Wed, Jul 21, 2010 (Reuters Health) — Even  if they aren't staffed to handle emergency cesarean sections, hospitals  should respect a woman's informed choice to have a vaginal birth after  cesarean (VBAC), new guidelines say. 
VBAC is known to increase  the risk that the scar left in the womb from a previous cesarean will  tear during labor, leading to massive bleeding that can threaten the  baby's life. That has led to previous guidelines urging caution for  women who have had cesarean sections. 
But recent research shows  so-called uterine rupture occurs in less than one percent of women who  opt for vaginal birth, and that between 60 and 80 percent of VBACs are  completed successfully. 
While the new guidelines from the  American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) still say a  full surgical team should be present in case an emergency cesarean is  required, they now put a bigger emphasis on the woman's decision. 
"Respect  for patient autonomy supports that patients should be allowed to accept  increased levels of risk; however, patients should be clearly informed  of such potential increase in risk and management alternatives," they  say. 
"For most women with a previous cesarean delivery, a trial  of labor is a safe and appropriate option," said Dr. Jeffrey L. Ecker,  referring to a planned VBAC attempt. 
Ecker, who directs  maternal-fetal medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston,  co-wrote the new guidelines, published in the journal Obstetrics 
Even  women who've had two prior cesareans might be good candidates for  vaginal birth, he said. 
He added that he hoped the new  recommendations would help reduce the concerns about medical liability  that many doctors have held out as a reason for not offering VBAC. 
Today,  about nine in 10 pregnant women in the U.S. end up with a repeat  cesarean if they've already had one. By comparison about a third of all  women who give birth have cesareans. 
"I really think the  cesarean rates are going up too fast," said Dr. Peter Bernstein, of the  Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx, New York. "There is no  good evidence that newborns are better off now than they were 20 years  ago." 
Bernstein, who is an ACOG fellow but did not work on the  guidelines, said he was pleased with the new recommendations. 
He  said they updated information on what women would be good candidates  for VBAC and were important in the discussion of delivery options that a  woman should have with her doctor. 
But he said it was hard to  say if the guidelines would have any impact on the low VBAC rates. 
Indeed,  the guidelines note that health providers who feel uncomfortable with  the delivery choice a woman has made may want to refer her to another  provider. 
-- Frederik Joelving                
 
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