By E.B. SOLOMONT
Staff Reporter of the Sun
January 16, 2008
The rate of babies delivered by cesarean section in New York City increased to 30.6%, in 2006, up from 29.7% in 2005, in a trend that some politicians, doctors, and women's health advocates say is cause for concern.
The citywide increase reflects a national upward trend in the number of cesarean deliveries in recent years. Last month, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that the national cesarean rate in 2006 reached a record high, 31.1%, according to its preliminary birth data for that year.
"There is alarming concern throughout the country that there are too many cesarean sections," said Public Advocate Betsy Gotbaum, who in 2006 released a report based on 2005 data detailing individual hospitals' cesarean section rates. "It's additional cost and it's additional risk," Ms. Gotbaum said, adding, "I hate to impart motives on hospitals and doctors … I can just tell you the numbers speak for themselves."
"It's clearly been rising," the head of obstetrics at Brooklyn's Lutheran Medical Center, Dr. Iffath Hoskins, said. "On a day-to-day basis, there will be three or four cesareans going on at a given time," she said, estimating that one in three deliveries at Lutheran results in a cesarean.
A sampling by The New York Sun of New York City hospitals shows there are still disparities in cesarean rates among individual hospitals. At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital, the rate in 2006 was 26%, up from 25% in 2005. At NYU Medical Center, the rate was 31% in 2006, down from 32% the year before.
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital reported a 35.4% cesarean rate in 2007 for its three campuses, down from 37.1% in 2005.
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