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51% increase in unnecessary C-sections in Bangladesh

Black_cats

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Published on 12:00 AM, June 23, 2019
51% increase in unnecessary C-sections in Bangladesh

www.thedailystar.net/health/news/51-increase-unnecessary-c-sections-bangladesh-1761109%3famp

unnecessary_c-sections.jpg

Star Health Report
Bangladesh is facing a massive boom in the number of medically unnecessary Caesarean section, commonly known as C-sections — between 2016 and 2018 the number of operations increased by 51 percent, new figures released by Save the Children reveal. The country saw an estimated 860,000 of these unnecessary operations last year, while up to 300,000 women who need a C-section are unable to afford or access it.

The findings highlight the extent of Bangladesh’s burgeoning C-section problems, where the country’s wealthy are turning to caesareans in record numbers, even though unnecessary C-sections place mother and baby at a needless risk.


Key findings of the analysis include:

• In 2018 Bangladeshi parents paid $483 million in out-of-pocket expenses for C-sections that were medically unnecessary. That’s an average cost of $612 per case.

• 77 percent of all C-section operations — or an estimated 860,000 procedures in 2018 — were medically unnecessary, up from 570,000 in 2016.

• At the same time, up to 300,000 women who desperately need a C-section every year are unable to get one.

• Between 2004 and 2016 the C-section rate in Bangladesh increased from 4 percent to 31 percent.

Save the Children is calling for better regulation of the industry, more checks and balances on doctors who carry out the procedure and greater funding for vital maternal health services.

Dr Ishtiaq Mannan, Deputy Country Director of Save the Children in Bangladesh and an expert in newborn and maternal health, said, “This surge in popularity has created a situation where we have more and more affluent mothers lining up for unnecessary C-sections, under the belief that it’ll be more comfortable or because they’ve been misled by their doctor, while poorer women who desperately need the operation can’t access it. It’s simply astonishing.”

About 80 percent of all births in private hospitals in Bangladesh are now C-sections. This is in part due to poor regulation of the medical sector and some unscrupulous practitioners, for whom doing C-sections is a profitable business.

Dr Mannan continued, “Doctors and medical facilities are financially incentivised to deliver babies surgically rather than naturally, and face few repercussions if they provide misleading or incorrect advice.

Unnecessary C-sections put mothers and babies at needless risk, increasing the likelihood of infection, excessive bleeding, organ damage and blood clots as well as ensuring a significantly longer recovery time for the mother. It also takes away the benefits of a natural birth, which enables newborns to receive a dose of good bacteria that’s believed to boost their immune system when they travel through the birth canal, and enables a mother and her baby to have physical contact earlier and breastfeeding to begin sooner.”

One of the biggest challenges is addressing a major shortage of accredited midwives in Bangladesh, who not only support natural child birth when healthy to do so, but help reduce the burden faced by busy doctors. Across the country there are just 2,500 midwives, barely a tenth of the 22,000 recommended by a recent health sector review.

Save the Children supports a midwife training programme in partnership with the UN Population Fund to help address this shortage.

Dr Mannan concluded, “It’s important that all women, regardless of their income, location or status in society, have access to the right information and services and can make informed decisions about how they choose to give birth. Increasing the number of midwives in Bangladesh is a big part of this. And if a C-section is medically required, all women must be able to have one, not just those who can afford it.”

Many other countries have experienced caesarean booms too, including Thailand, Sri Lanka, and the United States. Where Bangladesh differs is that its boom has not corresponded with a matching reduction in maternal deaths as it should.
 
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Obviously copying the UK.

In Uk you can't have a C section in NHS unless its really needed,optional C sections can only be done in private practice. One of the reasons for the increased rate of C sections is also because of financial advantage to the private hospitals and doctors who are doing them,seen that first hand in Pakistan and doubt it would be any different in Bangladesh
 
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In Uk you can't have a C section in NHS unless its really needed,optional C sections can only be done in private practice. One of the reasons for the increased rate of C sections is also because of financial advantage to the private hospitals and doctors who are doing them,seen that first hand in Pakistan and doubt it would be any different in Bangladesh
In UK it was is used to reduce the number of beds and timetable deliveries.
 
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In UK it was is used to reduce the number of beds and timetable deliveries.
I work in the Nhs bro and doing an unnecessary procedure on a patient can create serious problems for the surgeon and the hospital.
 
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51% increase in unnecessary C-sections in Bangladesh
This has been happening for a very long time. Before, it happened to those expected mothers whose husbands are working abroad. The doctors/nurses would say fearful words, such as her own or her child's death unless it is a Cesearian birth. Bangladesh is ruined not by the average working people but by the educated people who are supposed to lead the country.

However, like all other educated people, doctors in BD do not possess human qualities, such as ethics, righteousness or integrity. Their greed would force unnecessary surgery on worried mothers, just for 50,000 Taka. What a corrupted society in Bangladesh, everybody tries to find loopholes to cheat others!!
 
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This has been happening for a very long time. Before, it happened to those expected mothers whose husbands are working abroad. The doctors/nurses would say fearful words, such as her own or her child's death unless it is a Cesearian birth. Bangladesh is ruined not by the average working people but by the educated people who are supposed to lead the country.

However, like all other educated people, doctors in BD do not possess human qualities, such as ethics, righteousness or integrity. Their greed would force unnecessary surgery on worried mothers, just for 50,000 Taka. What a corrupted society in Bangladesh, everybody tries to find loopholes to cheat others!!

You’re being too hard on Bangladesh here.

It’s the same in the US in some ways.
 
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You’re being too hard on Bangladesh here.

It’s the same in the US in some ways.
It is not necessary to compare with the situation in the USA. There are many other good countries in the world that we should compare and emulate. Besides, Bangladesh educated people to have a mind to rob the nation and its people as if the country belongs exclusively to them always looking for their personal privileges at the cost of common people.

Doctors are part of that evil scheming. Many of them also know little about medical professionalism, void of proper education but getting a college degree. I have met such a few in BD.
 
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It is not necessary to compare with the situation in the USA. There are many other good countries in the world that we should compare and emulate. Besides, Bangladesh educated people to have a mind to rob the nation and its people as if the country belongs exclusively to them always looking for their personal privileges at the cost of common people.

Doctors are part of that evil scheming. Many of them also know little about medical professionalism, void of proper education but getting a college degree. I have met such a few in BD.

Again, blanket statements are not accurate.

Your last sentence is ridiculous to make a generalization like that.

As for c-sections, sometimes there is a clear indication and most times it’s a gray zone and judgement call like many things in medicine.

Natural childbirth is the first option but sometimes emergencies happen and sometimes the women develops conditions like preeclampsia which makes a c section needed.

Of course, there are also matters of convenience for doctors which go against the best interests of the patients.

Like I said, it’s not limited to Bangladesh or the US.

But demonizing physicians like you did in your previous post is ridiculous.
 
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Again, blanket statements are not accurate.

Your last sentence is ridiculous to make a generalization like that.

As for c-sections, sometimes there is a clear indication and most times it’s a gray zone and judgement call like many things in medicine.

Natural childbirth is the first option but sometimes emergencies happen and sometimes the women develops conditions like preeclampsia which makes a c section needed.

Of course, there are also matters of convenience for doctors which go against the best interests of the patients.

Like I said, it’s not limited to Bangladesh or the US.

But demonizing physicians like you did in your previous post is ridiculous.
To you, everything is ridiculous if it does not suit your ego. Please do not praise BD doctors in so many words. They are not worthy of praise. I am not a small child not to know what you explained. Many BD doctors are not qualified to treat people suffering from acute diseases, they are not just trained properly. I have my own eyes to see the surroundings around them.

Why does it sound generalization when I speak of the reality? Not only the doctors, but most of the educated people in BD are DEMONIC. To know how hygienic doctors are I want you to visit Mohakhali Cholera hospital. The surrounding is full of smell with stool and vomit, the house doctors do not care, no one is there to clean the mess and they work on the upper floors. So, this is the standard in BD. Please do not again say that it is also the same in America.

It is natural that when the entire BD medical tree is dead, the childbirth branch is also the same.
 
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To you, everything is ridiculous if it does not suit your ego. Please do not praise BD doctors in so many words. They are not worthy of praise. I am not a small child not to know what you explained. Many BD doctors are not qualified to treat people suffering from acute diseases, they are not just trained properly. I have my own eyes to see the surroundings around them.

Why does it sound generalization when I speak of the reality? Not only the doctors, but most of the educated people in BD are DEMONIC. To know how hygienic doctors are I want you to visit Mohakhali Cholera hospital. The surrounding is full of smell with stool and vomit, the house doctors do not care, no one is there to clean the mess and they work on the upper floors. So, this is the standard in BD. Please do not again say that it is also the same in America.

It is natural that when the entire BD medical tree is dead, the childbirth branch is also the same.

There is a difference in saying the standards of Bangladeshi hospitals are lacking from saying “most of the educated people in BD are demonic”

If you don’t get that......then wow.

This has nothing to do with my ego and everything to do with you being borderline unhinged.

Please reply and prove my point.
 
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There is a difference in saying the standards of Bangladeshi hospitals are lacking from saying “most of the educated people in BD are demonic”

If you don’t get that......then wow.

This has nothing to do with my ego and everything to do with you being borderline unhinged.

Please reply and prove my point.
You really have a bad habit of nagging on something surreal. Why do you think you are right and I am wrong? I am speaking of my observations while in BD and I know very well the character of educated people there. Are you really any different when you are trying to impose your idiotic opinions on others?

Go ask why 1.1 million BD patients visit Indian doctors. There are other rich patients who regularly go to Singapore or Thailand. Why your super qualified BD doctors could not treat a heart patient named (Minister) Obaidul Kader? Is not it because they do not study and learn from other countries? No doubt, your BD doctors are what you are trying to portray them.
 
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You really have a bad habit of nagging on something surreal. Why do you think you are right and I am wrong? I am speaking of my observations while in BD and I know very well the character of educated people there. Are you really any different when you are trying to impose your idiotic opinions on others?

Go ask why 1.1 million BD patients visit Indian doctors. There are other rich patients who regularly go to Singapore or Thailand. Why your super qualified BD doctors could not treat a heart patient named (Minister) Obaidul Kader? Is not it because they do not study and learn from other countries? No doubt, your BD doctors are what you are trying to portray them.

Again.

Try to understand.

People leave BD to get medical treatmeant. I get that.

But perhaps that's due to the general standards and condition of BD healthcare being substandard.

What you are saying is that the doctors are either lacking or not ethical.

I am not saying that this in not the case in some cases.

But your blanket statements are an injustice to those who ARE capable, ethical and generally try to do their best with what they have been given.

The condition of healthcare goes far beyond "doctors" in any country.

Your emotional responses are a bit much.
 
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