High prevalence of caesarian sections at a referral hospital in Bangladesh

The rate of Caesarean delivery in Bangladesh is not known but thought to have increased markedly in recent years. This observational study addressed the prevalence of various types of deliveries conducted on 2714 subjects attending the postnatal ward of a referral hospital in Dhaka from August 1994...

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Main Author: Abdul Latif Bhuiya
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ibrahim Medical College 2009-01-01
Series:IMC Journal of Medical Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.imcjms.com/registration/journal_full_text/133
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spelling doaj-9e56ee1dbaae43c0896734a40a2851c62020-11-25T00:00:35ZengIbrahim Medical CollegeIMC Journal of Medical Science2519-17212519-15862009-01-01312123High prevalence of caesarian sections at a referral hospital in BangladeshAbdul Latif Bhuiya0Department of Community Medicine, Sir Salimullah Medical College, Mitford, Dhaka, BangladeshThe rate of Caesarean delivery in Bangladesh is not known but thought to have increased markedly in recent years. This observational study addressed the prevalence of various types of deliveries conducted on 2714 subjects attending the postnatal ward of a referral hospital in Dhaka from August 1994 to March 1995. During this period data were collected retrospectively from their registries and clinical history sheets. Of these participants 1509 (55.6%) had a history of normal delivery and 1150 (42.4%) underwent Caesarean sections. Very few (1.7%) had other means of delivery and only 0.7% were reported to have forceps delivery. The Caesarian delivery for the first baby was 14.1%, which gradually decreased in subsequent deliveries. Most of the deliveries, be it normal or Caesarean, were conducted by the trainee doctors (43.6%) and Medical Officers (25.7%). Professors and Assistant Professors performed less than 1%. The normal or Caesarean deliveries were assisted mostly by trainee doctors (54.4%), interns (19.0%) and nurses (15.8%); and very few were conducted by Medical Officers (8.3%) and Assistant Registrars (2.1%). The study observes that the rate of Caesarean delivery is much higher than that observed in western countries. Most of the deliveries in this hospital, whether normal or Caesarean, were found to be conducted by the trainee or junior doctors. Ibrahim Med. Coll. J. 2009; 3(1): 21-23http://www.imcjms.com/registration/journal_full_text/133Pregnancynormal deliveryCaesarean deliverydelivery practicestertiary hospital
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Abdul Latif Bhuiya
spellingShingle Abdul Latif Bhuiya
High prevalence of caesarian sections at a referral hospital in Bangladesh
IMC Journal of Medical Science
Pregnancy
normal delivery
Caesarean delivery
delivery practices
tertiary hospital
author_facet Abdul Latif Bhuiya
author_sort Abdul Latif Bhuiya
title High prevalence of caesarian sections at a referral hospital in Bangladesh
title_short High prevalence of caesarian sections at a referral hospital in Bangladesh
title_full High prevalence of caesarian sections at a referral hospital in Bangladesh
title_fullStr High prevalence of caesarian sections at a referral hospital in Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed High prevalence of caesarian sections at a referral hospital in Bangladesh
title_sort high prevalence of caesarian sections at a referral hospital in bangladesh
publisher Ibrahim Medical College
series IMC Journal of Medical Science
issn 2519-1721
2519-1586
publishDate 2009-01-01
description The rate of Caesarean delivery in Bangladesh is not known but thought to have increased markedly in recent years. This observational study addressed the prevalence of various types of deliveries conducted on 2714 subjects attending the postnatal ward of a referral hospital in Dhaka from August 1994 to March 1995. During this period data were collected retrospectively from their registries and clinical history sheets. Of these participants 1509 (55.6%) had a history of normal delivery and 1150 (42.4%) underwent Caesarean sections. Very few (1.7%) had other means of delivery and only 0.7% were reported to have forceps delivery. The Caesarian delivery for the first baby was 14.1%, which gradually decreased in subsequent deliveries. Most of the deliveries, be it normal or Caesarean, were conducted by the trainee doctors (43.6%) and Medical Officers (25.7%). Professors and Assistant Professors performed less than 1%. The normal or Caesarean deliveries were assisted mostly by trainee doctors (54.4%), interns (19.0%) and nurses (15.8%); and very few were conducted by Medical Officers (8.3%) and Assistant Registrars (2.1%). The study observes that the rate of Caesarean delivery is much higher than that observed in western countries. Most of the deliveries in this hospital, whether normal or Caesarean, were found to be conducted by the trainee or junior doctors. Ibrahim Med. Coll. J. 2009; 3(1): 21-23
topic Pregnancy
normal delivery
Caesarean delivery
delivery practices
tertiary hospital
url http://www.imcjms.com/registration/journal_full_text/133
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