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Why is the labor epidural rate low and cesarean delivery rate high? A survey of Chinese perinatal care providers

OBJECTIVE: China has a high cesarean delivery (CD) and low labor epidural analgesia (LEA) rate. This online survey was conducted to explore the reasons behind this phenomenon and potential solutions. METHODS: A voluntary, anonymous survey was distributed via both WeChat and professional websites for...

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Autores principales: Zhao, Peishan, Cai, Zhenyu, Huang, Anna, Liu, Chunyuan, Li, Huiling, Yang, Shuwei, Hu, Ling-Qun
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8139447/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34019570
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0251345
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author Zhao, Peishan
Cai, Zhenyu
Huang, Anna
Liu, Chunyuan
Li, Huiling
Yang, Shuwei
Hu, Ling-Qun
author_facet Zhao, Peishan
Cai, Zhenyu
Huang, Anna
Liu, Chunyuan
Li, Huiling
Yang, Shuwei
Hu, Ling-Qun
author_sort Zhao, Peishan
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: China has a high cesarean delivery (CD) and low labor epidural analgesia (LEA) rate. This online survey was conducted to explore the reasons behind this phenomenon and potential solutions. METHODS: A voluntary, anonymous survey was distributed via both WeChat and professional websites for 4 months amongst groups of Chinese perinatal professionals. Data was collected and analyzed using a Chi-square test and presented as percentages of respondents. RESULTS: 1412 respondents were recorded (43% anesthesiologists, 35% obstetricians, 15.5% midwives or labor and delivery nurses, and 6.5% others), and 1320 respondents were care providers. It was found that 82.7% (1092/1320) of the provider respondents used CD per patient request in fear of lawsuits or yinao/yibao and 63.4% (837/1320) used CD for respecting superstitious culture. The number one reason (noted by 60.2% (795/1320) of all the three specialties) for low LEA use was lack of anesthesia manpower without statistical difference among specialties. The most recommended solution was increasing the anesthesia workforce, proposed by 79.8% (1053/1320) of the three specialties. However, the top solution provided by the two non-anesthesia specialties is different from the one proposed by anesthesiologists. The later (83%, 504/606) suggested increasing the incentive to provide the service is more effective. The answers to questions related to medical knowledge about CD and LEA, and unwillingness of anesthesiologists, parturients and their family members to LEA were similar for the most part, while the opinions regarding low LEA use related to poor experiences and unwillingness of obstetricians and hospital administrators were significantly divided among the three specialties. In the providers’ point of view, the unwillingness to LEA from parturient’s family members was the most salient (26.1%, 345/1320), which is more than all care providers, hospital administrators, and parturients themselves (16.8%, 222/1320). CONCLUSION: The reasons for high CD rate and low LEA use are multifactorial. The sociological issues (fear of yinao/yibao and superstitious culture) were the top two contributing factors for the high CD rate in China, while lack of anesthesia manpower was the top response for the low LEA use, which contributes to its being the most recommended solution overall from the three specialties. An incentive approach to providers is a short-term solution while training more perinatal care providers (especially among anesthesiologists and midwives), improving billing systems, and reforming legal systems are 3 systemic approaches to tackling this problem in the long-term.
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spelling pubmed-81394472021-06-02 Why is the labor epidural rate low and cesarean delivery rate high? A survey of Chinese perinatal care providers Zhao, Peishan Cai, Zhenyu Huang, Anna Liu, Chunyuan Li, Huiling Yang, Shuwei Hu, Ling-Qun PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVE: China has a high cesarean delivery (CD) and low labor epidural analgesia (LEA) rate. This online survey was conducted to explore the reasons behind this phenomenon and potential solutions. METHODS: A voluntary, anonymous survey was distributed via both WeChat and professional websites for 4 months amongst groups of Chinese perinatal professionals. Data was collected and analyzed using a Chi-square test and presented as percentages of respondents. RESULTS: 1412 respondents were recorded (43% anesthesiologists, 35% obstetricians, 15.5% midwives or labor and delivery nurses, and 6.5% others), and 1320 respondents were care providers. It was found that 82.7% (1092/1320) of the provider respondents used CD per patient request in fear of lawsuits or yinao/yibao and 63.4% (837/1320) used CD for respecting superstitious culture. The number one reason (noted by 60.2% (795/1320) of all the three specialties) for low LEA use was lack of anesthesia manpower without statistical difference among specialties. The most recommended solution was increasing the anesthesia workforce, proposed by 79.8% (1053/1320) of the three specialties. However, the top solution provided by the two non-anesthesia specialties is different from the one proposed by anesthesiologists. The later (83%, 504/606) suggested increasing the incentive to provide the service is more effective. The answers to questions related to medical knowledge about CD and LEA, and unwillingness of anesthesiologists, parturients and their family members to LEA were similar for the most part, while the opinions regarding low LEA use related to poor experiences and unwillingness of obstetricians and hospital administrators were significantly divided among the three specialties. In the providers’ point of view, the unwillingness to LEA from parturient’s family members was the most salient (26.1%, 345/1320), which is more than all care providers, hospital administrators, and parturients themselves (16.8%, 222/1320). CONCLUSION: The reasons for high CD rate and low LEA use are multifactorial. The sociological issues (fear of yinao/yibao and superstitious culture) were the top two contributing factors for the high CD rate in China, while lack of anesthesia manpower was the top response for the low LEA use, which contributes to its being the most recommended solution overall from the three specialties. An incentive approach to providers is a short-term solution while training more perinatal care providers (especially among anesthesiologists and midwives), improving billing systems, and reforming legal systems are 3 systemic approaches to tackling this problem in the long-term. Public Library of Science 2021-05-21 /pmc/articles/PMC8139447/ /pubmed/34019570 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0251345 Text en © 2021 Zhao et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Zhao, Peishan
Cai, Zhenyu
Huang, Anna
Liu, Chunyuan
Li, Huiling
Yang, Shuwei
Hu, Ling-Qun
Why is the labor epidural rate low and cesarean delivery rate high? A survey of Chinese perinatal care providers
title Why is the labor epidural rate low and cesarean delivery rate high? A survey of Chinese perinatal care providers
title_full Why is the labor epidural rate low and cesarean delivery rate high? A survey of Chinese perinatal care providers
title_fullStr Why is the labor epidural rate low and cesarean delivery rate high? A survey of Chinese perinatal care providers
title_full_unstemmed Why is the labor epidural rate low and cesarean delivery rate high? A survey of Chinese perinatal care providers
title_short Why is the labor epidural rate low and cesarean delivery rate high? A survey of Chinese perinatal care providers
title_sort why is the labor epidural rate low and cesarean delivery rate high? a survey of chinese perinatal care providers
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8139447/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34019570
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0251345
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