Wednesday, July 28, 2010

You will probably just die anyway

The things some doctors tell women of size about pregnancy are just appalling. 

Scaring fat women about dying in pregnancy seems to be the latest scare tactic to keep fat women from even contemplating reproducing.

Here's yet another example from My OB Said What??!!

“If you get pregnant, you will get gestational diabetes, have high blood pressure, and oh, you will probably just die anyway.”


-Gynecologist to a young, obese woman who was not pregnant at the time of the gyn exam
It's amazing how all this fatness keeps getting passed down over the generations since all us fat moms die during pregnancy, you know? 

What kind of ridiculous things have you had said to you about pregnancy at larger sizes?

Friday, July 23, 2010

About Time: Good News for Vaginal Birth After Multiple Cesarean!

FANTASTIC NEWS!!!

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) has finally issued a revision of their 2004 guidelines on Vaginal Birth After Cesarean (VBAC).  [About time.]

In the new guidelines, ACOG changes positions on a few key elements.  The position changes of greatest import are the ones providing more flexibility for choosing VBAC even when staff aren't "immediately available" on-site to provide emergency care if needed, and the recognition of patient autonomy (the right of each patient to choose VBAC or repeat c-section for themselves, not have it imposed on them by doctor or hospital bans). 

I leave discussion of those topics to other bloggers and ICAN for now (I may eventually comment too...believe me, I have plenty to say on the subject!). Right now the part I most want to comment on is a REVISION of their policy on Trial Of Labor After Cesarean (TOL or TOLAC) in women with 2 prior cesareans.  Hallelujah

New Guidelines for VBA2C

Here's the summary about VBAC after 2 prior cesareans (VBA2C)  from the new ACOG guidelines:
Women with two previous low transverse cesarean deliveries may be considered candidates for TOLAC.
Previously, in the 2004 guidelines, women with 2 prior cesareans were only considered candidates for a trial of labor if they'd already had a vaginal birth.  Without that, women with more than 1 prior cesarean were supposed to be automatically sectioned for any subsequent children.

But now women with 2 prior cesareans can go for a VBAC, regardless of whether they've had a prior vaginal birth. Yes!!!

This is a cause for major celebration for women like me who have had more than one prior cesarean. Granted,  it doesn't make any difference for me personally, because I had my first VBA2C before the 2004 guidelines went into place. I had my second VBA2C after the guidelines, but because I'd already had a vaginal birth at that point they didn't apply to me.  And since I'm done having children, it's moot for me now as well.

But that's all coincidental timing.....I could easily have been affected, and I never forget that.  Most of the hospitals in my city, while still mostly supportive of VBAC, have stopped attending VBAMC completely.....even the University Hospital that has 24/7 anesthesia and OBs on-site.  If I were having my babies now, I'd be out of luck.

But while this doesn't affect me anymore, I care because of all the women I know who have had to search desperately (and often unsuccessfully) well into their pregnancy to find a care provider who would "let them try" a VBAMC, and who have had to endure scaremongering and egregiously inflated risk estimates from various "caregivers" along the way.

I care because of the good, honorable care providers who have been threatened with losing their privileges because they do support VBAMC, or who have been pressured or harassed out of attending VBAMC.

I care because an ICAN friend of mine had a VBA2C this week only because homebirth midwives in her area continue to support VBAMC (the hospitals in her area do not). Otherwise this friend of mine would now be recovering from yet another operation, all while trying to take care of a newborn and 2 toddlers.

I care because of all the women I know who have had to choose between being forced into repeat surgery they didn't need and an out-of-hospital birth that they may not have been comfortable considering. While homebirth is a reasonable choice and most of the VBAMC moms I've known in recent years have chosen a homebirth because it offers their best chance of success, not all women are comfortable with this option and it shouldn't be their only choice for avoiding surgery.

I care because of the women who have been threatened with Child Protective Services if they dared consider a VBA2C.  (The woman in this article isn't the only one.)

I care because of the women who were told they were almost sure to kill their baby if they dared to try a VBA2C. Like this woman, who was told:
Unless you have an elective cesarean at 38 weeks, the baby and you will die.”  -OB to mother with two prior cesareans  (from My OB Said WHAT?!?)
I care because of all the women with 2 or more prior cesareans who have been coerced or scared into repeat cesareans, despite the many complications multiple repeat cesareans exposes them to (Silver 2006). 

I care because of the women I know who came into the hospital well into labor (sometimes even pushing) but who were strapped down and sectioned anyway, despite their protests, simply because of a history of 2 prior cesareans.  One (a doctor herself) sustained significant internal damage from the surgery, and another was denied pain meds for a while after the cesarean "to teach her a lesson."  Another went on to nearly die from placenta accreta in her next pregnancy.

I care because of the women I know who have been coerced into repeat cesareans and have encountered severe complications in subsequent pregnancies (placental attachment issues, uterine rupture, hysterectomy, and stillbirth). 

The 2004 ACOG guidelines had consequences, sometimes dire ones; we must never forget that, and we must never let ACOG forget that either.

It's great to finally have some acknowledgement (belated though it may be) that VBA2C is a reasonable choice, that it does not carry a big excess of risk, and that women have the RIGHT TO CHOOSE their mode of birth.

But I'm pissed that the ripples from the 2004 guidelines are going to continue to echo for many years to come and I'm ticked as all get out that it took so long and so much harm to women and babies before ACOG changed its policy back again.

Bad Science, Birth Politics, and VBAMC

After supporting VBAC after Multiple sections (VBAMC) for years, ACOG backed away from it in their 2004 guidelines. The change was highly political,  as I've written about before. It wasn't based in good science, but rather on birth politics and one small, poorly-done study.

In 1999, Caughey et al. published a study of 134 women with a TOL after 2 prior c-sections, and it found a Uterine Rupture (UR) rate of 3.7%.

It didn't matter that no study on VBAMC before or since has found such high numbers, and it didn't matter that the study only involved 134 women and therefore the small sample size could easily distort the findings, creating the illusion of more severe risk than really was there........in the VBAC-lash climate, this became THE study to go by.

It didn't matter that the study had only 134 TOLs in 12 years, that extremely aggressive prostaglandin and pitocin policies were used at this hospital during those years, and that there were NO ruptures in the spontaneous labor VBA2C group.  No, ACOG decided to ban ALL VBA2C unless there was a prior vaginal birth, based on the data from this one small study.

The backstory here is that many care providers were already backing away from supporting VBACs of any kind.  If they could find any excuse to justify ending yet more trials of labor, they'd take it........and they did.

It's not a coincidence that one of the lead authors of this 1999 study was one of the main authors of the 2004 ACOG revised guidelines. She and the others basically ignored or dismissed all the other studies that found far lower rupture rates and focused only on that one in making the decision to recommend against VBAMC without a prior vaginal birth.

Birth politics, anyone?  With women and babies paying the price.

More Recent and Much Larger VBAMC Studies

Since the 2004 guidelines, two other FAR larger studies have found rupture rates much much lower than the Caughey 1999 study in VBA2C women.

Macones 2005 had a study group of 1,082 women, a far larger study group than the Caughey study.  It found a rupture rate of 1.8%, with 16 of the 19 ruptures found in the induced or augmented groups.  This suggests that the rupture rate could have been even lower. 

The authors didn't state the spontaneous rupture rate in the study but I crunched the numbers myself based on the percentages of induced, augmented, and spontaneous labors given in their data tables.  The spontaneous rupture rate in the VBA2C group was 3 out of about 379 spontaneous labors, or about 0.8%, compared to 16 ruptures out of about 703 induced or augmented labors, or about 2.3%.

Although it's impossible in hindsight to know exactly how many ruptures might have been prevented by avoiding induction and augmentation, it's a good bet that the total rupture rate would have been lower than 1.8%.  Thus, this number may not represent the true rupture risk for spontaneous labor VBA2C.

Landon 2005 had a study group of 975 women, also far larger than the Caughey study, and included a small group of women (n=104) with 3 or 4 prior cesareans in its data pool.  It found a VBAMC rupture rate of 0.9%, and that was with inductions and augmentations.  Therefore, the spontaneous labor rupture rate is probably even lower in that study. [I've asked Dr. Landon for the (unpublished) spontaneous labor rupture rate but unfortunately, so far he has not responded.]

A slightly smaller study, Lin and Raynor 2004, confirms that the rate of rupture is smaller in the spontaneous labor VBAMC group.  The full text of the study notes that there were 523 spontaneous labors in the VBAMC group, and this spontaneous labor group had a 0.8% rupture rate.  There were 2 ruptures in the 73 induced labors for a 2.7% rupture rate.

This is information that is very important.  Really, it's the spontaneous rupture rate that is the MOST important to consider when making a decision about whether to consider VBAMC. Women and their caregivers need to know that the VBAMC rupture rates usually quoted are rates distorted by induction and augmentation and that the true risk is likely much lower with spontaneous labor, as it is with VBA1C.

This is the information not being disclosed in the new ACOG guidelines.  They dance around the induction and augmentation issue, noting that a number of studies have found an increased risk of rupture when a trial of labor was induced, but diluting that by mentioning that some studies have only found increased rupture risk in women without a prior vaginal birth or when prostaglandins are used in conjunction with pitocin. 

However, the bottom line is that the lowest rates for uterine rupture are found in the groups of women with spontaneous labor....no induction, no augmentation....and that this is true also for VBAMC women.

Quoting a VBA2C rupture risk as 0.9 - 1.8% makes it sound like this is the risk even if the labor is spontaneous, and it likely is not.  VBAMC research needs to start differentiating between results for totally spontaneous labors, labors augmented with pitocin, and different types of induced labors, as VBA1C research often does. 

Yes, we need more studies with VBAMC spontaneous labors to confirm these numbers, but many more doctors and women might be willing to consider VBA2C if they understood that the real risk of rupture is more like 0.8% or so if labor is spontaneous. 

Full Text of ACOG's New Guideline on VBAMC

Here is the full text of ACOG's new guideline on VBAC after more than one prior cesarean.  I've substituted their study reference numbers with the author/year for clarity here, and also broken up the information into paragraphs for readibility.  The full citations for these studies are at the end of my blog post, with links to their abstracts. While I don't agree with all of ACOG's conclusions, I include the full section here for the sake of documentation:
More Than One Previous Cesarean Delivery

Studies addressing the risks and benefits of TOLAC in women with more than one cesarean delivery have reported a risk of uterine rupture between 0.9% and 3.7%, but have not reached consistent conclusions regarding how this risk compares with women with only one prior uterine incision (Asakura 1995, Caughey 1999, Landon 2006, Macones 2005, Tahseen 2010).

Two large studies, with sufficient size to control for confounding variables, reported on the risks for women with two previous cesarean deliveries undergoing TOLAC (Landon 2006, Macones 2005). One study found no increased risk of uterine rupture (0.9% versus 0.7%) in women with one versus multiple prior cesarean deliveries (Landon 2006), whereas the other noted a risk of uterine rupture that increased from 0.9% to 1.8% in women with one versus two prior cesarean deliveries (Macones 2005). Both studies reported some increased risk in morbidity among women with more than one prior cesarean delivery, although the absolute magnitude of the difference in these risks was relatively small (eg, 2.1% versus 3.2% composite major morbidity in one study) (Macones 2005).

Additionally, the chance of achieving VBAC appears to be similar for women with one or more than one cesarean delivery. Given the overall data, it is reasonable to consider women with two previous low transverse cesarean deliveries to be candidates for TOLAC, and to counsel them based on the combination of other factors that affect their probability of achieving a successful VBAC.

Data regarding the risk for women undergoing TOLAC with more than two previous cesarean deliveries are limited (Cahill 2010).
What About VBAC After 3 or More Prior Cesareans?

Women who have had more than 2 prior cesareans are no doubt wondering how this all applies to them and whether they will be left out in the cold.  Basically, the new guidelines leave the question open-ended.

In the past, while ACOG guidelines did not exactly advocate for VBAC after 3 or more cesareans, it did not ban them either. The 1994 guidelines stated:
A woman who has had two or more previous cesarean deliveries with lower uterine segment incisions and who wishes to attempt vaginal birth should not be discouraged from doing so in the absence of contraindications.
In other words, it was left up to the judgment of the managing care providers and the birthing mother.

The new 2010 ACOG guidelines state that women with 2 prior cesareans are candidates for a TOLAC but that the data on women with 3 or more prior cesareans are limited.

Unfortunately, it is true that we don't have a lot of data on VBAC in women with 3 or more prior cesareans.  Higher-order VBACs have happened, but rarely in any kind of large, systematic way. Several studies have had small numbers of VBAMC TOLACs, but the sample sizes were not large enough for any real conclusions.

There is only one somewhat substantial study of higher-order VBACs. Miller (1994) had 1,827 TOLs in women with 2 or more cesareans. Of these, there were 241 TOLs in women with 3 or more prior cesareans.

Overall, the rupture rate was found to be 1.7% in all VBAMCs combined; 1.8% in VBA2Cs, but only 1.2% in VBA3+Cs. This seems to contradict the theory that rupture risk rises linearly as the number of prior incisions rises. However, these labors may just have been managed with more caution (i.e., less induction and augmentation), thus decreasing the risk of rupture. Without more details, we cannot know. But the 1.2% rupture risk in the higher-order VBAC group is within the 0.9-1.8% risk cited for VBA2C in the new guidelines, so it seems logical that higher-order VBACs should not be categorically denied either.

Despite the discouragement of VBAMC, some women are still managing to have higher-order VBACs, although it is harder now than in the past. The highest-order VBAC documented in the medical literature is a VBAC after 5 cesareans (Veridiano 1989). Wood (2001) documented a VBA4C in Australia. There are anecdotal stories on my main website of  VBA3C, VBA4C, even VBA7C births.

A few recent studies are starting to broach the question of higher-order VBACs again.The Landon 2006 study documented 104 TOLs in women with 3 or 4 cesareans, 84 with 3 prior cesareans and 20 with 4 prior cesareans. Cahill (2010) documented 89 TOLs in women with 3 prior cesareans, all with "no cases of composite maternal morbidity" (i.e. no ruptures, bladder or bowel injury, or uterine artery laceration), and a slightly higher success rate than VBA1C cases (79% vs. 75%).

More data (from large, well-designed studies) are urgently needed to properly evaluate the risks in higher-order VBACs, but the data we have so far suggest that a trial of labor should not be ruled out. Furthermore, any consideration of possible uterine rupture risks in higher-order VBACs must also be balanced against the substantial risks of continuing cesareans (Silver 2006), particularly in women who want larger families.

The good news is that the new guidelines, while not endorsing higher-order VBACs, do not rule them out either.  They merely state that more data are needed.  The fact that the guidelines do not outright preclude them leaves the back door open to doctors and midwives willing to attend higher-order VBACs.  This, plus the mini-trend towards more research on VBAMC, suggests that maybe even the front door could open eventually to the possibility of higher-order VBACs.

Concluding Thoughts

Even though I'm thrilled beyond words that ACOG has finally revised its guidelines, my joy is tempered by outrage that those bad-science 2004 guidelines will continue to have ripple effects for many years to come. 

The Macones study (2005) called for a re-evaluation of the ACOG guidelines on VBAMC. The authors wrote:
It seems reasonable to consider VBAC in those with 2 prior cesareans with no prior vaginal delivery, especially if they go into labor spontaneously.
Landon et al. (2006) also called for VBAMC to remain an option:
A requirement that a history of vaginal delivery be present in women with multiple prior cesarean deliveries to be considered candidates for trial of labor seems unwarranted given the apparent level of risk for uterine rupture and adverse outcomes in this population.  Moreover, a comparison of outcomes after trial of labor in women with multiple prior cesarean versus those undergoing elective repeat operation indicates that both options should remain available for eligible women.
Yet it still took four to five more years for ACOG to actually change those guidelines! And during that time, how many more women got forced into repeat cesareans they didn't want or need? 

The SOGC, the Canadian equivalent of ACOG, stayed open to VBA2C on paper, as did some other countries....but the fact is that the climate for VBAMC chilled considerably around the world because ACOG changed its guidelines

How many women have been butchered in the last six years because of ACOG's unscientific response to a study with only 134 participants

How many will continue to be butchered even after the rule change because doctors now have a distorted sense of risk around VBAMC, or because some malpractice insurance companies refuse to cover doctors or hospitals that "allow" VBAMC? 

Many OBs are never going to go back to "allowing" VBAMC on a regular basis. Like breeches, that horse is out of the barn door and it's not coming back, at least not any time real soon.

Thanks to the Caughey 1999 study and the ACOG 2004 guidelines, many docs will stay with a policy of "twice a cesarean, always a cesarean." They know that scheduled cesareans are more convenient schedule-wise and less risky liability-wise anyhow. They're not going to go back anytime soon, even with the new rules.

So while I'm thrilled that ACOG has finally changed their VBA2C rules, I'm still absolutely LIVID that the 2004 rule change (based on bad science and bad birth politics) resulted in so many women being exposed to so much unnecessary risk.  And I'm even MORE livid that this stupid rule change is likely to go on affecting women's choices around the world for a long time to come, despite it having been rescinded. 

However, I'm trying to remember the positive. 

[Deep calming breath.]

This IS a big step in the right direction, after all. It took a big kick in the behind from the NIH VBAC conference this past year to get it going, but at least there is some momentum in the right direction now. Yessss!!!!!

It at least opens the possibility for VBAMC again for those providers who wanted to support it but felt they couldn't go against the ACOG guidelines and the standard of care in their community. Doctors and midwives need to be able to support VBAMC without feeling they are at extra risk legally for doing so.

This new guideline gives women who want a VBAMC a leg to stand on.  If their doctor tells them they cannot have a TOL, they can show the doctor the ACOG guidelines and point out that they have the right to refuse a repeat cesarean and cannot be coerced into one. 

I'm not holding my breath, waiting for a tidal wave of VBAMCs. Doctors largely ignore contradictory evidence when it goes against the way they want to practice. It's all about convenience and perception of risk these days, and I'm not sure how far ACOG rule changes will go towards altering the prevailing obstetric culture of birth.

Rest assured, though, that there ARE docs and midwives who are "allowing" a TOL after 2 or more cesareans anyhow (thank you, Dr. Landon and Dr. Tate!). They are few and far between.....but there are still some out there. And BLESS THEM for standing against the ACOG machine and standing up for what's right!

And good for ACOG and its current leadership for recognizing and trying to resolve some of the harms that were caused from the 2004 guidelines. This ACOG leadership is a refreshing breath of air compared to some past regimes, and by and large, the Committee on Practice Bulletins (aided by Dr. William Grobman and Dr. Jeffrey Ecker) did a good job of balancing difficult policy questions in this new bulletin.

Now I'm waiting to see MORE providers out there, willing to stand up for women's autonomy in decision-making. Take a stand, providers; nearly half of all U.S. hospitals ban VBACs of any kind and the rate is much higher for VBAMC.  It's time to make your voice HEARD.  It will take lots of pressure on the part of both consumers and healthcare providers for the change to happen. Stop letting the majority of the momentum come from consumers and start adding your voices back to the discussion!

Oh, and ACOG, if you truly believe in women's autonomy in making their own decisions (as you insist you do), it's time to start pressuring more hospitals to reduce their preventable primary cesarean rates.  Don't just pay lip-service to the idea of autonomy; true patient autonomy includes more of a voice in all decisions, not just VBAC decisions. That includes making sure women have the choice of vaginal birth in the scenarios that lead to a lot of "elective" primary cesareans (breech babies, big babies, "late" babies, etc.).  If we reduce the primary cesarean rate, then we can reduce the need for VBACs markedly.

ACOG, this was a decent first step; now back it up with further action.

No woman should be forced into surgery if she doesn't want it.  She should consider the pros and cons of all her choices, but she should choose from a place of knowledge, not a place of coercion.  She should receive counseling from her healthcare providers about the risks and benefits of her various options, but ultimately, the choice should be hers. 

At least we finally have some ACOG recommendations to support that, and which recognizes that VBAMC is a reasonable choice after all. 

About time.


References

Veridiano NP. Vaginal delivery after cesarean section. International Journal of Gynaecology and Obstetrics August 1989;29(4):307-11. PMID: 2571531

ACOG Committee Opinion. Vaginal delivery after a previous cesarean birth. #143, October 1994.

Miller DA et al. Vaginal birth after cesarean: a 10-year experience. Obstetrics and Gynecology August 1994;84(2):255-8. PMID: 8041542

Asakura H, Myers SA. More than one previous cesarean delivery: a 5-year experience with 435 patients. Obstet Gynecol 1995;85:924–9.  PMID: 7770261

Caughey AB et al. Rate of uterine rupture during a trial of labor in women with one or two prior cesarean deliveries. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology October 1999;181(4):872-6.  PMID: 10521745

Wood JR, Quinlivan JA, Keirse MJ.  Trial of labour after four Caesarean sections: a case report and literature review.  Aust N Z J Obstet Gynaecol 2001 May;41(2):233-5.  PMID: 11453282

Spaans WA et al. Trial of labour after two or three previous caesarean sections. Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol Sept 10, 2003;110(1):16-9.  PMID: 12932864

ACOG Practice Bulletin: Clinical Management Guidelines for Obstetrician-Gynecologists. Vaginal birth after previous cesarean delivery. #54, July 2004.

Lin C and Raynor D. Risk of uterine rupture in labor induction of patients with prior cesarean section: an inner city hospital experience. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 2004;190:1476-8.  PMID: 15167874

Macones GA et al. Obstetric outcomes in women with two prior cesarean deliveries: is vaginal birth after cesarean delivery a viable option? American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 2005;192:1223-9.  PMID: 15846208

Landon, MB et al. Risk of uterine rupture with a trial of labor in women with multiple and single prior cesarean delivery. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Maternal-Fetal Medicine Units Network.Obstetrics and Gynecology July 2006;108(1):12-20.  PMID: 16816050

Silver RM, Landon MB, Rouse DJ, Leveno KJ, Spong CY, Thom EA, et al. Maternal morbidity associated with multiple repeat cesarean deliveries. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Maternal-Fetal Medicine Units Network. Obstet Gynecol 2006;107:1226–32.  PMID: 16738145

Tahseen S, Griffiths M. Vaginal birth after two caesarean sections (VBAC-2)-a systematic review with meta-analysis of success rate and adverse outcomes of VBAC-2 versus VBAC-1 and repeat (third) caesarean sections. BJOG 2010;117:5–19.  PMID: 19781046

Cahill AG, Tuuli M, Odibo AO, Stamilio DM, Macones GA. Vaginal birth after caesarean for women with three or more prior caesareans: assessing safety and success. BJOG 2010;117:422–7.  PMID: 20374579

ACOG Practice Bulletin: Clinical Management Guidelines for Obstetrician-Gynecologists. Vaginal birth after previous cesarean delivery. #115, August 2010.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Being Human

A quick post to promote the BBC series, Being Human. It's a series about a vampire, a werewolf, and a ghost who all share a flat in Bristol, England and try to discover what it means to "be human." 

The show is funny, scary, and at times, quite compelling in its storylines.  The actors are good, especially Russell Tovey as George the Werewolf.  He twitches and overacts and chews the scenery (sometimes literally) but somehow pulls it off anyhow with cheek and a touching vulnerability.  Annie the Ghost starts off as weak-willed and victimized but gains strength and chutzpah by the end of the series and it's a nice transformation to behold.  Mitchell the Vampire is a bit more muddled but even so, the character works, especially in his interactions with Annie and George. 

This was first produced as a one-off show, a pilot without a commitment to a series, a few years ago.  It gained enough of a following that it returned as a 6-episode series follow-up, albeit with new stars in 2 of the 3 main roles.  Season Two begins soon on BBC America.  Season Three has been ordered (but reportedly will move to Cardiff, Wales), and the SyFy Network in America has ordered an American remake of the series (bleah, they should have just gotten the BBC series rights).

The British version was written by Toby Whitehouse, who has written episodes of Doctor Who and Torchwood.  Now, while my husband and kids love Dr. Who, I'm not quite as big a fan......but I loved this show.  It was a huge surprise, and a very pleasant one.

Being Human really is worth giving a chance to, even if you're not a big sci-fi buff.  The vampire blood bits and the final werewolf effects are way cheesy (as all screen vampire and werewolf stuff inevitably is) but a lot of other stuff is more unexpected and less cheesy.  There is some horror stuff, be warned, but it's not horribly excessive. The best part of the show is the humor; we laughed quite a bit at the show and we totally didn't expect to.  There were also some touching moments to balance the humor and the horror bits.

Right now, you can catch Season One in repeats on BBC America or other channels as a lead-up to the premiere of Season Two on BBC America this weekend.  If you can, I highly recommend watching the whole of Season One first.  The story arc starts off a bit weak but gets stronger, and the Season ends with a bang.  Definitely worth seeing before trying out Season Two. 

I have no idea if Season Two will be any good.....sometimes you get a really promising Season One and a huge disappointment in the next season.  But if you are a sci-fi fan at all.....and maybe even if you're not.....this series is definitely worth checking out. It has been one of our favorite new shows of the year.....and it's great to have new content to watch in the summertime.  Give it a chance!

Monday, July 12, 2010

Limiting Fertility Treatment Access for Fat Women

Finally, a breath of fresh air reply from the research journals to the many folks advocating that fat women not be allowed access to fertility treatment (as they are not in Britain).

Should access to fertility treatment be determined by female body mass index?


Hum Reprod. 2010 Apr;25(4):815-20. Epub 2010 Feb 3.
Pandey S, Maheshwari A, Bhattacharya S.
Assisted Reproduction Unit, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen Maternity Hospital, Forresterhill Road, Aberdeen AB25 2ZL, UK.

Abstract

Resource allocation towards fertility treatment has been extensively debated in countries where fertility treatment is publicly-funded. Medical, social and ethical aspects have been evaluated prior to allocation of resources. Analysis of cost-effectiveness, risks and benefits and poor success rates have led to calls of restricting fertility treatment to obese women. In this debate article, we critically appraise the evidence underlying this issue and highlight the problems with such a policy.

Poor success rate of treatment is unsubstantiated as there is insufficient evidence to link high body mass index (BMI) to reduction in live birth. Obstetric complications have a linear relationship with BMI but are significantly influenced by maternal age. The same is true for miscarriage rates which are influenced by the confounding factors of polycystic ovary syndrome and age. Studies have shown that the direct costs per live birth are no greater for overweight and obese women.

With changing demographics over half the reproductive-age population is overweight or obese. Restricting fertility treatment on the grounds of BMI would cause stigmatization and lead to inequity, feelings of injustice and social tension as affluent women manage to bypass these draconian restrictions. Time lost and poor success of conventional weight loss strategies would jeopardize the chances of conception for many women.

PMID: 20129994

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Will I Feel My Baby Move If I'm Fat?

Whether or not a fat pregnant woman will feel her baby move is one of those myths about fat women and pregnancy that you hear periodically.

I don't hear it very often, but I have heard it a number of times over the years. 

It never ceases to amaze and surprise me that some non-fat folks actually believe this nonsense, but they do.  Some people actually tell fat women that they will never feel their baby move or kick because of their fatness

Puleeeeeeeze.  Like there is fat inside your uterus that will prevent contact between your baby and the uterine wall?  Like the nerves in the area don't function in the presence of adipose tissue?  Like there is soooo much fat in the abdomen that nobody from the outside could possibly be able to feel an 8 lb. bowling ball rolling around inside?  Come on!!

Plus, there's the actual experience of fat women.  We feel our babies move, trust me.  But somehow, either that experience doesn't get communicated to non-fat folks or they just don't believe it.

So you get these people who tell women that they probably won't feel their babies move in pregnancy because of their fatness, or that their partner will probably never feel the baby move either.

Personally, I think it's another way to make fat women feel bad about pregnancy, like they can't experience all the normal pregnancy stuff other women get to have.  People may not consciously be trying to shame or make fat women feel bad with these remarks, but deep down I think that the unconscious motivation is tsk-tsking.  Really, anyone with half a brain who took a second to think about it (or ask a fat woman about their experience) would know it's not true.

It's like saying, Yeah you can have a baby, but you are so fat you won't get any of the pleasure that goes with it.  Nyah, nyah.

People may not always intend it in a mean-spirited way--it may simply come from ignorance--but what a joy-killer a remark like this is.  Shame on the people who perpetuate this kind of nonsense. 

One Woman's Story

Here's an email I got a while back from someone with exactly that question, plus my reply to her. 
Someone told my husband that I may not be able to feel the baby kick or move because of my weight. I was searching your site...and was just wondering if this is true. It doesn't sound right to me ... because the baby is inside my body...
My Reply:

You are correct. You will feel this baby move. There is no fat inside the uterus, so you will feel the baby move inside you just fine.

You'll probably feel it on a similar timeline as a woman of average size, which can be anywhere from the 12th week or so till the 26th week or so. In fact, you probably are already feeling the baby move but if you've never been pregnant before, you simply may not recognize it as fetal movement yet. It's really very subtle at first. And it takes a while to be sure you really know what it is.

From the OUTSIDE it's true that it may be harder to feel the baby move early on because of intervening "fluff," but in time it will also be felt there. It may happen later than it would happen in a person of average size, but sooner or later, your partner (and you) will be able to feel this baby move from the outside too.

The one caveat to this is that if you have an anterior placenta (a placenta that has implanted on the front side of your uterus, near your belly), that can make it harder (and take a little longer) to feel the baby move internally and/or externally.  It definitely makes it harder to find the baby's heartbeat at first, as I know from my own experience with one of my kids.  But that has nothing to do with obesity, just with placental placement. Skinny women with anterior placentas have the same problems.

Rest assured, you will eventually feel the baby move from both the inside and the outside. You'll feel it from the inside on a similar schedule as other women; it may take longer to feel from the outside, but it will happen.

I'm "morbidly obese," have had 4 babies now, and have been able to feel all of them move, both inside and out. Sometimes I felt the baby moving in the first trimester, usually it was early to middle second trimester, and with my third it was late in the second trimester (because I had an anterior placenta).  But I felt them every time, and eventually so did my husband.  There was never any problem with it.

Even the most supersized woman I've encountered has felt her baby move, sooner or later.

So don't worry, you won't miss out on this wonderful feeling! Feeling your baby move is one of the most special things about pregnancy, so enjoy the heck out of it once you do feel it. It's one of the things I miss most, now that my childbearing days are done. 

Treasure it forever, and don't let some ignorant stranger worry you about it.  In this way, as in so many other ways, your experience of pregnancy as a woman of size will be very comparable to that of other women.  Your weight won't keep you from feeling your baby move, don't worry.

*Anybody out there ever hear this chestnut?

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Words of Sense in the Boston Globe: Now Apply Them to Women of Size

Check out this great new op-ed opinion in The Boston Globe from Judy Norsigian (of Our Bodies, Ourselves) and Dr. Timothy R. B. Johnson (Bates professor and chair of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Michigan).

In the op-ed, the authors discuss the high costs of cesareans, both financial and medical, and the non-medical factors that lead to more cesareans. 
Even though caesareans are associated with higher rates of complications than vaginal births, they are becomingly increasingly common. Problems range from infections, including the more serious antibiotic-resistant ones, to blood clots, prematurity, respiratory problems for the baby, and more complications with subsequent pregnancies. There is even a small but measurably higher risk of death for the mother...

There are also cost consequences for taxpayers — the caesarean rate for Massachusetts mothers on Medicaid is increasing at a faster pace than among privately insured mothers. Nationally, in 2008, average hospital charges for an uncomplicated caesarean section were $14,894, while such charges for an uncomplicated vaginal birth were $8,919.
In the media, most of the blame for the increasing cesarean rate has been placed on the mothers, rather than on doctor practices and medico-legal concerns.  Mothers are blamed for being too old, too fat, too high-risk......supposedly that's why the cesarean rate is rising.  But the article quickly skewers this reasoning:
Between 2000 and 2006, while the Massachusetts caesarean rate climbed from 16th to 10th highest among all states, the state’s ranking on neonatal mortality has slipped from 4th best to a tie for 9th. Six hospitals in the state have caesarean rates greater than 40 percent for first time mothers, yet none of these hospitals is designated as a high-risk center. So much for the argument that high-risk pregnancies are the reason for these rates.
Now, I would like to have seen more from the authors addressing (and questioning) the issue of obesity "causing" high cesarean rates, but I love how succinctly they suggest commonsense options for improvements in the overall cesarean rate (emphasis mine).
What can we do to lower the caesarean rate? Considerable media attention has focused on how extreme obesity can raise the risk of having a caesarean, but more emphasis is needed on these system-based approaches:
  • More hospitals need to institute policies that restrict the induction of labor, unless there is a good medical reason...
  • Obstetricians and hospitals should follow the new National Institute of Health recommendations to offer the option of vaginal birth after a caesarean for those women who want to avoid repeat surgery...
  • Hospitals could expand access to nurse-midwifery care. In Boston, statistics for hospitals that care for women facing the same risk of complications show that hospitals with nurse-midwifery services tend to have lower caesarean rates than those without a significant midwifery presence.
These suggestions are so common-sense that they have a big "DUH" factor.....yet they are not routinely used in many hospitals. 

The induction rate today is completely out of control....and it's not all "inductions of convenience" just because the mother is tired of being pregnant, as some doctors claim.  For the most part, doctors are behind the epidemic of inductions these days, for reasons of fear, of convenience, and because they are in denial about the very real risks of induction.  WE MUST STOP INDUCING LABOR SO OFTEN.

Denying women the right to VBAC is a violation of human rights, pure and simple.  No one should be forced into surgery they don't want or need.  Everyone, including pregnant women, has the the right to bodily autonomy and the right to informed consent/refusal.  Even ACOG's own position paper says that women have the right to make their own decisions on their medical care.  This should include the right to choose a VBAC and/or refuse a planned repeat cesarean:
Once a patient has been informed of the material risks and benefits involved with a treatment, test or procedure, that patient has the right to exercise full autonomy in deciding whether to undergo the treatment, test or procedure or whether to make a choice among a variety of treatments, tests, or procedures.  In the exercise of that autonomy, the informed patient also has the right to refuse to undergo any of these treatments, tests, or procedures...Performing an operative procedure on a patient without the patient's permission can constitute "battery" under common law.  In most circumstances this is a criminal act...Such a refusal [of consent] may be based on religious beliefs, personal preference, or comfort.  --ACOG Committee Opinion #237, June 2000
Finally, access to midwifery care should be the right of every woman, but more and more hospitals, doctors, and insurance companies are closing down midwifery-friendly hospitals, phasing out nurse-midwifery practices, and trying to restrict/outlaw out-of-hospital midwifery.  Midwifery is a more economical choice and has equivalent or better outcomes for most women and babies....yet it is not available to many women, and some authorities are trying to actively cut off access for still more women.  This makes NO financial or ethical sense!

In particular, I would like to see the above systematic suggestions applied to women of size.  Women of size are routinely induced at extremely high rates, and are increasingly being denied access to VBACs and to midwifery care.  Let's see if restricting inductions, allowing (and encouraging!) VBACs, and expanding access to low-intervention midwifery care might lower the rate of cesareans in "obese" (and "extremely obese") women as well. 

If these suggestions work as systematic solutions for lowering the cesarean rate in all women, they should help lower the cesaran rate in women of size too.  Funny how folks have blinders on in applying these suggestions to "obese" women, though, eh?