- my iParenting

- quick clicks
- pregnancy today articles
- pregnancy today q&a
- message boards
- research baby names
- prepare a birth plan
- content channels
- ip channel rss feeds
- read birth stories
- read parenting stories
- recommended books
- e-newsletters
- safety recalls
- ip diaries
- ip store
- mom of the month
- dad of the month
- editor's letter
- letters to the editor
- e-newsletters
- Sign up to receive our free weekly e-newsletters
- award-winning products
The iParenting Media Awards program helps parents find the best products for their families.

The Pros and Cons of VBAC
An Updated Look at Vaginal Birth After Cesarean
By Lisa A. Goldstein
After enduring 44 hours of labor with her first child, when Mistie Thompson finally began to push, the baby crowned almost immediately. But after two hours of pushing and an attempted vacuum extraction, she didn't budge. The baby was delivered by C-section, during which the epidural didn't work properly, so Thompson was given Versed. She woke up in recovery having no idea what happened.
"I was determined to have a different experience with my next child," says Thompson, a St. Louis, Mo., resident. "Or at least, to actually remember my child's birth!" Because of this, she did an enormous amount of research about VBAC, or vaginal birth after Cesarean.
In 1999, the position was revised to say "...because uterine rupture may be catastrophic, VBAC should be attempted in institutions equipped to respond to emergencies with physicians immediately available to provide emergency care."
An increasing number of studies have shown that a woman's risk of a ruptured uterus during a VBAC is about three-quarters of 1 percent, or seven out of every 1,000 cases, says Tina Cassidy, a Boston-based author of Birth: The Surprising History of How We Are Born (Atlantic Monthly Press, 2006), which addresses the VBAC issue in detail. If the uterus ruptures, there's a 5 percent chance the fetus will suffer oxygen deprivation or death. The risk of the mother dying is even lower. "Not particularly shocking data, but it's plenty worrying to obstetricians, who expect to eventually contend with a complication, and therefore, a lawsuit," Cassidy says.
Want to see more?
Comments
There are no comments for this article yet.Be the first to 
|
Post As:
|
||
| Enter your comment below: | ||
| Title | ||
| Comment Text | ||
| CAPTCHA | ||
| Please note that any comments submitted become the property of Disney Family / iParenting and can be edited and posted at our discrection. | ||


