Factors associated with cesarean delivery in adult nulliparous women

Authors

  • Maria Cristina Antunes Willemann Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina Author
  • Célia Adriana Nicolotti Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina Author
  • Tatiane Baratieri Universidade Estadual do Centro-Oeste Author
  • Emil Kupek Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4025/actascihealthsci.v43i1.53083

Keywords:

maternal health; cesarean section; natural childbirth.

Abstract

The aim of this study was to analyze the sociodemographic factors associated with cesarean section in adult women with conditions favorable for normal delivery and to identify the groups most likely to undergo this surgery in the state of Santa Catarina (SC). A case control study with microdata from the Sistema de Informação de Nascidos Vivos on 7,065 women for 2016 in SC. A relationship between cesarean section and sociodemographic variables was analyzed by logistic regression where we calculated the Adjusted Odds Ratio (AOR), confidence interval and p-value. The probability of cesarean section for each group of women (called "interaction") was also calculated. Among women with more favorable conditions for normal childbirth, the prevalence of cesarean section was 41.1%. Lower chance of cesarean section was found for women without partners (AOR: 0.79 [0.71-0.87]), up to 8 years of schooling (AOR: 0.56 [0.47-0.66]), with up to 2 prenatal visits (AOR: 0.46 [0.23-0.90]). The most likely group of women (51.4% [49.3-53.4]) to undergo cesarean section are women who perform 7 to 15 prenatal visits and have 12 or more years of schooling. A cesarean section occurs with women who have greater access to education and prenatal care and those who have partners, even though the aspects favor normal childbirth, suggesting that this does not seem to be a decision only by women.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2021-10-13

Issue

Section

Health Sciences

How to Cite

Factors associated with cesarean delivery in adult nulliparous women. (2021). Acta Scientiarum. Health Sciences, 43(1), e53083. https://doi.org/10.4025/actascihealthsci.v43i1.53083

Similar Articles

1-10 of 410

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

Most read articles by the same author(s)