Women’s Preferences of Method of Delivery and Influencing Factors

Type Journal Article - Iranian Red Crescent Medical Journal
Title Women’s Preferences of Method of Delivery and Influencing Factors
Author(s)
Volume 15
Issue 8
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2013
Page numbers 683
URL http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3918192/
Abstract
Background

Currently, the rate of caesarean section has been substantially increased in developing and developed countries. To determine the factors causing such an increase, it is important to determine reasons for women to refuse vaginal delivery and preferring caesarean section.

Objectives

To determine Turkish women’s attitudes and basal knowledge regarding vaginal delivery and caesarean section, as well as factors causing women to prefer caesarean section even when a medical indication does not exist.

Patients and Methods

This descriptive study consisted of 840 women, completing the questionnaire developed by the researchers.

Results

Mean age rate of participants was 39.8 ± 11.8 years. The most significant reasons of vaginal delivery preferred by participants (n = 685) were determined to be healthy and swift recovery period after delivery, whereas those preferred by participants (n=155) for caesarean section were being safer for babies, easier than vaginal delivery and a less painful method. Higher educational status, pregnancy after infertility treatment and undergoing caesarean section for the last delivery were determined to be among important factors affecting to choose caesarean section.

Conclusions

Information gained misleadingly and fears related to vaginal delivery were seen as factors affecting women’s preferences for delivery. Thus, midwives are required to train both pregnant women during antenatal care and all women in society about methods of delivery and to give effective counseling.

Related studies

»