Physician contribution to a cesarean delivery risk model
- PMID: 12824996
- DOI: 10.1067/mob.2003.389
Physician contribution to a cesarean delivery risk model
Abstract
Objective: The purpose of this study was to assess the contribution of physician management to the probability of cesarean delivery.
Study design: A prospective cohort study was performed of all live births who weighed > or =500 g for a 2-year period (1999-2000) at a large metropolitan hospital (n = 10,027 births). Factors that were associated significantly with cesarean delivery at one time excluded cases in which cesarean delivery was a necessary or probable outcome. In the planned vaginal delivery sample (n = 7940 births), a risk-adjusted logistic regression model was used to assess the prediction of cesarean delivery. To test for the effect of physician-management physician, we used the subset of physicians with > or =45 deliveries in the 2-year time period (n = 6563 deliveries).
Results: When physician-management physician data were added to the use of forward stepwise regression, entry order was abnormal position, nulliparity, birth weight of >4000 g, and physician. The model's predictive ability improved from 43.8% to 50.2%.
Conclusion: Physician management adds a significant independent effect to the cesarean delivery risk model.
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