top of page

These hospitals figured out how to slash C-section rates

  • Writer: The San Juan Daily Star
    The San Juan Daily Star
  • 4 hours ago
  • 4 min read
A nurse monitors a fetal heart rate at Rochester General Hospital in Rochester, N.Y., on Nov. 13, 2025. While C-sections for first-time mothers ticked up across the U.S. in recent years, Rochester General Hospital dropped its rate dramatically. (Lauren Petracca/The New York Times)
A nurse monitors a fetal heart rate at Rochester General Hospital in Rochester, N.Y., on Nov. 13, 2025. While C-sections for first-time mothers ticked up across the U.S. in recent years, Rochester General Hospital dropped its rate dramatically. (Lauren Petracca/The New York Times)

By SARAH KLIFF and BIANCA PALLARO


When Dr. Elizabeth Bostock took over the obstetrics department at Rochester General Hospital in New York in 2019, she was alarmed by its high rate of C-sections: 40% of healthy, first-time mothers were delivering in operating rooms.


The figure was far higher than the 24% recommended by the federal government. When needed, the procedure can be lifesaving, but its overuse can prolong recovery, complicate future births and sometimes risk the mother’s life.


“Most of the worst disasters I’ve seen in my career — hemorrhages, sepsis — are related to C-sections,” Bostock said. “There is inherent risk in doing abdominal surgery.”


Bostock tried to tackle the problem through a series of discrete changes. In 2021, low-risk patients began getting routed to midwives. A new checklist in 2023 required various steps to promote vaginal delivery before surgery. Perhaps most important, she said, she had uncomfortable discussions with doctors about their individual surgery rates.


In the United States during that period, cesarean rates for first-time mothers ticked up. But Rochester General’s rate declined steadily and dramatically, reaching 25% this year.


That drop is among the steepest at the 1,600 hospitals that regularly report cesarean rates to the Leapfrog Group, a nonprofit that publishes metrics of hospital quality, according to a New York Times analysis of its most recent data.


Many doctors see rising C-section rates as an intractable problem. Some physicians point to women giving birth at older ages, with more complications like obesity and high blood pressure, and say the extra cesareans are inevitable.


But the success of Bostock and others shows that less surgery is possible when administrators are willing to confront the problem.


“Any hospital can do this,” said Rebecca Clark, a nursing professor who studies C-sections at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.


Maternity Care ‘Not All Objective’


In 2021, Clark published a paper showing that many fixed characteristics of a hospital — whether it was a tiny, rural facility, for example, or a bustling academic medical center — had no relationship to its C-section rate. Two factors that do matter, she and others have found, are an obstetrician’s pay and the doctor’s personal beliefs about the surgery.


Physicians and hospitals usually earn more money when they perform a cesarean, though it often requires less time. The average insurance payment to a hospital for a C-section is about $17,000. For vaginal delivery, it is just over $11,000. Studies have found that when insurers make the payments equal, surgeries decline.


Attitudes toward childbirth also affect surgery rates. For nearly a decade, Dr. Emily White VanGompel of the University of Illinois Chicago has surveyed staff members of maternity wards. She has repeatedly found that hospitals whose doctors and nurses have more negative, fearful views of childbirth have higher C-section rates.


“We need to look at the fact that it is not all objective medical decisions,” said Dr. Moeun Son, an obstetrician at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York City.


Surgery can even be a matter of time management preferences. In 2020, Son and other researchers analyzed the medical records of more than 115,000 women at 25 hospitals who had tried to have a natural labor. The researchers wanted to know whether the time of day had any influence on whether an obstetrician opted for surgery.


If C-sections were medically warranted, then the procedures would happen evenly throughout the day. But the researchers found that C-sections clustered in the early evening. Doctors, it seemed, were avoiding late-night deliveries.


Some doctors contend that the country’s stubbornly high C-section rate is unlikely to change, given the underlying medical problems of mothers today.


“The amount of high-risk work we do has increased exponentially,” said Dr. Catherine Bernardini, who oversees the obstetrics department at Bryn Mawr Hospital in Pennsylvania, where the C-section rate has risen by around 11 percentage points since 2021. She attributed the change to women having babies later in life and with more health complications.


Others’ experiences suggest that some factors are within a doctor’s control.


Franciscan Health Olympia Fields in Illinois has dropped its C-section rate by one-third since 2019, hitting 20% this year. The hospital did so with surprisingly simple changes, said Joan Culver, director of patient care services.


In monthly meetings, Culver made doctors aware of their C-section rates compared with their peers’. She also hung “first little lamb” signs on the doors of first-time mothers’ rooms, reminding staff that such women usually needed more time.


“I went into this with some trepidation because the number had not moved in years,” Culver said. “But then we were able to drop it dramatically.”


Money, Midwives and Patience


Bostock oversees labor and delivery at five hospitals that are part of the Rochester Regional Health system. Three have substantially reduced their C-section rates since 2021, according to Leapfrog. Rochester General, a large teaching hospital that delivers about 1,800 babies a year, saw the biggest drop.


The hospital had reformed its payment system for obstetricians before Bostock took over, no longer paying doctors more for surgery than natural labor. In 2020, that policy was extended to the system’s other hospitals as well.


One obstetrician on her team, Dr. Paul Cabral, said that under the old system, money could sit in the back of his mind as the end of his shift drew near and a woman he’d spent hours caring for had not yet delivered.


“I’m going to go home and somebody else is going to receive the financial reward,” he remembered thinking. Now, he said, that doesn’t happen. “You’re ending up being a little more comfortable around not doing a C-section.”


In 2021, Bostock began automatically routing low-risk patients into midwifery care. And last year, she gave midwives their own department within the hospital system, allowing them to make their own decisions about how they practice, rather than being overseen by obstetricians.

1 Comment


choi seung ju
choi seung ju
3 hours ago

The valuable articles and works you provide on your site have left a deep impression on me. I believe many visitors will find the same wealth of information and positive energy I did. Your work is valuable and worthwhile. Your writing will undoubtedly bring about a significant and positive change in someone.

For your reference, I recommend this site, where you can find massage tips, including self-massage techniques, and information about professional massage therapists for those experiencing headaches and back pain due to prolonged computer work and poor posture. 건강 마사지

Like

Looking for more information?
Get in touch with us today.

Postal Address:

PO Box 6537 Caguas, PR 00726

Phone:

Phone:

logo

© 2025 The San Juan Daily Star - Puerto Rico

Privacy Policies

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
bottom of page