| Literature DB >> 32722668 |
Patrick S Moran1, Charles Normand2,3, Patricia Gillen4, Francesca Wuytack1, Michael Turner5, Cecily Begley1, Deirdre Daly1.
Abstract
Caesarean section (CS) rates throughout Europe have risen significantly over the last two decades. As well as being an important clinical issue, these changes in mode of birth may have substantial resource implications. Policy initiatives to curb this rise have had to contend with the multiplier effect of women who had a CS for their first birth having a greater likelihood of requiring one during subsequent births, thus making it difficult to decrease CS rates in the short term. Our study examines the long-term resource implications of reducing CS rates among first-time mothers, as well as improving rates of vaginal birth after caesarean section (VBAC), among an annual cohort of women over the course of their most active childbearing years (18 to 44 years) in two public health systems in Europe. We found that the economic benefit of improvements in these two outcomes is considerable, with the net present value of the savings associated with a five-percentage-point change in nulliparous CS rates and VBAC rates being €1.1million and £9.8million per annual cohort of 18-year-olds in Ireland and England/Wales, respectively. Reductions in CS rates among first-time mothers are associated with a greater payoff than comparable increases in VBAC rates. The net present value of achieving CS rates comparable to those currently observed in the best performing Scandinavian countries was €3.5M and £23.0M per annual cohort in Ireland and England/Wales, respectively.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32722668 PMCID: PMC7386590 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0228309
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Decision tree model structure.
CS caesarean section; VAG vaginal birth; CFR completed fertility rate; para parity.
Model parameters.
| Parameter | Ireland | England & Wales | Distribution | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Probability of having a caesarean section for 1st baby | 0.33 | 0.28 | N/A | Euro- Peristat 2018 [ |
| Probability of having a CS after previous vaginal birth | 0.20 | 0.24 | N/A | |
| Probability of having a vaginal birth after previous CS (VBAC) | 0.22 | 0.27 | N/A | |
| Cost of uncomplicated CS | €3,272 | £3,200 | Gamma | HSE/NHS [ |
| Cost of vaginal birth | €2,489 | £2,478 | Gamma | |
| Probability of having 0 children | 0.18 | 0.18 | Beta | CSO/ONS [ |
| Probability of having 1 child | 0.13 | 0.18 | Beta | |
| Probability of having 2 children | 0.31 | 0.37 | Beta | |
| Probability of having 3 children | 0.23 | 0.17 | Beta | |
| Probability of having 4 or more children | 0.14 | 0.10 | Beta | |
| Mean (SD) age when having baby 1 | 30.4 (5.5) | 28.8 (5.9) | Normal | CSO/ONS [ |
| Mean (SD) age when having baby 2 | 32.6 (4.9) | 31 (5.5) | Normal | |
| Mean (SD) age when having baby 3 | 34.0 (4.5) | 32 (5.2) | Normal | |
| Mean (SD) age when having baby 4 | 34.5 (4.6) | 33 (5.0) | Normal | |
| Cohort size | 29,204 | 325,315 | N/A | CSO/ONS [ |
* Parameter uncertainty examined using deterministic sensitivity analysis rather than Monte Carlo simulation
** Data from Northern Ireland
*** adjusted for multiple pregnancy and cumulative mortality rate, N/A Not applicable, SD Standard Deviation; CS caesarean section, HSE Health Service Executive, NHS National Health Service, CSO Central Statistics Office (Ireland), ONS Office of National Statistics (UK)
Impact of reducing CS rates on hospital costs and number of CSs in Ireland.
| Change in costs (Euro) | Absolute change in VBAC rate | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.00% | 2.50% | 5.00% | 7.50% | 10.00% | ||
| Absolute change in nulliparous CS rate | 0.00% | 0 | -104,958 | -209,916 | -314,875 | -419,833 |
| -2.50% | -444,239 | -542,719 | -641,198 | -739,677 | -838,157 | |
| -5.00% | -888,478 | -980,479 | -1,072,480 | -1,164,480 | -1,256,481 | |
| -7.50% | -1,332,717 | -1,418,239 | -1,503,761 | -1,589,283 | -1,674,805 | |
| -10.00% | -1,776,956 | -1,856,000 | -1,935,043 | -2,014,086 | -2,093,129 | |
VBAC vaginal birth after caesarean, CS caesarean section
Impact of reducing CS rates on hospital costs in England & Wales.
| Change in costs (Pound sterling) | Absolute change in VBAC rate | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.00% | 2.50% | 5.00% | 7.50% | 10.00% | ||
| Absolute change in nulliparous CS rate | 0.00% | 0 | -788,306 | -1,576,612 | -2,364,918 | -3,153,224 |
| -2.50% | -4,244,922 | -4,977,282 | -5,709,642 | -6,442,002 | -7,174,363 | |
| -5.00% | -8,489,844 | -9,166,258 | -9,842,672 | -10,519,087 | -11,195,501 | |
| -7.50% | -12,734,765 | -13,355,234 | -13,975,702 | -14,596,171 | -15,216,639 | |
| -10.00% | -16,979,687 | -17,544,210 | -18,108,732 | -18,673,255 | -19,237,777 | |
VBAC vaginal birth after caesarean, CS caesarean section
Changes in costs and overall CS rates by achieving European-best levels of primiparous-CS and VBAC rates.
| Ireland | England/Wales | |
|---|---|---|
| -13 percentage points | -9 percentage points | |
| -€3,538,152 | -£23,030,672 |
CS caesarean section, 1 change in overall CS rate associated with specified changes in primipara CS rates and VBAC rates combined, 2 Net present value of cost savings among annual cohort of 18-year-old females
Fig 2Probabilistic sensitivity analysis of changes in costs by achieving European-best levels of primiparous-CS and VBAC rates.
CS caesarean section, VBAC vaginal birth after caesarean.