Cesarean section in China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong—A safe choice for women and clinicians?

Mairead Black and Sohinee Bhattacharya discuss research findings on preferences for cesarean delivery in Asian settings and share their Perspective on facilitating woman-centered birth choices in China following the end of the one-child policy.


Socioeconomic factors for women and clinicians
Maternal preference for CS assessed in early pregnancy played a minor part in explaining rising CS trends, as previously found in countries with high CS rates [4]. However, interactions with healthcare providers during pregnancy emerge as a contributor towards 1 in 5 women in the third trimester preferring a CS birth. A further proportion appears to be explained by decisions made by clinicians. In keeping with evidence from Turkey-where in 83.1% of cases women described a plan for CS as being their obstetrician's decision-Long and colleagues identified that not only is CS perceived to reduce litigation risk but some clinicians in mainland China may be motivated to perform CS to increase financial revenue, even when this is in direct conflict with clinical guidance [5].
Economic growth and women's empowerment, known drivers of CS births in resourceconstrained settings, were important influences in mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan [6]. In addition to low birth rates and rising maternal age, their growing economies mean many women are financially independent-the cost of a CS birth in Taiwan equates to the average monthly income-making CS easily affordable [7]. These observations are relevant to other settings in which similar socioeconomic forces are at play and likely explain why introducing equal financial reward for CS and vaginal birth led to a lowered elective CS rate in Taiwan but no change in women's demand for CS [7].

CS as the 'safe' option and conducive to woman-centred care
Long and colleagues found that belief in the 'safety' of CS birth underpinned women's CS preferences in early pregnancy, not least when women felt they 'had one chance to get it right' under China's one-child policy. Women-clinician relationships were critical to evolving CS choices during pregnancy, in which loss of faith in a provider due to a perceived lack of woman-centred care led to CS requests in a bid to avoid negative intrapartum experiences. Multiple women described CS as the 'safe' choice for birth; quotes detailed CS as a means to avoid 'any risk' to their baby, whether 'immediate complications' or 'longer-term child-development' issues. Such perceptions of CS as being a safer birth option than aiming for vaginal birth are somewhat at odds with the 2015 World Health Organization's statement on CS, which cites maternal and offspring 'risk' associated with nonmedically indicated CS [8]. However, the practice of attributing greater risk to a single CS than to a single attempt to achieve vaginal birth has been challenged by research arising from mainland China. Utilising the combination of large population databases of birth-related events and a high CS-on-maternalrequest (CDMR) rate, researchers reported outcomes of over 66,000 first births in Shanghai between 2007 and 2013 [9]. Reduced offspring birth trauma, neonatal infection, meconium aspiration syndrome, and hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy followed CDMR, with no difference in risk of serious maternal complications when compared with a plan for vaginal birth. Offspring born by CDMR were more likely to experience respiratory-distress syndrome, in keeping with existing evidence on elective CS [10]. Overall, these findings suggests that, where women are certain of their plan to have only one child, those with similar characteristics in equivalent healthcare settings may be justified in choosing CS on safety grounds. Going forward, however, families and clinicians in mainland China should be aware that with the recent removal of China's one-child policy, apparently well-informed birth plans may become invalid when a previously unplanned future pregnancy arises. Adverse consequences of a previous CS such as abnormally adherent placenta and CS scar rupture are rare but can be devastating and so should be weighed up against potential benefits of the initial CS.
Long and colleagues aimed to identify mechanisms through which unnecessary CS may be reduced in mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan, where 'unnecessary' is defined as 'not clinically indicated'. However, as their study demonstrates, some women choose CS based on their own beliefs and value judgements, not the judgement of their clinician, such that the overall study aim risks undermining the importance of women's preferences. Instead of strategies to lower CS rates per se, efforts should move towards ensuring that women who prefer vaginal birth feel safe to aim for this mode of delivery in collaboration with their providers and that financial incentives for clinicians are equal for CS and vaginal birth. The agenda to lower CS rates appears to be driven by WHO's position statement, which cites a lack of evidence for reduction in maternal and infant mortality at the population level for CS rates above 10%-15% [8]. However, the WHO statement does not reflect the quality-of-life outcomes that appear to be important to women in mainland China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong such as birth experience and sexual function. Long and colleagues' findings demonstrate that women and clinicians in these settings who plan CS may be voting with their feet to optimise both perceived safety and quality-of-life outcomes. In the United Kingdom and Singapore, where recent person-centred legal developments mean that informed consent to give birth requires that women are informed of (1) risks she considers to be important and (2) reasonable available options, decisions for CS based upon quality-of-life outcomes appear legitimate yet highlight the gulf between WHO priorities (saving lives) and those of women and clinicians making individual birth plans [11,12].

China's importance in future research
It is clear from the work of Long and others that China's recent one-child policy has affected attitudes towards CS birth, and the end to the policy demands a fresh look at how future pregnancy and long-term outcomes of CS birth are studied and shared with women. Information about the cumulative and long-term risks and benefits of a planned CS across more than one pregnancy are sadly lacking. China is in a strong position to use its high CDMR rates and its population-based birth registries to support studies of birth outcomes beyond mortality and to engage with women to identify outcomes that are important to them. Such a truly woman-centred approach would facilitate birth choices being made in the full knowledge of the balance of risks and benefits.