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Commentary

The World Health Organization (WHO) previously recommended a population caesarean section rate of 10–15% to ensure mortality rates are kept low for mothers and babies.1 However in 2015, the WHO guidelines were revised. Caesarean section rates at population level can be determined by the type of hospital(s) in that particular area, for example, larger hospitals tend to receive referrals of most complicated pregnancies or deliveries which in turn, may need more caesarean sections. On the other hand, some small facilities may not even be equipped to conduct caesarean sections.2 The WHO recommends that, rather than a population-based estimate of caesarean section rate, the Robson classification (also called the 10-group classification) be used to evaluate and compare caesarean section rates between groups of women.1 3 The Robson classification allows the comparison of caesarean section rates amount births with similar clinical characteristics. This classification system groups women into 10 mutually exclusive groups based on obstetric characteristics, such as parity (number of previous pregnancies), onset of labour, whether there has been a previous caesarean section, and the baby’s gestational age.1

References

  1. Department of Reproductive Health and Research 2015. WHO statement on caesarean section rates. WHO/RHR/15.02. Geneva: WHO.
  2. WHO Statement on Caesarean Section Rates: Frequently asked questions http://www.who.int/reproductivehealth/topics/maternal_perinatal/faq-cs-section/en/
  3. Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care 2017. The Second Australian Atlas of Healthcare Variation. Sydney.

Chart

Caesarean section births by Robson classification groups, ACT mothers, 2010-2018

Data

To access the data, select "View source data" link at the bottom of the visualisation. This link will open up a data table that you can download.

Codes and sources

ACT Maternal Perinatal Data Collection

This page is managed by: ACT Health Directorate