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C-section is no longer cutting edge

By Yang Wanli (China Daily) Updated: 2015-01-26 08:02

 

C-section is no longer cutting edge

New rules allow couples in China to have an extra baby if one partner is an only child. However, uterine damage as a result of a cesarean delivery, a common procedure in the country, poses a threat to further pregnancies. Liao Zhengyan / for China Daily

Changes to the rules governing family planning prompted hundreds of thousands of couples to register to have a second child, but a former reliance on cesarean deliveries is causing misery for many, as Yang Wanli reports.

Fang Yan should have had a baby in early July. It would have been the family's second child, conceived after Fang and her husband joined the 700,000 couples that registered to have another child following the 2014 announcement of amendments to China's family planning policy.

The new rules allow couples to have a second baby if one partner, like Fang's husband, is an only child. The

C-section is no longer cutting edge

couple, both 38, had their first child, a boy, three years ago. In October, they were overjoyed to learn that Fang was pregnant again.

However, bad news quickly followed good. Fang was diagnosed with a cesarean-scar pregnancy - a rare occurrence. The fertilized egg had become embedded in the scar from the cesarean she had at age 35. The situation could have been life-threatening, so Fang terminated the pregnancy.

"It's difficult to describe the sadness of losing this baby. My son was born via cesarean section because I was scared of the pain of a natural, first delivery, and also worried about potential problems I might encounter because of my age," she said in a choked voice. "Three years ago, we didn't plan to have another child because of the family planning policy, and we never imagined that a cesarean scar might be a bomb that would kill my second child."

Fang is not alone. In early January, He Rui, 31, who is also eligible to have a second child, was told that the scar from a cesarean she had four years ago was too thin and there was a potential risk of uterine rupture during pregnancy.

The 31-year-old had her first child, a girl, via a cesarean delivery because she and her husband wanted the baby to be born before Sept 1, and start school a year earlier. "We really wanted to have another child so our son won't grow up alone. The new policy could have made our dream come true. It's hard to accept that our dream has been destroyed by this scar," said He, from Kunming, the capital of the southwestern province of Yunnan.

Cesarean section accounts for about 47 percent of all births in China. That's the highest rate for the procedure worldwide - the recommended rate is less than 15 percent - according to a 2010 report by the World Health Organization. Statistics released at a national seminar in April indicated that nearly 25 percent of cesareans performed in China have no medical rationale.

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