Cesarean section rate differences by migration indicators |
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Authors: | Anita J. Gagnon Andrea Van Hulst Lisa Merry Anne George Jean-François Saucier Elizabeth Stanger Olive Wahoush Donna E. Stewart |
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Affiliation: | 1. Ingram School of Nursing and Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, McGill University, Montreal, Canada 2. Women’s Health Mission, McGill University Health Center, 2155 Guy St, Suite 400-7, Montreal, QC, H3H 2R9, Canada 4. Université de Montréal, Montreal, Canada 3. Ingram School of Nursing, McGill University, Montreal, Canada 5. University of British Columbia, Prince George, Canada 6. Centre Hospitalier universitaire de mère enfant, L’H?pital Sainte-Justine, Montreal, Canada 7. Vancouver Coastal Health, Vancouver, Canada 8. McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada 10. University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada 9. University Health Network, Toronto, Canada
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Abstract: | ![]()
Purpose To answer the question: are there differences in cesarean section rates among childbearing women in Canada according to selected migration indicators? Methods Secondary analyses of 3,500 low-risk women who had given birth between January 2003 and April 2004 in one of ten hospitals in the major Canadian migrant-receiving cities (Montreal, Toronto, Vancouver) were conducted. Women were categorized as non-refugee immigrant, asylum seeker, refugee, or Canadian-born and by source country world region. Stratified analyses were performed. Results Cesarean section rates differed by migration status for women from two source regions: South East and Central Asia (non-refugee immigrants 26.0 %, asylum seekers 28.6 %, refugees 56.7 %, p = 0.001) and Latin America (non-refugee immigrants 37.7 %, asylum seekers 25.6 %, refugees 10.5 %, p = 0.05). Of these, low-risk refugee women who had migrated to Canada from South East and Central Asia experienced excess cesarean sections, while refugees from Latin America experienced fewer, compared to Canadian-born (25.4 %, 95 % CI 23.8–27.3). Cesarean section rates of African women were consistently high (31–33 %) irrespective of their migration status but were not statistically different from Canadian-born women. Although it did not reach statistical significance, risk for cesarean sections also differed by time since migration (≤2 years 29.8 %, >2 years 47.2 %). Conclusion Migration status, source region, and time since migration are informative migration indicators for cesarean section risk. |
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