We Kid You Not Childfree Forums

Full Version: Obese Mothers A Burden On Hospital Resources
You're currently viewing a stripped down version of our content. View the full version with proper formatting.
Obese Mothers A Burden On Hospital Resources
by ANEMONA HARTOCOLLIS
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/06/health...=nutrition

As Americans have grown fatter over the last generation, inviting more heart disease, diabetes and premature deaths, all that extra weight has also become a burden in the maternity ward, where babies take their first breath of life.

About one in five women are obese when they become pregnant, meaning they have a body mass index of at least 30, as would a 5-foot-5 woman weighing 180 pounds, according to researchers with the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. And medical evidence suggests that obesity might be contributing to record-high rates of Caesarean sections and leading to more birth defects and deaths for mothers and babies.

Hospitals, especially in poor neighborhoods, have been forced to adjust. They are buying longer surgical instruments, more sophisticated fetal testing machines and bigger beds. They are holding sensitivity training for staff members and counseling women about losing weight, or even having bariatric surgery, before they become pregnant.

At Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, where 38 percent of women giving birth are obese, Patricia Garcia had to be admitted after she had a stroke, part of a constellation of illnesses related to her weight, including diabetes and weak kidneys.

At seven months pregnant, she should have been feeling the thump of tiny feet against her belly. But as she lay flat in her hospital bed, doctors buzzing about, trying to stretch out her pregnancy day by precious day, Ms. Garcia, who had recently weighed in at 261 pounds, said she was too numb from water retention to feel anything.

On May 5, 11 weeks shy of her due date, a sonogram showed that the baby’s growth was lagging, and an emergency Caesarean was ordered.

She was given general anesthesia because her bulk made it hard to feel her spine to place a local anesthetic. Dr. Betsy Lantner, the obstetrician on call, stood on a stool so she could reach over Ms. Garcia’s belly. A flap of fat covered her bikini line, so the doctor had to make a higher incision. In an operation where every minute counted, it took four or five minutes, rather than the usual one or two, to pull out a 1-pound 11-ounce baby boy.

Studies have shown that babies born to obese women are nearly three times as likely to die within the first month of birth than women of normal weight, and that obese women are almost twice as likely to have a stillbirth.

About two out of three maternal deaths in New York State from 2003 to 2005 were associated with maternal obesity, according to the state-sponsored Safe Motherhood Initiative, which is analyzing more recent data.

Obese women are also more likely to have high blood pressure, diabetes, anesthesia complications, hemorrhage, blood clots and strokes during pregnancy and childbirth, data shows.

The problem has become so acute that five New York City hospitals — Beth Israel Medical Center and Mount Sinai Medical Center in Manhattan, Maimonides in Brooklyn and Montefiore Medical Center and Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center in the Bronx — have formed a consortium to figure out how to handle it. They are supported by their malpractice insurer and the United Hospital Fund, a research group.

One possibility is to create specialized centers for obese women. The centers would counsel them on nutrition and weight loss, and would be staffed to provide emergency Caesarean sections and intensive care for newborns, said Dr. Adam P. Buckley, an obstetrician and patient safety expert at Beth Israel Hospital North who is leading the group.

Very obese women, or those with a B.M.I. of 35 or higher, are three to four times as likely to deliver their first baby by Caesarean section as first-time mothers of normal weight, according to a study by the Consortium on Safe Labor of the National Institutes of Health.

While doctors are often on the defensive about whether Caesarean sections, which carry all the risks of surgery, are justified, Dr. Howard L. Minkoff, the chairman of obstetrics at Maimonides, said doctors must weigh those concerns against the potential complications from vaginal delivery in obese women. Typically, these include failing to progress in labor; diabetes in the mother, which can lead to birth complications; and difficulty monitoring fetal distress. “With obese women we are stuck between Scylla and Charybdis,” Dr. Minkoff said.

But even routine care, like finding a vein to take blood, can be harder through layers of fatty tissue.

And equipment can be a problem. Dr. Janice Henderson, an obstetrician for high-risk pregnancies at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore, described a recent meeting where doctors worried that the delivery room table might collapse under the weight of an obese patient.

At Maimonides, the perinatal unit threw away its old examining tables and replaced them with wider, sturdier ones. It bought ultrasound machines that make lifelike three-dimensional images early in pregnancy, when the fetus is still low in the uterus and less obscured by fat, but also less developed and thus harder to diagnose clearly. “You really need to use the best equipment, which is more expensive,” said Dr. Shoshana Haberman, the director of perinatal services.

Many experienced obstetricians complain that as Americans have grown larger, the perception of what constitutes obesity has shifted, leading to some complacency among doctors. At UMass Memorial Medical Center in Worcester, Mass., Dr. Tiffany A. Moore Simas, the associate director of the residency program in obstetrics, demands that residents calculate B.M.I. as a routine part of prenatal treatment. “It’s one of my siren songs,” Dr. Moore Simas said, “because we are very bad at eyeballing people.”

Dr. Haberman said there was obesity in her own family, and she had seen how hurtful even professionals could be. “We as a society have issues with the perception of obesity; anatomically, you get turned off,” she said.

So she was sympathetic to Ms. Garcia, making sure she got a room with a window, and calling to check on her after hours.

Ms. Garcia, 38, a former school bus dispatcher, is 5 feet tall. She said she had tried diets, weight-watching groups and joining a gym. She was 195 pounds before her pregnancy (B.M.I., 38) and ballooned to 261 pounds, which she attributed to water weight and inactivity.

“I’m the smallest one in my family,” she said. Her older brother weighed more than 700 pounds before having gastric bypass surgery.

She wiped tears away as she confessed that she worried that she might die and leave her baby without a mother.

At Ms. Garcia’s stage of pregnancy, every day in the womb was good for the baby but bad for the mother, Dr. Minkoff said. “She’s making a heroic decision to put her own self in peril for the sake of the child,” he said.

She survived, but was dismayed by the size of her son, Josiah Patrick, who had to be put on a breathing machine. At first she could see him only by remote video. But after a month, Josiah was off the ventilator, taking 15 milliliters of formula and had smiled at his mother, and doctors said he was where he should be developmentally for a preemie his age.

The hospital estimated that the cost of caring for the mother and baby would be more than $200,000, compared with $13,000 for a normal delivery.

Ms. Garcia promised Dr. Minkoff that she would lose weight and see her baby graduate from college. “I’m going on a strict, strict, strict diet,” she said. “I’m not going through this again.”
Be a heck of a lot easier to not get pregnant in the first place.

PrairieGirl

Quote:nd counseling women about losing weight, or even having bariatric surgery, before they become pregnant.

Umm....doesn't bariatric surgery lead to fewer nutrients being absorbed by the body? And then, doesn't it follow that the babies of women with bariatric surgery would not be as healthy anyway? Might as well just let them be fat, if they want a shot at a healthier baby -- seems to me a baby with nutrients is healthier than one without.

But then, I agree with eslbee's conclusion. Just don't have babies! -- or adopt one that's already here!
(06-30-2010 12:37 AM)kristin9924 Wrote: [ -> ]Studies have shown that babies born to obese women are nearly three times as likely to die within the first month of birth than women of normal weight, and that obese women are almost twice as likely to have a stillbirth.

About two out of three maternal deaths in New York State from 2003 to 2005 were associated with maternal obesity, according to the state-sponsored Safe Motherhood Initiative, which is analyzing more recent data.

Obese women are also more likely to have high blood pressure, diabetes, anesthesia complications, hemorrhage, blood clots and strokes during pregnancy and childbirth, data shows.

That's incredible. I wonder if the doctors are really counseling these women about the dangers or if they just figure that the women won't change no matter what.

Too bad Jillian Michaels can't clone herself about 1,000 times!
Cats, I don't think it's that the doctors don't try, it's more a case of the doctors know that they'll be screamed at for daring to say my infamous phrase of "Drop the fork!" because of course obesity is never anyone's fault. Pregnancy is just an excuse to eat for two.

PrairieGirl

"Drop the fork" and "Jillian Michaels" is overly simplistic, but I know better than to get into it with thin people. They think that's all it takes.
We hate Jill. All she does is scream. I could never go on those shows because I won't let people talk to me that way. On our trip a young Euro-trasher was disrespectful to BJ and I told him off. You don't get to do that.
There are several types of bariatric surgery.. not all of them prevent the absorption of nutrients.

And I agree with PrairieGirl.. people are made with all different types of metabolisms.. some people just can't get thin easily. Obviously you shouldn't eat 3000 calories a day, but I've been eating 1300 calories a day or less for 3 years (thanks to a bariatric surgery) and can't get below 200lbs. I did lose 100lbs initially but I can't get any lower. I just accept myself now, but I'll never accept other people's judgmental nature.
The author should've included another type of mother that's a burden on hospital resources. It's the women who decide that they absolutely must have a kid when they're in their late 40's, 50's and 60's and spend an endless amount of money on IVF. I would think the risks are just as high as overly obese women popping out kids. The same with multi-breeders like the octomom who pop out baby after baby like an assembly line.
Fertility treatments disgust me.

Instead of adopting, it's all about vanity. It's all about having "their" child. All that money and medical resources being wasted when so many kids are in homes.
I'm with Eddy. As all intelligent people know, we share 98.5% of our DNA with chimps. So how "different" can individual human DNA possibly be?
Why are people so full of themselves? I actually had someone ask how I could "stand the idea" that the next generation would go on without a 'piece' of me in it! I told them that, as an educator, I do a lot more for the next generation than any loser parent would!
(07-01-2010 11:48 AM)Dog Holliday Wrote: [ -> ]The author should've included another type of mother that's a burden on hospital resources. It's the women who decide that they absolutely must have a kid when they're in their late 40's, 50's and 60's and spend an endless amount of money on IVF. I would think the risks are just as high as overly obese women popping out kids. The same with multi-breeders like the octomom who pop out baby after baby like an assembly line.

Excellent point.

Add to drags on the system men who have 8 or 10 kids from all different women and never work a real job one day in their sorry-ass life. Seems like every time someone is arrested for drugs or shot in a drug crime around here it's some guy in his 20s who already has fathered numerous kids, all with different last names. But I digress. Smile
Reference URL's