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To address rising rates of cesarean delivery, the use of laborists (generally defined as obstetricians who exclusively cover inpatient labor and delivery) has grown. In a prospective cohort study, researchers at one community hospital assessed a collaborative model between in-hospital midwives and laborists and its effect on rates of cesarean delivery and vaginal birth after cesarean (VBAC) in 4884 births. Outcomes in a cohort of privately insured patients were compared before and after introduction of the laborist model.
Among the privately insured nulliparous women, primary cesarean rates dropped from 32% before introduction of the midwife–laborist model to 25% afterwards (adjusted odds ratio, 0.56; P=0.002), and VBAC rates rose from 13% t…