Women's Health Risks
Associated with Orthodox Medicine - Part 1
by Gary Null, PhD, Debora Rasio, MD, and Martin Feldman, MD
During the past century, a medical establishment has evolved that has positioned
itself as the exclusive provider of so-called scientific, evidence-based therapies.
For the first 70 years of the 20th century, little effort was made to challenge
the establishment’s paradigm, which we call the orthodox medical approach.
In the past 30 years, however, there has been a growing awareness of the importance
of an alternative approach to medical care, one that, either on its own or
as a complement to orthodox medicine, emphasizes nontoxic and noninvasive treatments
and prevention.
Unfortunately,
this new perspective has been fought vigorously. We’ve been told that
it is only the treatments of orthodox medicine that have passed careful scientific
scrutiny involving double-blind placebo-controlled studies. We’ve also
been told that alternative or complementary health care does not have any science
to back it up, only anecdotal evidence. These two ideas have led to the widely
accepted “truths” that anyone offering an alternative or complementary
approach is depriving patients of the proven benefits of safe and effective
care, and that people not only do not get well with alternative care but actually
are endangered by it.
With this report, we question the status quo in one area of orthodox medicine:
practices related to women’s health. Our review of the medical literature
shows that the safety and effectiveness of many orthodox treatments cannot
be assumed. We present dozens of research summaries which reveal that conventional
treatments may not deliver the expected benefits or may be associated with
an increased risk of various health disorders.
This review will be presented in three parts, covering topics ranging from
the use of oral contraceptives to surgical practices such as hysterectomies
and cesarean sections. In Part 1, we focus on antenatal care, fetal heart monitoring,
home versus hospital deliveries, and breast-feeding versus formula feeding.
Note that all of the studies included in this report come from mainstream medicine’s
own respected journals, such as the Journal of the American Medical Association and The
Lancet. There is nothing subjective or political about the conclusions
drawn here. The criticism of various therapies in this series comes not from
the “alternative” world but from the very heart of orthodox medicine
itself.
The journal articles speak for themselves. We are a society that claims to
live by the gold standard of scientific research, but this report shows that
statement to be at odds with reality. It shows that we routinely cause iatrogenic
conditions and unnecessary suffering—as well as waste vast sums of money—through
a systemic negligence of the facts. This situation must be challenged and remedied.
Antenatal Care
If you assume that more prenatal care equals better pregnancy outcomes,
the following research reports may come as a surprise. Several studies have
found that fewer prenatal visits to the doctor or fewer medical procedures
resulted in similar or better outcomes than more visits or more care.1-2
Other studies show that routine ultrasound screening of low-risk women
does not translate to improved health in newborns.3-4 And when it comes to
detecting cases of Down’s syndrome, traditional screening by ultrasound
and maternal age is just as effective as the more costly method of blood
serum screening.5
The results of this study, conducted on over 57,000 women, show that those
who received the most amount of prenatal care by their physicians had the worst
pregnancy outcomes and the highest rate of cesarean sections and induced labor.
—Gissler M, Hemminki E, Amount of antenatal care and infant outcome. Eur
J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol 1994 Jul; 56(1):9-14.
The results of this study show that the introduction of a new program of prenatal
care consisting of an average of 2.7 fewer than usual prenatal visits was associated
with maternal and infant outcomes that were similar to those of women receiving
standard number of prenatal visits.
—McDuffie RS Jr, Beck A, Bischoff K, Cross J, Orleans M, Effect of frequency
of prenatal care visits on perinatal outcome among low-risk women. A randomized
controlled trial. JAMA 1996 Mar 20; 275(11):847-51.
This randomized study, conducted on approximately 16,000 women in Zimbabwe,
evaluated the effects of a new prenatal program for pregnant women consisting
of fewer physician visits (an average of 4 instead of 6 visits), and fewer
medical procedures per visit, on maternal and infant outcomes. Women who received
less prenatal visits and less medical procedures had significantly lower risk
of delivering preterm babies and of experiencing severe hypertension and eclampsia.
Other outcomes were similar in the two groups.
—Munjanja SP, Lindmark G, Nystrom L, Randomised controlled trial of a
reduced-visits programme of antenatal care in Harare, Zimbabwe. Lancet 1996
Aug 10; 348(9024):364-9.
The results of this study show that routine ultrasound screening during pregnancy
is not associated with improved newborn health. The study was conducted on
15,151 low-risk pregnant women randomized into two groups. Women in the first
group received two ultrasound tests during their pregnancy, those in the second
group received an ultrasound scan only if their doctor saw a specific medical
need for the exam. No differences in perinatal outcome were detected between
the two groups, indicating that routine ultrasound screening in low-risk women
may increase health care costs without improving the health of women and their
newborns.
—Ewigman BG, Crane JP, Frigoletto FD, LeFevre ML, Bain RP, McNellis D,
Effect of prenatal ultrasound screening on perinatal outcome. RADIUS Study
Group. N Engl J Med 1993 Sep 16; 329(12):821-7.
The results of this study show that routine ultrasonographic screening in low-risk
pregnant women is not associated with higher rates of abortion for congenital
anomalies or with improved health outcomes of infants born with treatable malformations.
—Crane JP, et al., A randomized trial of prenatal ultrasonographic screening:
impact on the detection, management, and outcome of anomalous fetuses. The
RADIUS Study Group. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1994 Aug; 171(2):392-9.
The results of this study show that blood serum screening, introduced as the
most effective screening method for Down’s syndrome since 1993, is no
more effective than traditional screening by ultrasound and maternal age at
detecting cases of Down’s syndrome, and is significantly more costly.
The retrospective study was conducted on all women who gave birth at one institution
in the period 1993 to 1998. Overall, there were 31,259 deliveries, including
53 cases of Down’s syndrome. The traditional method of screening using
maternal age in combination with ultrasound scans detected 68% cases of Down’s
syndrome, corresponding to the same effectiveness of screening through blood
markers. Traditional screening has been replaced by blood screening based on
the unverified assumption that traditional screening could only detect one-third
of Down’s cases. This study, however, demonstrates that the benefits
of blood screening may be much less than supposed, and undermines the costs-benefit
arguments for it.
—DT Howe, et al., Six year survey of screening for Down's syndrome
by maternal age and mid-trimester ultrasound scans. BMJ 2000; 320:606-610
(4 March).
Fetal Heart Monitoring
Electronic monitoring of fetal heart rates gets a negative report card
from the research presented here in terms of its ability to improve fetal
outcomes. These studies suggest that the practice is unnecessary and perhaps
harmful.
One study found that fetal heart monitoring does not lead to a reduced
incidence of neurological complications or perinatal mortality,6 while another
found that premature babies monitored electronically have a worse neurological
outcome than those monitored with periodic auscultation.7
Electronic
fetal monitoring also is associated with an increased rate of cesarean deliveries
and a low Apgar score,8 which is a numerical rating of a baby’s health
immediately after delivery.
This article emphasizes that, despite early results from uncontrolled trials
documenting the beneficial effects of fetal monitoring, randomized trials have
consistently failed to demonstrate its efficacy in improving fetal outcome.
Electronic monitoring of fetal-heart rates does not result in a decreased incidence
of neurological complications or perinatal mortality and is, therefore, unnecessary.
—Kaiser G, Do electronic fetal heart rate monitors improve delivery outcomes? J
Fla Med Assoc 1991 May; 78(5):303-7.
This article presents evidence from randomized controlled trials indicating
that fetal heart rate monitoring does not improve fetal outcome, and its use
is therefore unjustified.
—Parer JT, King T, Fetal heart rate monitoring: is it salvageable? Am
J Obstet Gynecol 2000 Apr; 182(4):982-7.
The results of this study indicate that premature babies who undergo electronic
fetal heart rate monitoring have a worse neurological outcome, compared to
those monitored with periodic auscultation. In the study, 189 premature babies
were randomly assigned to either electronic fetal monitoring or periodic auscultation.
Neurological assessment performed at the age of 4, 8, and 18 months revealed
that babies monitored electronically had lower mental- and psychomotor-development
scores, compared to those monitored by periodic auscultation. In addition,
babies who underwent electronic monitoring had a 2.5-fold increased incidence
of cerebral palsy, compared to those followed by auscultation. Median time
to delivery after the recognition of an abnormal heart rate pattern was 104
minutes in babies monitored electronically and 60 minutes in those monitored
by auscultation. These data indicate that fetal heart monitoring is ineffective
in improving neurological outcome in prematurely born babies, and its use may
be associated with harm.
—Shy KK, et al., Effects of electronic fetal-heart-rate monitoring, as
compared with periodic auscultation, on the neurologic development of premature
infants. N Engl J Med 1990 Mar 1; 322(9):588-93.
The results of this study show that electronic fetal monitoring does not improve
delivery outcome, while being associated with an increased rate of cesarean
deliveries and low Apgar score.
—McCusker J, Harris DR, Hosmer DW Jr., Association of electronic fetal
monitoring during labor with Cesarean section rate and with neonatal morbidity
and mortality. Am J Public Health 1988 Sep; 78(9):1170-4.
Home Versus Hospital Delivery
The medical literature offers some encouraging news about the option of delivering
at home. A handful of studies, most published since 1995, attest to the safety
and effectiveness of home deliveries.
These
studies attribute a variety of positive results to midwife-managed care. In
one study, the risk of infant and neonatal death and the likelihood of delivering
a low-birth-weight baby were lower in midwife-attended births, compared with
physician-attended births.9 Another study found that women in midwife-attended
deliveries were less likely to undergo a cesarean section and that fewer diagnoses
of fetal distress were made.10
In total,
the studies point to less intervention in midwife-assisted deliveries. A 1996
study in The Lancet found that labor was initiated less often in women
attended by midwives only than in women attended by physicians and midwives.
Significantly more women were satisfied with the midwife-managed care than
with the care managed by a physician and midwife.11
The results of this study show that the pregnancy outcome of women who delivered
their first baby at home is as good as that of women who gave birth to their
first baby in the hospital. On the other hand, women who gave birth to at least
one child and planned to deliver at home had significantly better pregnancy
outcomes than those who planned to deliver in the hospital, indicating that
home delivery is as safe, or safer, than hospital delivery.
—Wiegers TA, Keirse MJ, van der Zee J, Berghs GA, Outcome of planned
home and planned hospital births in low risk pregnancies: prospective study
in midwifery practices in The Netherlands. BMJ 1996 Nov 23; 313(7068):1309-13.
This letter was written in reply to an article published on the Times of May
20, describing hospital delivery as being 3 times safer than home delivery.
The letter emphasizes that the author of the Times article compared data from
different countries to reach his conclusions, although data were actually not
comparable. Evaluation of the National Birthday Trust survey of home births
in the U.K., a certainly more appropriate approach to the question of safety
of home versus hospital delivery, shows that within a group formed by 3,896
women who delivered at home, there was only one neonatal death (occurring from
0 to 27 days after birth) and no stillbirths, compared to 2 neonatal deaths
and 2 stillbirths in a control group of similar, low-risk women who delivered
in the hospital. The author concludes that there is no evidence indicating
that home delivery carries more risk than hospital delivery in properly screened
women. The letter emphasizes that women should receive accurate, up-to-date
information, so that they may properly choose between home and hospital delivery.
—Chamberlain G, Choosing between home and hospital delivery. Risk of
home birth in Britain cannot be compared with data from other countries. Letter. BMJ 2000;
320:798 (18 March).
This randomized study, conducted on 1,299 low-risk pregnant women, evaluated
pregnancy outcome in women attended by midwives only, or by a combination of
midwives, hospital doctors and general physicians. Labor was initiated significantly
more often in women followed by physicians and midwives than in those followed
by midwives only (33.3% vs. 23.9% of cases). Women attended only by midwives
were more likely to have an intact perineum and less likely to undergo episiotomy
(surgical enlargement of the vulval orifice during delivery). Perineal tears
and rate of complications were similar in the two groups. Significantly more
women expressed satisfaction with the midwife-managed care than with the physician-midwife
managed care.
—Turnbull D, et al., Randomised, controlled trial of efficacy of midwife-managed
care. Lancet 1996 Jul 27; 348(9022):213-8.
The results of this study, conducted on all women who in 1991 delivered by
the vaginal route a single baby at 35-43 weeks gestation, show that the risk
of infant and neonatal death is 19% and 33% lower, respectively, in midwife-attended
births compared to physician-attended births. The likelihood of delivering
a low-birth-weight infant is 31% lower in midwife- versus physician-assisted
deliveries. These results suggest that delivery care provided by midwives may
be superior to that provided by physicians.
—MacDorman MF, Singh GK, Midwifery care, social and medical risk factors,
and birth outcomes in the USA. J Epidemiol Community Health 1998 May;
52(5):310-7.
The results of this study show that women attended by midwives are 30% less
likely to undergo cesarean section compared to those attended by physicians.
Furthermore, a diagnosis of fetal distress is made 50% less often in babies
delivered by midwives, compared to those delivered by physicians.
—Butler J, Abrams B, Parker J, Roberts JM, Laros RK Jr., Supportive nurse-midwife
care is associated with a reduced incidence of Cesarean section. Am J Obstet
Gynecol 1993 May; 168(5):1407-13.
The results of this study show that pregnancy outcomes in women whose pregnancy
has been followed by midwives are similar to those of women followed by obstetricians,
indicating that routine visits of low-risk pregnant women by obstetricians
are unnecessary. Women who experienced complications during labor were promptly
recognized by midwives and transferred to obstetrician care.
—Law YY, Lam KY, A randomized controlled trial comparing midwife-managed
care and obstetrician-managed care for women assessed to be at low risk in
the initial intrapartum period. J Obstet Gynaecol Res 1999 Apr; 25(2):107-12.
The results of this study show that pregnancy outcomes in women who choose
to deliver at home and are attended by midwives are similar to those of women
who choose to deliver in hospital and are attended by obstetricians. Women
who delivered at home received significantly less medication and fewer medical
interventions, compared to those who delivered in the hospital. In the case
of complications or suspected complications, women were transferred to the
hospital and were followed up by obstetricians.
—Ackermann-Liebrich U, et al., Home versus hospital deliveries: follow
up study of matched pairs for procedures and outcome. Zurich Study Team. BMJ 1996
Nov 23; 313(7068):1313-8.
References:
References:
1. McDuffie RS Jr, Beck A, Bischoff K, Cross J, Orleans M, Effect of frequency
of prenatal care visits on perinatal outcome among low-risk women. A randomized
controlled trial. JAMA 1996 Mar 20; 275(11):847-51.
2. Munjanja SP, Lindmark G, Nystrom L, Randomised controlled trial of a reduced-visits
programme of antenatal care in Harare, Zimbabwe. Lancet 1996 Aug 10;
348(9024):364-9.
3. Ewigman BG, Crane JP, Frigoletto FD, LeFevre ML, Bain RP, McNellis D, Effect
of prenatal ultrasound screening on perinatal outcome. RADIUS Study Group. N
Engl J Med 1993 Sep 16; 329(12):821-7.
4. Crane JP, et al., A randomized trial of prenatal ultrasonographic
screening: impact on the detection, management, and outcome of anomalous fetuses.
The RADIUS Study Group. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1994 Aug; 171(2):392-9.
5. DT Howe, et al., Six year survey of screening for
Down's syndrome by maternal age and mid-trimester ultrasound scans. BMJ 2000;
320:606-610 (4 March).
6. Kaiser G, Do electronic fetal heart rate monitors improve delivery outcomes? J
Fla Med Assoc 1991 May; 78(5):303-7.
7. Shy KK, et al., Effects of electronic fetal-heart-rate monitoring, as compared
with periodic auscultation, on the neurologic development of premature infants. N
Engl J Med 1990 Mar 1; 322(9):588-93.
8. McCusker J, Harris DR, Hosmer DW Jr., Association of electronic fetal monitoring
during labor with Cesarean section rate and with neonatal morbidity and mortality. Am
J Public Health 1988 Sep; 78(9):1170-4.
9. MacDorman MF, Singh GK, Midwifery care, social and medical risk factors,
and birth outcomes in the USA. J Epidemiol Community Health 1998 May;
52(5):310-7.
10. Butler J, Abrams B, Parker J, Roberts JM, Laros RK Jr., Supportive nurse-midwife
care is associated with a reduced incidence of Cesarean section. Am J Obstet
Gynecol 1993 May; 168(5):1407-13.
11. Turnbull D, et al., Randomised, controlled trial of efficacy of midwife-managed
care. Lancet 1996 Jul 27; 348(9022):213-8.
12. Taylor A, Violations of the international code of marketing of breast milk
substitutes: prevalence in four countries. BMJ 1998; 316:1117-1122
(11 April).
13. Lanting CI, Fidler V, Huisman M, Touwen BC, Boersma ER, Neurological differences
between 9-year-old children fed breast-milk or formula-milk as babies. Lancet 1994
Nov 12; 344(8933):1319-22.
14. Scariati PD, Grummer-Strawn LM, Fein SB, A longitudinal analysis of infant
morbidity and the extent of breastfeeding in the United States. Pediatrics 1997
Jun; 99(6):E5.
15. Chen Y, Yu SZ, Li WX, Artificial feeding and hospitalization in the first
18 months of life. Pediatrics 1988 Jan; 81(1):58-62.
16. Oddy WH, Holt PG, Sly PD, Read AW, Landau LI, Stanley FJ, Kendall GE, Burton
PR, Association between breast feeding and asthma in 6 year old children: findings
of a prospective birth cohort study. BMJ 1999 Sep 25; 319(7213):815-9.
17. Ravelli AC, van der Meulen JH, Osmond C, Barker DJ, Bleker OP, Infant feeding
and adult glucose tolerance, lipid profile, blood pressure, and obesity. Arch
Dis Child 2000 Mar; 82(3):248-52.
18. Verge CF, Howard NJ, Irwig L, Simpson JM, Mackerras D, Silink M, Environmental
factors in childhood IDDM. A population-based, case-control study. Diabetes
Care 1994 Dec; 17(12):1381-9.
19. Virtanen SM, Rasanen L, Aro A, Ylonen K, Lounamaa R, Tuomilehto J, Akerblom
HK, Feeding in infancy and the risk of type 1 diabetes mellitus in Finnish
children. The ‘Childhood Diabetes in Finland' Study Group. Diabet
Med 1992 Nov; 9(9):815-9.
20. Hypponen E, Kenward MG, Virtanen SM, Piitulainen A, Virta-Autio P, et al.,
Infant feeding, early weight gain, and risk of type 1 diabetes. Childhood Diabetes
in Finland (DiMe) Study Group. Diabetes Care 1999 Dec; 22(12):1961-5.
21. Fallot ME, Boyd JL 3d, Oski FA, Breast-feeding reduces incidence of hospital
admissions for infection in infants. Pediatrics 1980 Jun; 65(6):1121-4.
22. Howie PW, Forsyth JS, Ogston SA, Clark A, Florey CD, Protective effect
of breast feeding against infection. BMJ 1990 Jan 6; 300(6716):11-6.
23. Horwood LJ, Fergusson DM, Breastfeeding and later cognitive and academic
outcomes. Pediatrics 1998 Jan; 101(1):E9.
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Gary Null, nationally syndicated talk show host & producer of PBS specials,
is a consumer advocate, investigative reporter, NY Times best-selling author
and an award-winning documentary filmmaker. Gary believes that, "You
must be empowered before you can be whole," and he empowers all who will
listen with life-changing facts that promote wellness.
Gary has conducted over a hundred major investigations and has produced numerous
documentaries in which he encourages his viewers to take charge of their lives
and health. Among his dozens of videos are titles like "The Pain,
Profit and Politics of AIDS," "Chronic Fatigue," "Diet
for a Lifetime, and "Cancer, A Natural Approach."
Gary Null lives the active, healthful life that he advocates. He regularly
competes in races and marathons and has trained thousands of people in his "Natural
Living Walking and Running Club "to do the same.