NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH
NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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The Health Impacts of Hospital Delivery Practices

David Card, Alessandra Fenizia, David Silver

NBER Working Paper No. 25986
Issued in June 2019, Revised in November 2020
NBER Program(s):Children, Labor Studies

Treatment practices vary widely across hospitals, often with little connection to the medical needs of patients. We assess impacts of these differences in childbirth, where there is broad interest in reducing cesarean deliveries. Using a distance-based design and data from half a million births, we find that infants delivered at hospitals with higher c-section rates are born in better shape, are less likely to be readmitted to the hospital, are exhibit suggestive evidence of improved survival. These benefits are driven by the avoidance of prolonged labors that pose serious risks to infant health. In contrast, we document that these infants are substantially more likely to return to the emergency department for respiratory-related problems in the year after birth, providing some of the first design-based evidence consistent with a large observational literature linking cesarean delivery to chronic reductions in respiratory health.

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Document Object Identifier (DOI): 10.3386/w25986

 
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