Women are at least 17 percent more likely to have cesarean sections at for-profit hospitals than at non-profit hospitals in California, according to an analysis by California Watch, an investigative journalism organization.
The analysis, California Watch said, provides ammunition to those who have suspected that unnecessary C-sections are performed for financial reasons. A surgical birth, the report said, can bring a hospital twice as much revenue as a vaginal delivery.
California Watch evaluated records from 253 hospitals between 2005 and 2007. It found that the trend of more frequent C-sections at for-profit hospitals occurred regardless of the ethnic or economic backgrounds of patients served by the institutions.
Some hospital officials disputed the notion that institutions performed more C-sections for financial reasons. A representative of Tenet Healthcare, Rick Black, said the decision to perform the surgery is made by the doctor and patient, while the hospital exerts no direct influence.
A previous California Watch report found that the maternal death rate in California had increased. Researchers are exploring whether that increase could be linked to a rise in C-sections.


