LONDON (AP)-pregnant women in Britain, where the Government provides free health care, as soon as possible can get Caesar in demand thanks to change rules that critics describe as a health system into a crowd of caving "too posh to push".
Currently, the United Kingdom woman who cannot afford a private doctor for their baby's delivery had been allowed to have a planned C-parts only if there is a problem of health of the mother or baby. Emergency C-sections is done when the situation demands it.
But the new guidelines is set to take effect later this month said the pregnant woman "with personal reasons" shouldn't be cesarean if they still want to follow the discussion with mental health experts.
"It is about time the women who have no desire to see the work as a rite of passage to be the mother may choose how they want to have their babies," said Pauline Hull, who has had two children by cesarean due to medical reasons. "The important thing for me was meeting my baby, rather than work experience."
Hull run website, elective Cesarean, from his home in Surrey, South of London. He said the midwives tend to overexaggerate the risk C-sections and dismissive vaginal birth people.