---
name: documenting-cesarean-sections
language: en
description: Creates structured C-section operative reports with indication, technique, and estimated blood loss. Use when documenting cesarean deliveries, recording operative findings, or writing C-section reports.
tags:
  - documentation
  - obstetrics-and-gynecology
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Obstetrics
    - Gynecology
    - Maternal-Fetal Medicine
  document_types:
    - Clinical Documentation
  skill_modes:
    - Documentation
---

# Documenting Cesarean Sections

Creates structured C-section operative reports with indication classification, surgical technique details, and estimated blood loss per ACOG documentation standards.

## Why This Skill Exists

Cesarean delivery accounts for approximately 32% of all deliveries in the United States. Each operative report becomes a permanent medicolegal document and is the primary reference for future delivery planning (TOLAC candidacy), surgical complications, and malpractice defense. ACOG Practice Bulletin No. 205 emphasizes that the type of uterine incision must be clearly documented because it determines whether trial of labor after cesarean (TOLAC) is appropriate in subsequent pregnancies. Incomplete operative reports — particularly missing incision type, adhesion findings, or blood loss — represent a significant liability and quality gap.

This skill produces a complete, defensible C-section operative report that captures every required element from skin incision to skin closure.

---

## Checkpoint A: Pre-Draft Intake (Mandatory)

1. **Indication for cesarean** — elective repeat, labor arrest, non-reassuring fetal status, malpresentation, placenta previa, other? (Default: extract from provider note)
2. **Urgency classification** — scheduled, urgent, or emergent? Decision-to-incision time if emergent? (Default: determine from context)
3. **Prior surgical history** — number of prior cesareans, type of prior uterine incision, known adhesions? (Default: review prior operative reports)
4. **Anesthesia type** — spinal, epidural, combined spinal-epidural, general? (Default: from anesthesia record)
5. **Gestational age at delivery** — weeks + days? (Default: from prenatal record)
6. **Antibiotic prophylaxis** — drug, dose, timing relative to incision? (Default: cefazolin 2 g IV within 60 minutes, 3 g if BMI ≥ 40)
7. **Patient positioning and preparation** — supine with left lateral tilt, Foley catheter placed? (Default: standard)
8. **Surgical team** — surgeon, first assist, scrub tech, circulator, anesthesiologist, pediatric team present? (Default: collect from OR log)

### Documents to Request

- Preoperative consent form (signed, with indication documented)
- Anesthesia record
- Prior cesarean operative reports
- Intraoperative nursing record
- Neonatal resuscitation record (if applicable)
- Pathology request (if specimens sent)

---

## Step 1: Document Preoperative Elements

The operative report must begin with:

1. **Patient identification** — name, MRN, date of birth
2. **Date and time of surgery** — incision time and closure time
3. **Preoperative diagnosis** — e.g., "Term pregnancy with arrest of active phase labor"
4. **Postoperative diagnosis** — may differ (e.g., "Term pregnancy with arrest of active phase labor; dense adhesions from prior cesarean")
5. **Indication for cesarean** — per ACOG categories:
   - Failed induction (document that ripening + oxytocin criteria were met)
   - Arrest of first stage (≥ 6 cm, ruptured membranes, 4 hrs adequate / 6 hrs inadequate contractions)
   - Arrest of second stage (minimum time thresholds met per parity/epidural status)
   - Non-reassuring fetal status (state NICHD Category)
   - Malpresentation (breech, transverse)
   - Placenta previa / vasa previa / accreta spectrum
   - Prior classical or T-incision (contraindication to TOLAC)
6. **Anesthesia type** and adequacy
7. **Antibiotic prophylaxis** — drug, dose, time administered relative to incision

---

## Step 2: Document the Surgical Procedure

Use systematic, layered documentation:

### Skin Incision
- **Type:** Pfannenstiel (most common), vertical midline (for emergent access or prior vertical scar), Joel-Cohen
- **Length** (approximate in cm)
- Note if prior scar was excised

### Fascial Entry
- Sharp dissection vs. electrocautery
- Fascia opened transversely or vertically
- Extension method (sharp vs. blunt)

### Peritoneal Entry
- Blunt vs. sharp entry
- Presence of adhesions (none, mild, moderate, dense) — describe location and lysis technique
- Bladder flap creation: performed or omitted (per surgeon preference/evidence)

### Uterine Incision — CRITICAL DOCUMENTATION
- **Low transverse** (most common — supports future TOLAC)
- **Low vertical**
- **Classical (fundal/upper segment vertical)** — contraindicates future TOLAC
- **J-extension or T-extension** — document if occurred, contraindicates future TOLAC
- **Inverted-T** — document if occurred

State clearly: "A low transverse uterine incision was made" — this exact language determines future delivery planning.

### Delivery
- Presentation at delivery (vertex, breech extraction, transverse)
- Delivery technique (manual extraction, vacuum assist)
- Time of delivery (to the minute)
- Sex, weight, Apgar scores (1 min, 5 min)
- Cord clamping (delayed cord clamping duration if performed)
- Cord blood gases sent (arterial and venous)

### Uterine Inspection and Closure
- Uterus exteriorized or in situ for repair
- Inspection of adnexa (tubes and ovaries — normal or findings)
- Placenta delivery (spontaneous or manual removal, completeness)
- Uterine closure technique (single-layer vs. two-layer, suture type — e.g., #1 chromic or 0-Vicryl)
- Hemostasis confirmed at suture line
- Additional hemostatic measures (if needed): figure-of-eight sutures, B-Lynch compression suture, intrauterine balloon, uterine artery ligation

---

## Step 3: Document Closure and Completion

- Fascia closure (running vs. interrupted, suture type)
- Subcutaneous closure (if depth > 2 cm, per evidence for wound complication reduction)
- Skin closure (subcuticular, staples, or adhesive)
- Instrument, sponge, and needle counts — document as correct × 3
- Foley catheter output and character
- Estimated blood loss (EBL) or quantitative blood loss (QBL)
- Specimens sent to pathology (placenta, tubal ligation specimen, adhesion tissue)
- Disposition — recovery room, vitals stable

---

## Step 4: Document Concurrent Procedures

If performed during the same operation, document separately:

- **Bilateral tubal ligation (BTL):** technique (Parkland, modified Pomeroy, clips, cautery), specimen sent for pathology confirming tubal segments
- **Adhesiolysis:** extent, location, method, complications
- **Cervical cerclage removal**
- **Myomectomy:** location, size, technique, hemostasis
- **Hysterectomy (cesarean hysterectomy):** indication (accreta spectrum, hemorrhage), type (supracervical vs. total), blood products administered

---

## Checkpoint B: Post-Draft Alignment (Mandatory)

1. **Is the uterine incision type explicitly documented** — low transverse, low vertical, classical, or extension?
2. **Does the indication meet ACOG criteria** — particularly for arrest disorders (time and contraction thresholds met)?
3. **Is the timeline complete** — decision time, incision time, delivery time, closure time?
4. **Are counts documented** as correct × 3 (initial, closing, final)?
5. **Is EBL documented** and does it match the clinical picture (IV fluid volume, uterotonic use, hemodynamic status)?

---

## Quality Audit

- [ ] Indication for cesarean is clearly stated with supporting clinical data
- [ ] Urgency classification is documented (scheduled, urgent, emergent)
- [ ] Decision-to-incision time documented for emergent cases (target < 30 minutes)
- [ ] Anesthesia type documented
- [ ] Antibiotic prophylaxis documented with drug, dose, and timing
- [ ] Skin incision type and length documented
- [ ] Adhesion presence and severity documented
- [ ] **Uterine incision type explicitly stated** (this is the single most critical element)
- [ ] Any uterine incision extension documented
- [ ] Delivery time, sex, weight, and Apgar scores recorded
- [ ] Placenta delivery method and completeness documented
- [ ] Uterine closure technique (layers, suture type) documented
- [ ] Instrument, sponge, and needle counts confirmed correct × 3
- [ ] EBL/QBL documented
- [ ] Concurrent procedures (BTL, adhesiolysis) separately documented

---

## Guidelines

1. **Always state the uterine incision type in plain language** — "Low transverse uterine incision was made and extended bluntly bilaterally." This sentence determines TOLAC eligibility for all future pregnancies.
2. **Document extensions immediately** — any J, T, or vertical extension must be captured in the operative report, as it changes future delivery counseling.
3. **Use ACOG-consistent indications** — never write "failure to progress" without specifying whether it was first-stage arrest, second-stage arrest, or failed induction with the supporting time and contraction criteria.
4. **Distinguish elective from indicated** — a scheduled repeat cesarean at 39 weeks is "elective repeat" not "failed TOLAC."
5. **Record decision-to-incision time** — for emergent cesareans, the benchmark is < 30 minutes; document the actual time and any delays with explanations.
6. **Document adhesion severity objectively** — mild (filmy, easily lysed), moderate (vascular, requiring sharp dissection), dense (organ involvement, bowel adherent to uterus).
7. **Include a future delivery statement** — e.g., "Patient is a candidate for TOLAC with one prior low transverse cesarean" or "Classical uterine incision — TOLAC is contraindicated."
