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Turkiye fines over 100 doctors for Caesarean deliveries – World


Turkiye fines over 100 doctors for Caesarean deliveries – World

ANKARA: Turkiyeโ€™s health ministry has fined more than 100 obstetrician-gynaecologists for carrying out Caesarean sections, suspending them from duty and forcing them to undergo training, BirGun newspaper reported on Saturday.

The country has the highest rate of C-section births among the OECDโ€™s 38 nations, according to the last available data from 2023, with around 615 such procedures out of every 1,000 live births that year.

Medical professionals have said C-sections were more time-efficient for medical staff โ€” 30 minutes, versus 12 hours for a traditional delivery โ€” and lowered the risk of legal action over complications, ensuring a guarantee of safety for both the physician and the women.

Last year, the Turkish government began a campaign to tackle falling birthrates under President Recep Tayyip Erdoganโ€™s โ€œDecade of the Familyโ€ initiative that has seen it move to exert greater control over how women give birth.

Erdogan, a pious Muslim who is pushing for women to have so-called natural births, wants to address Turkiyeโ€™s record number of elective C-section births, with his government in April 2025 banning such procedures at private healthcare facilities without medical justification.

According to BirGun, more than 100 doctors have been fined for performed C-sections, citing figures provided by medical associations across the country, sparking a backlash from heathcare professionals.

On its website, the Antalya Chamber of Physicians said obstetricians had been โ€œissued with warnings, subjected to disciplinary investigations, temporarily suspended from practising, and compelled to attend antenatal training courses, on the grounds of high caesarean section rates across the countryโ€.

The Diken news website cited the case of one obstetrician working at a private hospital in Sakarya near Istanbul, who was dismissed at the request of the health ministry on grounds of a high rate of C-sections, then suspended for six months.

Published in Dawn, July 12th, 2026

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