Hysterectomy rates continue to drop

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Sandra Nauer, shown here in her home in Sacramento, Calif., had heard horror stories about hysterectomies from older relatives, but her recovery took about 2 weeks with no complications and she was able to return to her job as a caterer. (MCT News Service)
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SACRAMENTO, Calif. – Not until after the surgery did Sandra Nauer realize how sick she’d been.

“Oh, my gosh, I had no idea I was in such bad shape,” said Nauer, 44, who lives in Galt, Calif.

After years of excruciating back pain, fatigue and other symptoms, she had an outpatient hysterectomy on May 22 – and on June 7, she returned to work running her catering business.

“I’m a new woman,” she said. “Holy smokes, I feel like a million bucks.”

For earlier generations of women, hysterectomy was all but a rite of passage before age 50, albeit a difficult one. Even now, it remains the second-most-performed surgical procedure for American women still of reproductive age, and by age 60, one in three women has undergone the surgery, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Despite that, hysterectomy rates in the past three decades have dropped from almost 56 per 10,000 women to 33 per 10,000, American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists statistics show, and the surgery itself has been streamlined into minimally invasive procedures that make the operation and recovery easier.

But hysterectomy remains controversial. While many medical experts see good news in pioneering advances and quick recovery times, some of them also see bad news, as well, saying that up to two-thirds of the 600,000 hysterectomies performed each year in this country could be avoided.

Are too many women undergoing hysterectomies, even now? Should women think twice before having the surgery?

“The rate has come down a little but not enough,” said Dr. William Parker, UCLA School of Medicine clinical professor and author of “A Gynecologist’s Second Opinion.”

“In the old days, hysterectomy was all we had to offer for patients. We were taught that it was the solution for almost every complaint.”

Today, alternative treatments often replace surgery, particularly for women below age 50.

“One of the problems is that the information on alternatives hasn’t seeped out as widely as it should into the medical world,” Parker said. “A lot of the newer surgeries now are minimally invasive, but many doctors haven’t been trained to do them.”

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