“New” Data: CS Skin Incision To Delivery Interval (AJOG-MFM) episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 27, 2026 · 20 MIN

“New” Data: CS Skin Incision To Delivery Interval (AJOG-MFM)

from Dr. Chapa’s OBGYN Clinical Pearls · host Dr. Chapa’s Clinical Pearls

If you practice obstetrics, you already know that our entire world is ruled by a stopwatch. Think about it: we are obsessed with time. We wait exactly 60 or 120 minutes for a gestational diabetes challenge. We stare at a monitor for a strict 30 minutes timing a biophysical profile. The entire pregnancy is dictated by an Estimated Date of Delivery that has us counting down the literal days. But what happens when we step into the OR? Once that scalpel hits the skin for a cesarean section, does the clock matter just as much? There are two separate intervals which have generated data: the skin incision to delivery interval, and the uterine incision to delivery interval. In today's episode, we are CUTTING INTO the data. First, we are summarizing a hot-off-the-press study from AJOG-MFM (Pink) that takes a hard look at the macro clock—the skin incision-to-delivery interval. Then, we are going to contrast those findings with the recent Bart 2026 study published in the AJOG (Grey) Journal, which tracked over 5,800 routine deliveries to see exactly what happens to a baby's pH and clinical outcome when that uterine extraction takes longer than 120 seconds. These two are somewhat at odds. Listen in for details. Strong Coffee Company - Protein Coffee PLUS MORE; Get 20% OFF | Promo Code: CHAPANOSPINOBG https://promocode.to/strong-coffee-company/chapanospinobg-hbv​ Zayat N, Bertozzi-Villa C, Cavallino A, et al. Skin incision-to-delivery interval and neonatal outcomes: A retrospective cohort study. Am J Obstet Gynecol MFM2026;00:101980.​ Bart Y, Sibai BM, Fishel Bartal M, Mazaki-Tovi S, Yoeli R. Uterine incision-to-delivery interval and neonatal outcomes among nonurgent, term, cesarean deliveries. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2026 May;234(5):1459-1469. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2025.12.059. Epub 2025 Dec 30. PMID: 41478544.

If you practice obstetrics, you already know that our entire world is ruled by a stopwatch. Think about it: we are obsessed with time. We wait exactly 60 or 120 minutes for a gestational diabetes challenge. We stare at a monitor for a strict 30 minutes timing a biophysical profile. The entire pregnancy is dictated by an Estimated Date of Delivery that has us counting down the literal days. But what happens when we step into the OR? Once that scalpel hits the skin for a cesarean section, does the clock matter just as much? There are two separate intervals which have generated data: the skin incision to delivery interval, and the uterine incision to delivery interval. In today's episode, we are CUTTING INTO the data. First, we are summarizing a hot-off-the-press study from AJOG-MFM (Pink) that takes a hard look at the macro clock—the skin incision-to-delivery interval. Then, we are going to contrast those findings with the recent Bart 2026 study published in the AJOG (Grey) Journal, which tracked over 5,800 routine deliveries to see exactly what happens to a baby's pH and clinical outcome when that uterine extraction takes longer than 120 seconds. These two are somewhat at odds. Listen in for details. Strong Coffee Company - Protein Coffee PLUS MORE; Get 20% OFF | Promo Code: CHAPANOSPINOBG https://promocode.to/strong-coffee-company/chapanospinobg-hbv​ Zayat N, Bertozzi-Villa C, Cavallino A, et al. Skin incision-to-delivery interval and neonatal outcomes: A retrospective cohort study. Am J Obstet Gynecol MFM2026;00:101980.​ Bart Y, Sibai BM, Fishel Bartal M, Mazaki-Tovi S, Yoeli R. Uterine incision-to-delivery interval and neonatal outcomes among nonurgent, term, cesarean deliveries. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2026 May;234(5):1459-1469. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2025.12.059. Epub 2025 Dec 30. PMID: 41478544.

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“New” Data: CS Skin Incision To Delivery Interval (AJOG-MFM)

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This episode was published on June 27, 2026.

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If you practice obstetrics, you already know that our entire world is ruled by a stopwatch. Think about it: we are obsessed with time. We wait exactly 60 or 120 minutes for a gestational diabetes challenge. We stare at a monitor for a strict 30...

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