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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2018 Jan 1.
Published in final edited form as: J Labor Econ. 2017;35(1):18977. doi: 10.3386/w18977

Table 2.

Means for Full Sample and by Probability of C-Section

C-Section Risk Full Sample Low Risk of C-Section High Risk of C-Section
Outcomes:
 C-section rate .331 .103 .545
 Any bad outcome .127 .111 .143
 Bad maternal outcome .055 .037 .073
  Bleeding, fever, seizures at delivery .039 .024 .053
  Late maternal complications .019 .014 .024
 Bad child outcome .080 .080 .081
  Fetal distress .071 .073 .069
  Birth injury .003 .003 .003
  Neonatal death .004 .003 .006
Doctor characteristics:
 No. of deliveries per doctor 1,019.45 (650.15) 1,030.34 (674.73) 1,009.22 (626.00)
 Decision making .000 (1.000) −.032 (1.013) .030  
(.987)
 Procedural skill differential .000 (1.000) −.016 (1.026) .014  
(.974)
 Market price differential ($1,000) 4.711 (1.606) 4.687 (1.590) 4.734 (1.621)
 Share high risk .122 .116 .127
Mother and child characteristics:
 African American .158 .185 .132
 Hispanic .210 .244 .179
 Married .713 .645 .776
 High school dropout .128 .177 .082
 Teen mom .030 .052 .009
 Mom age 35 or more .238 .221 .254
 Smoked .081 .090 .073
 Child male .513 .514 .513
 Child first born .398 .200 .584
 Medicaid .206 .260 .155
Observations 968,748 469,170 499,578

Note.—The analysis sample excludes birth attendants who were not physicians and birth attendants who had too few deliveries for a measure of diagnositic skill to be computed. Standard deviations are in parentheses.