title: Obstetrician-Gynecologist
slug: obstetrician-gynecologist
aliases:
  - OB-GYN
  - Obstetrician
  - Gynecologist
category: Healthcare
tags:
  - obstetrics
  - gynecology
  - reproductive-health
  - surgery
  - medicine
difficulty: expert
summary: >-
  Carries two patients through birth knowing their interests can diverge,
  manages labor and obstetric emergencies, and treats reproductive disease while
  keeping preference-sensitive choices genuinely the patient's own.
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
last_reviewed: null
provenance: ai-generated
created: '2026-06-26'
updated: '2026-06-26'
related:
  - slug: physician
    type: prerequisite
    note: a medical-surgical specialty built on medical training
  - slug: midwife
    type: collaboration
    note: co-manages low-risk birth and shares the physiologic-labor philosophy
  - slug: anesthesiologist
    type: collaboration
    note: provides labor analgesia and is the partner in obstetric emergencies
  - slug: surgeon
    type: adjacent
    note: shares the operative mindset for pelvic surgery and its complications
  - slug: oncologist
    type: collaboration
    note: co-manages gynecologic cancers
specializations:
  - Maternal-Fetal Medicine Specialist
  - Gynecologic Oncologist
  - Reproductive Endocrinologist
  - Urogynecologist
country_variants: []
sources:
  - title: Williams Obstetrics
    kind: book
  - title: Berek & Novak's Gynecology
    kind: book
  - title: ACOG Practice Bulletins
    kind: standard
status: draft
reviewers: []
sections:
  - heading: Purpose
    markdown: >-
      An obstetrician-gynecologist exists to carry two patients through one of
      the few

      events in medicine that is both ordinary and catastrophic — birth — and to
      care

      for the female reproductive system across a life from menarche to
      menopause and

      beyond. Pregnancy is mostly physiology, until in minutes it becomes
      hemorrhage,

      eclampsia, or a fetal heart rate that won't recover. The obstetrician's
      reason for

      being is to keep a normal process normal, to recognize the moment it stops
      being

      normal, and to act when the welfare of the mother and the welfare of the
      fetus

      diverge. As a gynecologist, the same physician diagnoses and operates on
      disease

      of the pelvis and counsels women through choices — contraception,
      fertility,

      cancer screening, menopause — that are as much about values as about
      medicine.
  - heading: Core Mission
    markdown: >-
      Bring mother and baby safely through pregnancy and birth, knowing that two
      lives

      share one body and their interests can conflict; and across a woman's
      life,

      diagnose and treat reproductive disease while making the
      preference-sensitive

      choices genuinely the patient's own.
  - heading: Primary Responsibilities
    markdown: >-
      The visible work is delivering babies and doing pelvic surgery; the actual
      work is

      managing two patients whose interests can diverge, and supporting choices
      that

      belong to the woman. An obstetrician follows the pregnancy, screens for
      and

      manages its complications (preeclampsia, gestational diabetes, growth
      restriction,

      preterm labor), reads the fetal heart-rate tracing, manages labor, decides
      when to

      intervene with augmentation, instruments, or cesarean, and handles the

      obstetric emergencies — hemorrhage, shoulder dystocia, cord prolapse —
      where

      seconds matter. As a gynecologist they evaluate bleeding, pain, masses,
      and

      infertility, screen for and treat cervical and other gynecologic cancers,
      perform

      laparoscopic and open pelvic surgery, and counsel on contraception and
      menopause.

      Underneath it all is shared decision-making in a domain dense with
      personal

      values, and the constant arithmetic of maternal versus fetal risk.
  - heading: Guiding Principles
    markdown: >-
      - **Two patients, one body.** Every obstetric decision weighs the mother
      and the
        fetus, who usually share an interest and sometimes don't. When they diverge, the
        competent mother's autonomy governs, but the conflict must be named.
      - **Pregnancy is normal until it isn't — and the shift can be sudden.**
      Don't
        medicalize physiology, but watch relentlessly for the complication that turns a
        routine labor into an emergency in minutes.
      - **The fetal heart-rate tracing is a probability, not a verdict.** A
        non-reassuring tracing raises the chance of hypoxia but is poorly specific;
        resuscitate the fetus in utero and reassess before reaching for the knife.
      - **Hemorrhage is the obstetric killer; stay ahead of it.** Anticipate the
        atonic uterus, have the blood and the uterotonics ready, and intervene before
        the patient is unstable, not after.
      - **The decision is the patient's where the evidence is balanced.** Mode
      of
        delivery after a cesarean, contraception, hysterectomy for benign disease, screening
        intervals — these are values choices, and the obstetrician's job is informed,
        unpressured consent.
      - **Screen on the schedule, because the cancers are silent.** Cervical
      cytology
        and HPV testing catch disease before symptoms; the calendar is the safeguard.
  - heading: Mental Models
    markdown: >-
      - **Maternal-fetal risk balance.** Every intervention is scored on two
      ledgers at
        once. Magnesium for the mother's seizures, betamethasone for the fetus's lungs,
        delivery timing that trades prematurity against the danger of staying in — the
        model is always "what does this do to each patient?"
      - **The labor curve and the stages of labor.** Labor is tracked against
      expected
        progress (the modern Zhang curve having revised the older Friedman); "failure to
        progress" is defined against that expectation, and arrest of dilation or descent
        triggers a decision, not a reflex.
      - **Fetal heart-rate interpretation (the three-tier system).** Category I
        (reassuring), II (indeterminate, the majority), III (abnormal, predictive of
        acidemia). The discipline is the structured response to Category II tracings —
        intrauterine resuscitation — rather than treating every dip as fetal distress.
      - **The obstetric hemorrhage cascade.** The "four T's" — tone, trauma,
      tissue,
        thrombin — organize the diagnosis and treatment of postpartum bleeding into a
        sequence executed under time pressure.
      - **Shared decision-making for preference-sensitive care.** When two
      options are
        clinically close, the patient's values are the deciding vote; the model is to
        lay out the options and risks and elicit what matters to her, not to
        recommend by default.
      - **The reproductive life course.** Disease and counseling are framed by
      the stage
        — adolescence, reproductive years, pregnancy, perimenopause, postmenopause —
        because the same symptom means different things at different ages.
  - heading: First Principles
    markdown: >-
      - There are always two patients in obstetrics, and their interests usually
      but
        not always align.
      - A healthy mother and a healthy fetus can both decompensate faster than
      almost
        anywhere else in medicine.
      - The fetal monitor measures oxygenation indirectly and imperfectly; it
      warns,
        it does not diagnose.
      - Postmenopausal bleeding is cancer until proven otherwise;
      reproductive-age
        bleeding rarely is.
      - A competent pregnant woman has the same right to refuse treatment as
      anyone,
        including treatment that would benefit the fetus.
  - heading: Questions Experts Constantly Ask
    markdown: >-
      - How does this decision affect the mother, and how does it affect the
      fetus —
        separately?
      - Is this pregnancy still in the normal range, or has it crossed into a
        complication that needs action?
      - What is the fetal tracing actually telling me, and have I tried
      intrauterine
        resuscitation before escalating?
      - Is the bleeding atony, trauma, retained tissue, or coagulopathy — and am
      I
        ahead of it?
      - Is this a values-sensitive choice that belongs to the patient, and have
      I
        informed her without steering?
      - In this bleeding or pain, what's the worst cause for her age, and have I
        excluded it?
  - heading: Decision Frameworks
    markdown: >-
      - **Mode of delivery.** Match indication to route: cesarean for the clear
        indications (placenta previa, cord prolapse, non-reassuring tracing unresponsive
        to resuscitation, arrest), trial of labor where appropriate, and TOLAC/VBAC as a
        counseled, patient-driven choice weighing uterine rupture risk against repeat
        surgery.
      - **Manage / induce / deliver.** For each complication, decide whether to
      manage
        expectantly with surveillance, induce at the gestational age where benefit
        outweighs prematurity, or deliver now for maternal or fetal indication.
      - **The hemorrhage protocol.** Run the four T's in sequence — uterotonics
      and
        massage for tone, repair for trauma, evacuate retained tissue, correct
        coagulopathy — escalating to balloon, sutures, embolization, or hysterectomy as
        bleeding continues.
      - **Screening and workup of bleeding.** Sort abnormal uterine bleeding by
      the
        PALM-COEIN framework and by age; postmenopausal bleeding mandates endometrial
        sampling to exclude cancer.
  - heading: Workflow
    markdown: >-
      1. **Establish the pregnancy or the problem.** Confirm dating and
      viability, or
         characterize the gynecologic complaint and its urgency.
      2. **Risk-stratify.** Screen for the complications that fit the patient
      and the
         gestation; identify the high-risk pregnancy early.
      3. **Surveil.** Track growth, blood pressure, glucose, and fetal
      well-being on the
         schedule the risk demands.
      4. **Manage labor.** Assess progress against the labor curve, interpret
      the fetal
         tracing, resuscitate in utero before escalating, decide mode of delivery.
      5. **Deliver and watch for hemorrhage.** Conduct the birth, then manage
      the third
         stage actively and stay ahead of bleeding.
      6. **Operate when indicated.** For gynecologic disease, choose
      laparoscopic, open,
         or hysteroscopic approach matched to the pathology and the patient's goals.
      7. **Counsel and follow.** Contraception, screening intervals, menopause,
      fertility
         — framed as the patient's choices, with the evidence laid out.
  - heading: Common Tradeoffs
    markdown: >-
      - **Maternal benefit vs. fetal risk** (and the reverse). A medication, a
      delivery
        timing, or a procedure that helps one can harm the other; the conflict is named,
        not hidden.
      - **Cesarean safety margin vs. surgical morbidity.** A liberal cesarean
      threshold
        avoids the rare catastrophic vaginal delivery and adds surgical risk and harder
        future pregnancies; the rate is a population-level trade.
      - **Intervening in labor vs. patience.** Augmenting or sectioning for slow
      progress
        can prevent a bad outcome or create an unnecessary surgery; the labor curve
        guides patience.
      - **Preterm delivery vs. continued pregnancy.** Delivering early protects
      the
        mother (in preeclampsia) at the cost of prematurity; the gestational age sets
        the trade.
      - **Screening and surveillance vs. overdiagnosis.** Aggressive imaging and
      biopsy
        catch cancer and generate findings that lead to surgery in women who'd never
        have been harmed.
  - heading: Rules of Thumb
    markdown: >-
      - Postmenopausal bleeding gets an endometrial biopsy until cancer is
      excluded.

      - A non-reassuring tracing means resuscitate the fetus in utero first —
        reposition, fluids, oxygen, stop oxytocin — before reaching for the OR.
      - The postpartum uterus that won't firm up is atony; mass it and give
      uterotonics
        before the patient is unstable.
      - Shoulder dystocia is a drill, not a decision — run the maneuvers in
      order,
        call for help, and don't pull.
      - Severe-range blood pressure in pregnancy with a headache is preeclampsia
        evolving — treat the pressure and think magnesium.
      - A positive pregnancy test with pain and bleeding is ectopic until the
        ultrasound locates it in the uterus.
      - Quote the cesarean and VBAC risks honestly, then let her choose.
  - heading: Failure Modes
    markdown: >-
      - **Reacting to the tracing instead of reading it.** Sectioning for a
      Category II
        pattern without trying intrauterine resuscitation, or ignoring a Category III.
      - **Falling behind on hemorrhage.** Underestimating blood loss and
      starting the
        protocol when the patient is already unstable.
      - **Missing preeclampsia's evolution.** Treating a blood pressure number
      without
        recognizing the syndrome heading toward eclampsia and HELLP.
      - **Steering the values choice.** Recommending a mode of delivery or a
        hysterectomy by default rather than eliciting the patient's values.
      - **Anchoring on "normal pregnancy."** Reassuring through the warning
      signs
        because most pregnancies are fine.
      - **Missing the ectopic.** Accepting a positive test as an intrauterine
      pregnancy
        without confirming location.
  - heading: Anti-patterns
    markdown: >-
      - **The reflex cesarean** for a tracing that would have resolved with
        resuscitation.
      - **Underestimating blood loss** by eyeballing it instead of weighing and
        quantifying.
      - **Paternalistic counseling** that delivers a recommendation as the only
      option.

      - **Treating the number, not the syndrome** in hypertensive disease of
      pregnancy.

      - **Skipping endometrial sampling** in postmenopausal bleeding because it
      "looks
        benign."
  - heading: Vocabulary
    markdown: >-
      - **Gravida / para** — number of pregnancies / births a woman has had.

      - **Gestational age** — weeks since the last menstrual period; the unit
      that
        frames every decision.
      - **Fetal heart-rate category (I/II/III)** — the three-tier tracing
      interpretation.

      - **Preeclampsia / eclampsia** — pregnancy hypertension with organ
      involvement /
        with seizures.
      - **Postpartum hemorrhage** — excessive bleeding after birth; a leading
      cause of
        maternal death.
      - **VBAC / TOLAC** — vaginal birth / trial of labor after a prior
      cesarean.

      - **Dystocia** — abnormal or obstructed labor (e.g., shoulder dystocia).

      - **PALM-COEIN** — the classification of abnormal uterine bleeding causes.

      - **Colposcopy** — magnified exam of the cervix after abnormal cytology.
  - heading: Tools
    markdown: >-
      - **Obstetric ultrasound** — dating, anatomy, growth, position, placenta,
      and
        biophysical profile.
      - **The fetal heart-rate monitor (cardiotocography)** — continuous
      surveillance of
        fetal oxygenation in labor.
      - **The partograph / labor curve** — tracking progress against expected.

      - **Uterotonics and the hemorrhage cart** — oxytocin, misoprostol, balloon
        tamponade, the means to stop bleeding.
      - **Laparoscopy, hysteroscopy, and the operating room** — for cesarean and
        gynecologic surgery.
      - **Cytology, HPV testing, and colposcopy** — the cervical-cancer
      screening and
        diagnostic chain.
  - heading: Collaboration
    markdown: >-
      Obstetrics is a team event under time pressure. The midwife co-manages

      low-risk labor and shares the philosophy of keeping normal birth normal;
      the

      relationship works when the threshold for escalation to the obstetrician
      is

      clear and respected in both directions. The anesthesiologist provides
      labor

      analgesia and is the indispensable partner in the obstetric hemorrhage and
      the

      crash cesarean. The neonatologist or pediatrician takes the baby at the
      moment of

      birth, so the handoff of fetal status is critical. Labor-and-delivery
      nurses are

      continuous eyes on the laboring patient and the early warning for the

      deteriorating tracing or the rising blood pressure. The recurring friction
      is the

      escalation handoff; the discipline is a structured, urgent communication
      of which

      of two patients is in trouble.
  - heading: Ethics
    markdown: >-
      The defining ethical structure of obstetrics is two patients in one body,
      whose

      interests usually align and sometimes collide. The settled position is
      that a

      competent pregnant woman's autonomy governs her own body, even when
      refusing

      treatment that would benefit the fetus — a hard, recurring conflict.
      Reproductive

      care is dense with values not the physician's own: contraception,
      sterilization,

      abortion where legal, fertility treatment, and the obstetrician owes

      non-judgmental, accurate information and respect for the patient's
      decision.

      Informed consent in a values-laden field means resisting the urge to
      steer.

      Maternal mortality tracks race and poverty, making access and bias a
      justice

      issue the field cannot ignore. And the duty to disclose one's own
      complication

      rates and to refer rather than operate beyond competence holds, as in all
      of

      surgery.
  - heading: Scenarios
    markdown: >-
      **The Category II tracing at full dilation.** A laboring patient's fetal
      monitor

      shows recurrent variable decelerations and reduced variability —
      indeterminate,

      worrying, the kind of tracing that tempts an immediate cesarean. The
      expert does

      not reach for the knife first. She runs intrauterine resuscitation:
      reposition the

      mother, give a fluid bolus, stop the oxytocin, and consider amnioinfusion.
      The

      tracing improves to Category I within minutes; the cord compression was

      positional. The patient delivers vaginally. Reading the tracing as a
      probability

      to be acted on, not a verdict, avoided an unnecessary surgery.


      **The boggy uterus after delivery.** Minutes after a vaginal birth the
      uterus

      won't firm and blood is steadily welling. The expert recognizes atony —
      the most

      common of the four T's — and acts before the patient is unstable: fundal
      massage,

      oxytocin running, then a second uterotonic, and quantified rather than
      eyeballed

      blood loss. Bleeding continues, so she escalates the protocol — balloon
      tamponade,

      blood products, the anesthesiologist and a second pair of hands called
      early. By

      staying ahead of the cascade rather than chasing it, she controls the
      hemorrhage

      short of hysterectomy.


      **The mode-of-delivery choice after one cesarean.** A healthy woman with
      one prior

      low-transverse cesarean is pregnant again and asks what she "should" do.
      The trap

      is to recommend a route by default. The expert lays out the real numbers:
      TOLAC

      has a roughly 60-80% success rate and a small (under 1%) but serious
      uterine

      rupture risk; repeat cesarean avoids that risk but is major surgery that

      complicates future pregnancies. She elicits what the patient values —
      recovery

      time, family size, tolerance for the rupture risk — and supports the
      patient's

      own decision. The skilled act is informing without steering.
  - heading: Related Occupations
    markdown: >-
      An obstetrician-gynecologist is a physician and surgeon who specialized in

      reproductive health, so medicine and the surgical disciplines are the
      foundation.

      The midwife co-manages low-risk birth and shares the philosophy of
      physiologic

      labor, escalating when risk rises. The anesthesiologist provides labor
      analgesia

      and is the partner in obstetric emergencies. The surgeon shares the
      operative

      mindset for pelvic surgery and its complications. The oncologist
      co-manages

      gynecologic cancers. The registered nurse on labor and delivery is the
      continuous

      surveillance and early-warning system.
  - heading: References
    markdown: |-
      - *Williams Obstetrics*
      - *Berek & Novak's Gynecology*
      - ACOG Practice Bulletins and Committee Opinions
      - *Te Linde's Operative Gynecology*
      - WHO recommendations on intrapartum care and postpartum hemorrhage
