Kotaska does not believe that these results are generalisable and thinks that practitioners must have pushed their comfort level for vaginal breech delivery to achieve a vaginal delivery rate of 57%3. However, this rate was for women having a trial of labour and is similar to rates found in published reports.3
Kotaska also criticises the selection criteria and the intrapartum management of women planning a vaginal breech delivery in the trial, despite the fact that the protocol was developed at a consensus workshop by a group of obstetricians who were recognised in their communities as expert at vaginal breech delivery, and was then vetted by experienced obstetricians worldwide.4
We agree that operators' skill is crucially important in evaluating surgical interventions but continue to believe that randomised controlled trials provide the best evidence as to whether such procedures cause more good than harm.5 We sympathise with practitioners who do not believe that the results of the term breech trial apply to them. No one was more disappointed with the findings of the trial than the participating clinicians themselves who believed in the safety of vaginal breech delivery but were willing to put their vaginal breech delivery skills to the test.