Home births up, driven by natural birth subculture

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ATLANTA – Home births rose 20 percent over four years …

Fewer than 1 percent of U.S. births occur at home. But the proportion is clearly going up …

The increase was driven by white women …

… “I think there’s more of a natural birth subculture going on with white women — an interest in a low-intervention birth in a familiar setting,”

… 27 states had significant increases during those four years. Montana, Vermont and Oregon had the most home births — about 1 in 50 births were at home in those states.

Alaska’s rate was nearly as high, and it’s clear that some home births occur because women are in remote locations and are not able to get to hospitals in time for delivery.

The increase is notable because doctors groups have been increasingly vocal about opposing home births, The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists has for years warned against home births, arguing they can be unsafe, especially if the mother has high-risk medical conditions, if the attendant is inadequately trained or if there’s no quick way to get mother and child to a hospital if something goes awry …

Thousands more women are choosing home births

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More women in the United States are choosing to give birth at home in recent years.

… home births increased by 20 percent between 2004 and 2008.

… Women may be seeking to give birth in a familiar environment without a lot of medical intervention … They may like the idea of being surrounded by family and friends or they may have cultural or religious concerns.

“Lack of transportation in rural areas and cost factors may also play a role as total costs for home birth are about one-third those for a hospital birth,” …

… women seek home birth options because they have a desire for more control over their labor and delivery process. “They want to avoid what is called the ‘cascade of intervention’ where one intervention [at the hospital] leads to another which leads to another which leads to another,” …

… “More women are realizing that having a baby in the hospital can be risky, now that our C-section rate is about 1 in 3.”

… benefits of home birth include: fewer complications and unnecessary interventions including lower C-section rates, lower infection rates, greater breastfeeding rates, easier sibling adjustment, heightened sense of autonomy, control and satisfaction with experience and lower postpartum depression rates.

Authors of the study noted that they believe that this increase in home births that will be of interest to practitioners and policymakers.

Benefits such as low intervention rates and continuity of care are really features of the chosen model of care, rather than the place of birth. It’s quite possible to have a low-intervention, continuity of care hospital birth – these benefits aren’t exclusive to homebirth. However … hospital will never be home the comfort, privacy, security and warmth of home can never be replicated in a hospital environment.

Bulgarian Obstetricians Want Incrimination of Home Birth

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A mother’s choice to give birth at home without medical help must be incriminated, Bulgarian obstetricians and gynecologists demand.

… Doctors want amendments to the Penal Code to provide sanctions for the above said mothers and for birth at home to be treated as a crime same as the endangerment of the life of a child.

Grigorova informs a meeting of obstetricians, with the majority supporting the move, to vote on the decision, is pending in the next few days and after that it would be taken to the Parliament, adding sanctions would not pertain to women giving premature birth at home.

The move is provoked by the drama which occurred on May 6 (St George’s Day), when a 32-year-old woman with a dead baby in her hands appeared five minutes before midnight at Saint Sofia. She had given birth at home … The newborn was not breathing at the time of birth. The doctors could do nothing else but certify the death of the baby.

Current Bulgarian legislation postulates pregnant women, just before birth, are considered being in the state of insanity and cannot be charged, legal experts say, with Grigorova admitting women cannot be held responsible for their actions during the process of delivering a baby.

The doctor further says women have the right to give birth without direct medical intervention, but it still must be done in a hospital and in the presence of a gynecologist, adding Saint Sofia already has such practice with future mothers asked to sign a declaration early during the pregnancy.

The woman who gave birth of the dead baby at home has serious and numerous infections, but had already left the hospital on her own will to prepare for the baby’s funeral, doctors from the hospital say, adding despite the antibiotics they have prescribed, the infection could progress and that they worry she would not seek hospital care.

With attitudes like that towards women, it’s no wonder women are preferring to birth their babies at home.

Baby born home, alone

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Before reading the article, it needs to be said that home birth is still legal. Even though it is not covered by insurance, it is legal for women to be attended by a registered midwife in private practice.

NICHOLE Lee-Yidaki’s dream of giving birth to her baby at home came a little too late for the Northern Rivers’ small home-birth industry.

So she decided to go it alone.

When the Federal Government last year tightened insurance regulations around home-birth midwives, the industry warned it risked opening the way for “free-birthers” – women who chose to bear their babies at home regardless of whether they had a midwife to help them.

The changes make it impossible for home-birth midwives to get medical indemnity insurance and effectively ban them from overseeing births at women’s homes.

Ms Lee-Yidaki said she would have preferred to have a midwife to help welcome her son, Aquil, into the world in the kitchen of her Main Arm home two-and-a-half weeks ago, but she had no regrets about choosing “free-birthing” over a hospital birth.

… Ms Lee-Yidaki was helped through the birth by a doula – a professional supporter – but without a midwife because it has become nigh-on impossible to get a home-birth midwife on the Northern Rivers since legal changes last year made it almost impossible for them to operate.

… in most cases mums could only get a private midwife to look after them before and after labour, but not through the birth itself.

… University of Technology Sydney midwifery professor Caroline Homer warned in 2009 “free-birthing” would be the “worst-case scenario” resulting from the Federal Government’s legal changes.

Ms Lee-Yidaki’s “worst-case scenario” was being unable to give birth at home …

Midwives are able to attend home births and home birth is legal. The issue is that insurance is unaffordable to some midwives with small practices. Doulas provide support at births that are attended by a midwife , but doulas do not provide professional care. Reputable doula organisations stipulate that a doula must not attend a home birth without the presence of a midwife.

Freebirth is on the increase, with some reports suggesting that unattended home birth is outnumbering midwife-attended homebirth.

Home births double in ČR

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… 419 out the 117,000 new-born babies were born outside maternity clinics in 2009, whereby the figure doubled in the past five years in the Czech Republic …

The long-term average was 200 annually for decades, the data show.

The biggest figure, 151, was recorded in Prague in 2009.

The number of births executed by midwives is on the rise as well.

… Dvorak said despite the growing number of births in a different than “impersonal environment of maternity clinic,” 400 births were not a significant part of the total 100,000 …

Home birth isn’t going to go away. It will always be a preference for some women and we ought to make sure that women can access safe homebirth services with access to hospitals if needed.

Safety of home births questioned

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New research has placed home births “under scrutiny,” … women who plan home births recover more quickly but there is a greater risk of the child dying.

The news is based on a high quality review of data from over half a million births from several Western countries, exploring how planned birth locations affect a number of birth outcomes for both mothers and babies. The findings are complex, and cannot simply be summed up as showing that hospital births are safer than home births … although it appears to show a greater risk of newborn deaths with home births, the absolute risk in either location is still very low (0.2% for planned home births and 0.09% for planned hospital births).

… some of the higher mortality rate may be attributable to fewer … interventional deliveries with home deliveries. This theory cannot be proven or disproved by this research … although home births appeared favourable for certain maternal outcomes, the study was unable to shed any light on the risk of maternal death for either location … when the analysis only looked at homebirths that had been attended by a certified midwife, there was no difference in risk of neonatal mortality compared to hospital births.

… Though home births were associated with lower rates of … vaginal tear, instrumental delivery, haemorrhage, infection … it must be remembered that mothers with any identified pregnancy complications would be more likely to be planned to deliver in hospital rather than at home.

The study did not consider the mother’s experience of home birth or hospital birth and crucially, the important outcome of maternal mortality could not be assessed …

This was a systematic review of reportedly all Western publications … that had reported outcomes for babies and mothers in relation to location of birth, e.g. whether at hospital or at home.

… when combining results of multiple studies, the differences in their methods, the populations included and assessments of outcomes, must be taken into account …

… They looked at a number of interventions and outcome for both mothers and newborns:

Mothers

* Interventions: epidural analgesia, electronic foetal heart rate monitoring, episiotomy, … operative vaginal delivery … and caesarean delivery.
* Outcomes: mortality, lacerations (>3 degree tear to the vagina or perineum), chorioamnionitis, … endometritis, … wound infection, urinary infection, postpartum haemorrhage, retained placenta, and umbilical cord prolapse.

Newborns

* Outcomes: Five-minute Apgar score <7, ... prematurity, ... post-[term], ... low birthweight, ... large baby, ... assisted ventilation requirement, perinatal death, ... and neonatal death ...

Twelve studies ... were included, which covered a total of 342,056 planned home births and 207,551 planned hospital deliveries. Studies came from US, Canada, UK, Australia and several European countries.

Planned home births were associated with fewer maternal interventions, including epidural analgesia, electronic foetal heart rate monitoring, operative delivery and episiotomy ... mothers who had home deliveries had fewer infections, vaginal and perineal tears, haemorrhages, and retained placentas (no difference in the rate of umbilical cord prolapsed).

Of outcomes in the newborn, babies born at home were less likely to be premature, less likely to be of low birthweight, and less likely to require assisted ventilation. However, there was greater likelihood of the baby being born post-dates if delivered at home.

Planned home and hospital births were found to have similar perinatal ... mortality rates, though planned home births were associated with significantly greater neonatal mortality rates ... These were two-to-three times as frequent (32 deaths in 33,302 hospital births [0.09%] and 32 deaths in 16,500 home births [0.20%]).

This observation was consistent across studies. The anticipated population-based attributable risk of neonatal death overall was 0.3% (i.e. 0.3% of neonatal deaths could be accounted for by birth occurring in the home rather than the hospital). The researchers noted an increased proportion of deaths attributed to respiratory distress or failed resuscitation in the home birth groups.

Applying sensitivity analyses that excluded poorer quality studies had little effect on the findings. However, when the researchers excluded studies of home births attended by people other than certified midwives, there was no significant difference between the newborn mortality rates associated with the two locations of birth.

… researchers conclude that less medical intervention during planned home birth is associated with an almost-tripled neonatal mortality rate.

… the associations seen should not be considered as a direct cause-and-effect relationship, i.e. it is an oversimplification to assume that planned birth location is directly or solely responsible for the birth outcomes seen.

… the principal limitation is that of attributing home or hospital birth as the actual cause of the outcome. For example, it is possible that home birth is associated with fewer instances of prematurity, low birthweight and assisted ventilation, not because home birth reduces the risk of this, but because mothers of babies who are identified as having some problem during antenatal care … would be more likely to be recommended a hospital delivery.

Likewise, mothers who have an obstetric or medical history putting them at higher risk … are more likely to be recommended a hospital birth. Consistent with this, the researchers noted that women planning home births tended to be at lower risk of complications and were less likely to be overweight or obese, giving birth to their first baby or to have history of previous pregnancy complications.

* Although home birth was associated with greater neonatal death … [it] is still very rare, and the absolute size of the risk is low (0.2% among planned home births and 0.09% among planned hospital births). The researchers calculated that only 0.3% of neonatal deaths could be attributable to birth occurring in the home rather than the hospital.
* It is also important to note that there was no increased risk of neonatal death with home birth compared to hospital birth once the analyses excluded those studies of home births attended by people other than certified midwives. That is to say, when the home birth was assisted by a certified midwife, there was no increase in mortality compared to a hospital birth.
… * Maternal mortality rates were an important outcome that was not able to be assessed … the four studies that had considered this outcome (covering 10,977 planned home and 28,501 planned hospital births), experienced no maternal deaths. Therefore, more research is needed on this outcome. Additionally low Apgar scores could not be assessed.

… future study needs to be directed at identifying the factors that contribute to the apparently excessive neonatal mortality among planned home births, and also considering the effect upon maternal mortality.

“Do it yourself” births prompt alarm

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A growing number of women are choosing to give birth without the assistance of doctors or midwives, provoked by dissatisfaction with modern obstetric care, fear of unnecessary medical intervention and a desire to reclaim birth as a private, natural act.

It’s a choice the professionals say is fraught with peril. They fear the fledgling “freebirth” movement may undo gains in mother-infant mortality. The women, however, believe unassisted childbirth is emotionally and physically the safest option for themselves and their babies.

Some 33%, or 8708 out of 26 667 homebirths in the United States in 2007 were not attended by a physician or midwife … Two-thirds of those deliveries attended by someone other than a physician or midwife … were reported as “planned” …

Canada lacks similar statistics, but a cursory search online turns up a surfeit of websites, forums … dedicated to freebirth …

It’s a difficult trend to track with any certainty … because advocates of unassisted childbirth aim to avoid interaction with the medical system wherever possible.

While some women forgo prenatal care entirely, others orchestrate a “planned oops” or “accidental” unassisted birth to avoid confrontation with health care providers and the law.

Many are already mothers, wary after a bad experience with a doctor or midwife.

“My first son’s hospital birth left something to be desired … the doctor I had was terrible. When I became pregnant a second time, I sought out a midwife and while one of the women in the practice was great, the other really talked down to my husband and I … ” … “I was probably seven months pregnant when I decided I didn’t want [that midwife] at my birth. I didn’t want it to be a guessing game.”

Others fear being coerced into medical procedures they’re not comfortable with.

“There are some people who can go into the birthing room and put their foot down, but I know when I go into a doctor’s office for an appointment, I get overwhelmed, let alone in a case where they’re saying your baby might die,” … “I think it’s easier to trust yourself if there’s not another voice there. Having that other set of interests involved makes me uncomfortable.”

Doctors and midwives bring their own timelines and expectations about how a delivery should proceed, and will err on the side of intervening in birth to protect themselves against litigation … “I can see the position they’re in, because if you don’t deliver a perfect baby there’s a chance you’ll get sued, and there’s this idea that if you’ve transferred someone to the hospital or done a C-section then you’ve done everything you could.”

… primary C-section rates ranged from a high of 23% of deliveries in Newfoundland and Labrador to a low of 14% in Manitoba.

With up to 15% of all births involving potentially fatal complications, however, “the evidence is overwhelmingly in favour of giving birth with a skilled attendant present,” …

Proponents of unassisted childbirth say it’s all a matter of perspective. They prefer to view birth as a “spiritual, sexual experience, not an inherently dangerous medical event,” says Shanley. “I trust the same intelligence that knows how to grow the baby from an egg and a sperm into a human being also knows how to complete the process.”

Unnecessary intervention in birth is more often the cause of complications than a remedy, she adds. “People counting, measuring and managing birth into this controlled, manipulated act, it’s no wonder women’s bodies shutdown — the way anybody’s would if someone kept interrupting them while they were trying to have sex, go to the bathroom or go to sleep.”

Intervention should be the last resort, not a given … ” … one of the nurses asked why we didn’t go to the hospital and my husband looked her in the eye and said: ‘Because it wasn’t an emergency.’”

The couple prepared for complications by reading books for first responders on how to deliver babies in emergency situations.

Others look for such information online.

“I had to assess what my personal risks were,” says Rundle. “I’m a healthy young woman, so when people say that 15% of the time there’s a complication, are they talking about women who have different medical histories than I have?”

Some women, like Shanley, prefer to put complete faith in their bodies and refer to complications as “variations of normal.”

“There are going to be babies who die during an unassisted birth who may not have if there had been intervention, but there are also going to be babies who die because of interventions,” she explains. “There’s no way to ensure a successful birth every time. Sometimes a baby dies and that’s just the way it is.”

It’s not a stance Shanley takes lightly, having lost a child to a congenital heart defect following an unassisted delivery, and been told by a coroner that the baby would have died even if she had gone to the hospital.

It’s a difficult stance to counter, says Canadian Association of Midwives president Anne Wilson. “You can’t say to a mum that 60% of all unassisted births result in complications where the baby dies because that kind of statistic doesn’t exist. A lot of complications in childbirth are predictable and occur over time, but a few happen without warning, such as severe hemorrhage. And if a woman doesn’t have prenatal care, doesn’t report the birth to the hospital, there’s no way to know.”

… “Unassisted childbirth is unsafe — period,” … “The people advocating this as a mainstream option for women are tragically uninformed.”

Midwives, however, are more “fuzzy” on the issue, says Wilson. The association has yet to take an official stance for fear of alienating women wary of intervention. “If someone came to us who was considering an unassisted birth we would want to keep that person engaged, build a relationship of trust and if they ended up going ahead with it, at least you’re someone they can call if they get half way through a delivery and change their mind.”

Failing that, “some prenatal care is better than none,” she adds.

The debate raises ethical questions of “autonomy versus beneficence” for midwives, Wilson says. “By the nature of what we do, we tend to look after people who don’t want interventions. It would come down to individual choice in terms of how comfortable you are as a practitioner taking that person into your care.”

For Shanley, however, unassisted childbirth is more a question of reproductive rights. “It’s your body, your birth and your baby, so you should have the right to give birth however you want.”

Is there no place like home? Where women give birth is a contentious issue across the rich world

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A RISKY and self-indulgent eccentricity, or a return to natural obstetrics? A medical and political row rages between supporters of home birth, many of them midwives and expectant parents, and its detractors, many of them doctors. Start telling women where they may or may not give birth, with hints that the choice may endanger their child’s life, and the gloves come off …

Stereotypes and simplifications are in rich supply. Many doctors think they are trying to curb a bunch of lentil-munching fanatics who ignore the dangers of something going suddenly, and badly, wrong … when even a few minutes’ delay can be fatal. The home-birthers decry grasping, bossy doctors who turn a natural experience into a near-emergency needing medical intervention. Hospital births are more likely to end in Caesarean sections, and to involve episiotomies … and epidurals …

Two kinds of risk are at issue. Giving birth at home may be safe most of the time, but when things do go wrong, they are more serious. In hospital more things go wrong because intervention is more common, but the complications are less likely to be lethal or to cause permanent damage.

Views on home birth vary widely between countries. In Hungary, Ms Gereb has helped at more than 3,500 home births (and attended more than 6,000 in hospital). But she was on shaky legal ground. Regulations there have for decades restricted the work of midwives … to the point where it was, in effect, illegal for them to attend home births. Now a change in the law from May 1st will explicitly allow home births for a restricted category of younger mothers with uncomplicated pregnancies. Ms Gereb is appealing against her sentence … Police have closed the birthing centre she founded and seized its records.

… In France, red tape snares most would-be home birthers; the costs are not fully reimbursed, as they are for births in hospital. Home births are rising in New Zealand, but not in Australia. In Britain only 2.7% of births take place at home, but the government wants them to be more readily available and both doctors and midwives agree.

The big outliers are the Dutch … nearly a third of mothers still choose to give birth at home. The Dutch perinatal mortality rate is one of the highest in Europe, though the cause is contested. Supporters of home births say that the numbers are still not all that high, and have to do with poor assessments of how risky pregnancies are. Nonetheless, they highlight how difficult it can be to determine whether a pregnancy is “low risk” and thus suitable for a home birth. For first-time mothers, judging the ease of birth is particularly tricky. Some complications cannot be predicted.

… Critics of home births cite a meta-analysis of over 500,000 births … that concluded that neonatal death … was three times more likely in a home birth. But the perinatal mortality rate … was about the same.

The National Childbirth Trust, a British parenting charity, questions the data behind the study. Only one of the studies used showed a big increase in neonatal deaths. Including unplanned home births, inevitably more dangerous, may have skewed the data. Lesley Page, a professor of midwifery at King’s College, London, has studied home births in Canada, where she and other researchers found that home births are just as safe as hospital ones—for healthy women expecting healthy babies, attended by a well-trained midwife, and with a hospital nearby if needed. The study compared home births only with hospital births where women were judged sufficiently low-risk to have given birth at home had they so wished.

At the end of last year Cathy Warwick, the head of the British Royal College of Midwives, which supports home birth, decried what she called a concerted and calculated backlash against home birth and midwife-led care, fuelled by a small number of doctors and a lot of poor research.

A definitive statistical answer to the relative perils of home and hospital births is unlikely. Randomised trials, which are the gold standard in medical research, will be tricky to impossible: women are unlikely to accept a researcher’s arbitrary instruction about where they should give birth. As with many other aspects of child-rearing, birth will come down to parental disposition—whether for a hospital’s bright lights and plentiful pain relief, or for the familiar comforts of home.

Hungarian doctor advocating home births given 2-year prison sentence for malpractice

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An obstetrician considered the main advocate for home births in Hungary was sentenced … to two years in prison for malpractice …

Agnes Gereb was found guilty of medical negligence in two separate home births, including one in which the baby died. She will have to spend at least a year behind bars before parole and was also banned from practicing both as an obstetrician and a midwife for five years.

Lawyers representing Gereb … had appealed the decision of the Budapest City Court.

… The verdict … was unusual because the judge’s sentence was much tougher than the suspended prison term originally sought by the prosecution.

… Gereb’s litigation became a rallying point for Hungarians seeking to accept home births as a regulated method of delivery.

Earlier this month, the government said home births will be allowed from May 1, but only under strict safety conditions.

Until now, women in Hungary had the right to give birth at home, but medical professionals were banned from assisting planned home births.

… midwives criticized the ruling against Gereb, saying the court applied different standards to home births from those used in deliveries at a hospital.

“In civilized countries, midwives answer for their work to professional associations, not courts,” … “They are judged not solely by experts who have experience only in hospital births, but by professionals who know about home births.”

… Because of a similar case in 2007, Gereb was already given a three-year ban from exercising her profession.

Gereb’s advocacy and her determination to assist with thousands of home births over the years has received plenty of media attention in Hungary, with public opinion about her deeply split.

She was recently voted one of Hungary’s “Women of the Decade” …

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Home birth bill takes a baby step for midwives

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Every time Sheri Brinkmeyer ponders having a third child, she can’t help but think that her family’s recent relocation to Springfield wasn’t the best move. She’s afraid the state’s lack of midwife licensure will mean giving birth in a hospital, like she did with her first child when she felt poked, prodded and bossed around. She birthed her second child at home while living in Oklahoma, but in Illinois the same type of experience would mean putting her midwife in legal jeopardy.

In Illinois, certified nurse midwives, who can be found only in a few Illinois counties, can legally help mothers give birth at home. Other midwives … are illegal in Illinois and can be prosecuted for helping mothers give birth at home …

A measure approved by the Illinois Senate last year but defeated in the House would have licensed midwives based on Certified Professional Midwife credentials … the Coalition for Illinois Midwifery are pushing a similar proposal this year … which would allow, without the risk of legal action, underground midwives to transfer mothers and their birth records to a hospital in the event of an emergency.

“This really has been a response to the Illinois General Assembly refusing to come up with an answer for the home birth maternity care crisis,” … a lack of licensed providers, subject to minimum standards set by a licensing board, has created a black market for midwifery, in which there is no consumer protection. The more a midwife works to become more formally educated, the more likely that midwife is to leave Illinois … as he or she is more likely to come under investigation.

… the ultimate goal of the coalition is midwife licensure … “Most transfers are not emergency, most are due to maternal fatigue, but you do have emergency transfers that do occur … When you have underground care, you have competing issues. It’s not just about the baby, the midwife is going to be concerned about being arrested.”

… without safe passage, women might postpone going to the hospital. Because hospitals now can report a midwife if they know who she is, when an underground provider transfers a mother to the hospital the midwife’s records don’t go with the mother and the hospital is less aware of the woman’s medical condition. “We’re not telling people that they should or shouldn’t [have a home birth], we’re just saying that there’s 700 women [in Illinois every year] who do have homebirths and we want to create the safest situation for them that we can.”

The Illinois State Medical Society opposes both midwife licensure and the emergency transport measure. “I think it’s the most insane idea I’ve heard yet,” says ISMS president Dr. Steven Malkin … “This bill sort of insinuates that it’s OK to have these people deliver you at home, and if there’s a mistake … we’ll be there to clean up the mess.”

Malkin says he’s not opposed to home births, as long as mothers are assisted by “qualified personnel” – hospital-trained certified nurse midwives or doctors. “If enough women want to deliver at home that niche can be filled, but we need to make sure it is done safely and with people who are experienced. … We should not lower our standards to fill a niche.”

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Home-birth study investigated

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The 25,000 US women who give birth at home each year received shocking news: … Babies born at home die within their first month of life at two to three times the rate of children born in hospitals, the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) declared …

But the study behind the warning is not as definitive as it seemed … the study generated so much criticism that the journal that published it … was investigating it. The post-publication review documented errors in the original analysis, but it did not contradict the study or change the paper’s conclusions, and the problems do not warrant a retraction …

The ongoing debate … underscores the difficulty of conducting objective reviews on controversial medical topics such as home birth

“The scientific debate about home birth has become extremely polarized and politicized,” …

… Using data from a subset of four … studies, Wax’s team concluded that babies born at home without birth defects were more likely to die in their first 28 days of life than those born in hospitals.

Soon after the study came out … midwives, some obstetricians and home-birth advocates alleged that the paper did not meet standards …

Researchers had also identified potential errors in the study’s statistics …

… Wax’s team did not provide measurements of the variations between the studies included in its analysis; when studies diverge widely in methods and outcomes, they should not be combined …

… in response to the criticisms, the journal enlisted three “specialists in maternal fetal medicine with expertise in meta-analysis and clinical research” to examine all the correspondence that the journal had received regarding the Wax paper. The reviewers attempted to reconstruct Wax’s calculated risks for three outcomes: deaths of neonates, or infants from birth to 28 days old; premature births before 37 weeks of gestation; and ‘postmature’ births after 42 weeks of gestation … “In all 3 cases, the results the panel found were slightly different from that in the Wax paper,” … although the panel did not find major differences in the risk estimates or the overall statistical significance of the results.

… Wax’s team posted the requested summary graphs on the journal website. The risk of newborn death and postmaturity among babies born at home is now higher than it was in the original paper, and the risk of prematurity is now lower. The document does not discuss whether or how Wax’s group erred in its original calculations, or what changes were made to produce the new results.

Critics are not appeased, because many had argued that Wax’s team erred by inappropriately including or excluding studies from some of these outcomes in the first place. Epidemiologists … agreed that there were problems with the study design.

Diana Petitti, an epidemiologist … says Wax’s group should not have excluded data from a major Dutch study, published in 2009, that examined more than 300,000 home births for many outcomes, including the risk of newborn deaths. That study found no increased risk of death after home birth in the first week of life.

Petitti says this issue could have led to incorrect conclusions even if the statistical methods were sound …

… The quality of non-Cochrane Reviews leaves much to be desired …

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Hungary legalizes mothers’ right to home delivery

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A long-awaited detailed regulation on home birth allows women to decide where they want to give birth as long as the baby is not in danger and so does not need a hospital environment.

… the regulation, that comes into effect on April 1 and will affect births after May 1, lays down all the duties, responsibilities and competencies of those assisting homebirths. Professionals helping baby deliveries outside hospitals have to have the required qualification as well as a license from public health and medical officer service.

They have to be a professional obstetricians or midwives with labor room experience exceeding two years and registered assistance at minimum 50 births. Mothers who want to give birth in a non-hospital environment have to choose the health supplier and the professionals to assist at the delivery by the 36th week of the pregnancy. The selected professionals have to be contracted with the given health supplier.

Also, mothers have to declare in advance that if the leading birth assistant or the pediatrician finds that hospitalization is necessary, they will accept it without opposition. At this point, the infant’s right to life comes before the mother’s right to autonomy.

… The detailed regulation is seen putting an end to a long struggle of women wishing to give birth outside hospitals and also of those professionals helping these mothers. Due to homebirths having been so unregulated so far, an internationally recognized home birth expert Agnes Gerab was arrested for helping a pregnant woman who unexpectedly went into labor during a birth training course. At that time, Gerab was prohibited from practicing due to a former incident that ended up in the death of a baby. After Gerab was taken in custody last October, her supporters held numerous demonstrations for her release and also for a clear regulation on home birth.

To find out more about the services I offer, please visit my website or call me on 0400 418 448.

Planned Home Birth: A New View

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The ACOG acknowledges that women have the right to make informed choices about home birth after thorough counseling about risks and benefits.

In the U.S., 25,000 births (0.6%) occur at home annually. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) has issued an updated committee opinion on planned home birth. Because data on the safety of home birth are limited (JW Womens Health Mar 7 2006), the statement relies primarily on a meta-analysis of observational studies of planned home births versus hospital births (Am J Obstet Gynecol 2010; 203:243.e1). This study showed that, although absolute risks were low, planned home birth was associated with twofold higher risk for neonatal death than was hospital birth (risk was threefold higher when anomalous newborns were omitted from the analysis).

The committee recommends that women who are considering planned home birth should adhere to strict selection criteria (e.g., absence of preexisting or pregnancy-related disease, singleton fetus, gestational age >36 weeks). In addition, the following resources should be readily available:

* Means of safe and timely intrapartum transfer
* Integrated care system for expedited transport and backup arrangements
* Certified nurse-midwife, certified midwife, or physician in attendance who is integrated with an existing healthcare system to facilitate transport to a hospital

The committee emphasized the need to respect the rights of women to make medically informed decisions about delivery and stressed that women who are planning home births should be made aware of the risks and benefits (particularly to their newborns) through adequate counseling.

Hopefully RANZCOG will soon amend their policy statement on home birth along similar lines to the revision above. Ideally, the professional bodies for obstetricians and midwives will be able to come together and write a combined policy statement on planned home birth. The RCOG and RCM have achieved this.

To find out more about the services I offer, please visit my website or call me on 0400 418 448.

Homebirth riskier, says report

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The Health Department has ordered an independent audit into homebirths in WA after finding they are riskier than claimed but stopped short of wanting them banned.

… The committee investigated seven deaths in planned homebirth deaths from 2005-07, finding three were possibly avoidable. It found the stillbirth rate in homebirths was almost four times that of hospital births, while the risk of stillbirth from asphyxia was 21 times higher in homebirth babies.

… WA chief medical officer Simon Towler defended the program, saying only low-risk pregnancies could use the service and more changes were being made to improve homebirth safety.
He said midwives needed to get informed consent from parents who would be given the findings from the committee’s report.

This article does sound alarmist, however we need to take a closer look before jumping to conclusions such as homebirth being unsafe.

The study looked at planned home births. That is, planned at the start of pregnancy. Not necessarily a planned home birth at the onset of labour which is a more accurate measure of safety. For many reasons, a woman may plan a home birth at the start of her pregnancy, but for many reasons she may decide – in the pregnancy – to birth in hospital rather than at home. For the most part, this will be because of issues such as high blood pressure, pre-term labour, bleeding in pregnancy, gestational diabetes and so on. So if the measure taken is “planned home birth at the onset of labour” this would have automatically reduced the number of deaths in the “planned home birth” arm of the study.

Four of the seven deaths were considered potentially avoidable. The other three babies had congenital abnormalities and had no preventable medical factors. Of the four babies whose deaths were considered to be potentially avoidable, some issues were identified as contributing to the death:

Absence of some routine screening tests in pregnancy
Delays in transfer from home to hospital
Poor communication
In one case, a woman declined to follow medical advice

Only three out of the seven babies were born at home; the others were born in hospital.

Rather than making a blanket statement that home birth is unsafe, it is more helpful to make a qualitative statement around homebirth understanding that it is safe for low-risk women who are attended by an experienced midwife, who have ready access to a hospital if this is needed, and who have had screening tests that are standard practice. Once it is evident that a transfer needs to occur, the midwife needs to recognise this and make the necessary arrangements. Once in hospital, effective communication and respectful dialogue between the woman, midwife and hospital staff are helpful in providing a safe and positive outcome.

Home birth is a wonderful experience for the woman, baby and family. I hope that this report stimulates discussion rather than hindering women’s access to safe home birth services.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Wales delivers on home birth rates

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Wales is leading the way in a rise in home births

WHEN Lindsey Gage decided to have her baby at home, husband Andrew was anxious.

He worried about the risk, the mess and how long it would take to get to hospital in an emergency.

In the event … Andrew, 34, held Lindsey while she gave birth at their home …

This type of idyllic home birth is what midwives recommend for all women with low-risk pregnancies who want it.

Yet just 4% of babies are born at home in Wales, just up on the 3% figure for across the UK, but still only a tiny proportion.

Until 40 years ago giving birth at home was the norm … This changed with the 1970 Peel Report saying hospital beds should be available for the safety of mother and baby.

Almost overnight giving birth became medicalised, putting doctors rather than midwives in charge.

By the 1990s women wanted to reclaim birth and a National Childbirth Trust study showed intervention was twice as likely in hospital, even in straightforward cases.

… Today, requests for home births are increasing and once again …

Since the Welsh Assembly Government launched its strategy to increase home births in 2002, they have more than doubled …

… rates vary enormously with some areas, including Porthcawl and Pyle, recording 25% to 30% home-birth rates.

… it’s partly growing requests from women, partly the WAG strategy and the fact that Wales is relatively small making communication and change easier.

… England followed this lead after visiting Wales to see how our Know Your Midwife scheme worked …

… Helen Rogers, director of the Royal College of Midwives in Wales, hopes rates will snowball as women see home birth works and says we should still aspire to 10% and more.

Science teacher Clare Sklavounos … who had both her children … at home, has no hesitation recommending it.

Husband Chris delivered both babies in the living room which he describes as an “amazing experience”.

Clare says she began to realise during ante-natal classes that intervention was more likely in hospital and wanted as natural a birth as possible.

After discussing home birth with midwives she says she was confident it was safe and the best option for her.

… “I was totally uninhibited and could eat and drink when I wanted.

“When it started to get intense I got into the birthing pool and gave birth. I didn’t want any pain relief and didn’t need it.

“The midwives were brilliant. They monitored the babies’ hearts during both labours quite regularly but it didn’t feel intrusive and I felt normal afterwards because it was treated as something normal.

“It all felt so natural. I had the labours I wanted.”

Chris says the experience was very different from when his first child Mia, five, from a former relationship, was born.

“Mia was born in the University Hospital Wales in Cardiff. It was my first child and it was amazing but different,” he recalls.

… “I was shattered and got no sleep,” she says.

“I had an epidural which I didn’t want but I did have to have because the baby got stuck and I couldn’t push.

“I was then told to lie on my back and hold my legs up to give birth but it felt wrong. With my second labour at home I stood up and then delivered standing and squatting.

“The home birth was lovely as births go.

… “He got to bond with the baby and he cut the cord.

… Although this type of birth might not be everyone’s choice, the Royal College of Midwives and Royal College of Obstetricians issued a joint statement in 2007 saying home birth should be available to all low-risk women wanting it.

The colleges added that “if women had true choice” home-birth rates would rise to between eight and 10%.

“There is ample evidence showing labouring at home increases a woman’s likelihood of a birth that is both satisfying and safe, with implications for her health and that of her baby,” the statement reads.

Not everyone agrees, however.

Last year medical journal The Lancet said “women do not have the right to put their baby at risk” in response to research from the USA suggesting home birth tripled the risk of neonatal mortality – babies dying within a month of birth.

The RCM responded by saying the research didn’t reflect the situation here where midwives are highly experienced and properly equipped to carry out home births.

… Here the RCOG agrees childbirth is unpredictable and says while it supports home birth in low-risk pregnancies, women birthing at home should also have quick access to obstetric care if an emergency occurs.

The RCM, which represents most of the 1,800 midwives in Wales, says choice and proper care are vital wherever you are.

“RCM policy is that women should have choice,” Helen Rogers explains.

“As part of that we expect low-risk women with no complications should be able and encouraged to have home births.

“I believe we are leading the way on this in Wales.

“It’s slow and there are times when I’d like to increase the rate more quickly but it’s a steady increase. I believe midwives are much more confident about home births now.

“In many areas of Wales the demand for home births has always been there and women have pushed for it.

“There has been a world-wide attack on home births. Some of it is the medical profession which seems to think that hospital is the safest place to have a baby.

“But the vast majority of women are fit and healthy and childbirth is a normal, physiological process. They don’t have to be in hospital.”

Helen says there’s no evidence mothers are less safe having babies at home and disputes any suggestion that home birth might be promoted as a way to cut costs.

“I don’t think health boards would promote home birth because it’s cheaper,” she insists.

“It’s more likely they’d cut them and put all staff in one place.

“As services get more cash starved it’s often so-called luxury services, like home birth, that get hit.

“The WAG supports home birth and its strategy to increase home birth has certainly helped.

“We didn’t get 10% home birth rates across Wales although we have more than 10% in many places and that will probably increase throughout Wales as more women have home births.

“A few years back it was only women who went to National Childbirth Council classes who had home births.

“Now women from all walks of life are having them. They’re seeing their friends and husbands’ friends’ wives having home births.”

… Wherever women give birth, studies show those who have positive births are more likely to recover faster and less likely to develop post-natal depression …

… “We find people birth quicker at home because there’s a sense of confidence and security.

“If you feel anxious and frightened you get the flight-and-fright reflex and release adrenalin which stops the labour.

“Anxiety happens because people are frightened of hospitals.

“Hospitals are wonderful places if you need to be there, but if you’re low-risk, home is as safe or safer.”

… “With a home birth women are in control of their birthing experience. They are in their own home and more relaxed.

“Nature gets on with it and you don’t have to interfere. It’s a very nice experience.”

… “When we talk about taking birth away from doctors people ask, ‘What if something happens?’,” she concedes.

“The women we deal with have uncomplicated pregnancies but if we need to transfer women from home or the birthing unit to hospital it’s because labour is not progressing as we’d want.

“Midwives are the experts at looking after women in normal births, not doctors.

“We have very, very experienced midwives with excellent equipment and they continue to train and update their skills. When women choose to go to hospital because doctors are there and it’s safer there are certain times of year, March and August, when junior doctors change rotation.

“In the first instance you might see a junior doctor. Doctors are my best friends and we need to work together but birth is normal and we should encourage women to give birth at home.

“Once you start on intervention it leads to another. If it’s an uncomplicated pregnancy, home and midwife-led birthing centres are social environments whereas hospital is a medical environment.

“I’m not saying things never go wrong but in this country, on the whole, you are dealing with healthy women.” …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Homing in on the Dutch birth debate

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or Medicare-funded private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

I’m reading a fantastic book at the moment, “Proactive Support of Labor” which speaks of the very issues raised in the article below. I think there are some very valid points that we need to consider as we reform maternity care in Australia.

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With the highest rate of home births in Europe, the Netherlands also has the highest rate of death among newborns, so how safe are home births?

DUTCH MOTHER Petra de Haan delivered three of her four sons at home, doing what generations of women before her in the Netherlands had done, gritting her teeth while “mother nature” took its course.

Stoic and strong, typical of women in her northern province of Friesland, she describes how home births were always part of “our culture, as natural as breastfeeding, decided on without any discussion, we believed it was the right way, the only way”.

Looking back now she realises that her first delivery … could have gone horribly wrong. “The labour went on much too long. I lost a lot of blood, the baby’s head was so big. But there was no indication of that beforehand as no echogram was done, you only had one in exceptional circumstances in Holland … ”

Ultrasounds are not routine in the Netherlands; even if they were, a 19-week scan would not accurately predict a baby’s weight at birth. In fact, there’s no truly accurate way to predict a baby’s size before birth. It’s often a matter of awaiting labour and seeing how it goes.

That was 22 years ago and Petra … remembers the great contrast between her first and second home births.

“It all went so well the second time, I was pottering around in labour, drinking a cup of tea at my kitchen table, in my own familiar surroundings, much better than in a hospital full of bright lights, noise and sick people.”

… the birth of her third, Jesse, who weighed over 10lb, was “awful”, with extensive cutting, loss of blood and stitches afterwards on that same bed in the family living room. Her fourth and youngest son, Ydwer (12), was born with a heart condition in hospital.

With the highest modern rate of home births in Europe, the Dutch are held up as an example to other countries … whenever it is suggested that more women would choose to give birth at home if the appropriate infrastructure was in place.

There is growing evidence, however, to show that Dutch women are falling out of love with home births and fast. Only a few decades ago, more than half of all women … deemed “low risk”, were having their babies at home, assisted by a midwife … But the rate of home births has dropped dramatically to 24 per cent …

A number of reasons are given for the decline. Women are waiting until they are older to start families, increasing complications, immigrant mothers often prefer hospital birth, while less healthy lifestyles, including obesity and smoking, remove others from the “low- risk” category suitable for home births. Some doctors say women are choosing hospital birth because they want a full range of pain relief and quicker deliveries.

Champions of home birth … are blaming negative media reports, which have raised questions about the safety of home births with “scare stories” and “muddled statistics”.

The powerful Dutch pro-home birth lobby and critics of the traditional system are at loggerheads. The figures, nevertheless, are disturbing. Last year, there were 1,700 still births and deaths among newborn babies, giving the Netherlands, among Europe’s highest rates, double that of Flanders (Dutch speaking Flanders across the border). Everyone agrees the figure is much too high.

The Health Ministry, which has long prided itself on the high quality of health and medical care in the Netherlands, has described as “worrying” the fact that the rate of death among newborn babies is higher than in other European countries.

To the public, this wrangling between the midwives’ sector, who operate independently within the system, and leading obstetricians and gynaecologists, who want more “intervention” and “medicalisation”, begs the question, who is right – are home births really that safe in Holland?

Prof Simone Buitendijk, head of the child health programme … declares: “Yes, they are safe, even if we totally abolished them we wouldn’t make a small dent in the mortality statistics. It is about choice and it would be really sad if choice disappears.”

She believes there is a real risk of that now happening in Holland … “The negative media coverage will influence some women and persuade them to have their babies in hospital instead of at home out of fear.” In her view, for low-risk women, not in danger of having complications, “home birth is the best possible way of being properly in control”.

“Midwives in the Netherlands offer an excellent level of care and are key to risk referral because they ensure that those opting to give birth at home fall into the low-risk category.”

Prof GHA Visser, a leading obstetrician at Utrecht Medical, is among a group of senior specialists who have criticised the system, claiming that intervention is too slow and the country has “fallen asleep on the job”.

He claims that midwives often neglect to inform many women wanting home births that there is a strong likelihood they will end up being taken to hospital after labour starts.

“Over 50 per cent of first-time deliveries end up in hospital, in rare cases there are tragic circumstances and the baby dies. We know midwives do a very good job, but there is this mentality among GPs as well that intervention should be avoided and the traditional philosophy goes on.

“The fact is that not all pregnancies are normal, and symptoms and warning signs are missed, the midwives are clinging on to a culture which used to work well but clearly has shortcomings also,” he says.

“… It’s a question of better co-operation between first- and second-line care givers.”

An independent inquiry has been launched into why the Dutch have one of the highest perinatal mortality rates compared with the rest of Europe. The big question is whether that will vindicate the Netherlands’ unique home births system.

Some believe there is no going back and more and more women will end up in hospital, with an increase in epidurals and Caesarean sections, even for those in the low-risk category, increasing the risk of maternal mortality in the process.

Petra de Haan is watching developments with interest. Like many other women in the Netherlands she believes childbirth should be as natural as possible, that the pain helps in the bonding process with the newborn infant, but she wonders whether tomorrow’s Dutch mothers will share that view.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Home births: A womb of my own

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In the 1960s, one in three women in the UK gave birth at home; now the figure is less than 3%. But why? Recent studies show the added risk of a home birth is tiny and that there are many benefits. Here, a mother of two reveals how the extreme language of both camps leaves mothers-to-be feeling lost.

“Women do not have the right to put their baby at risk.” This was the response of the Lancet to American research, published last July, that suggested home birth trebled the risk of neonatal mortality … The reaction was swift. There is “a concerted and calculated global attack and backlash against home birth,” said Cathy Warwick, general secretary of the Royal College of Midwives. The original American research was a “mishmash… that wouldn’t have been published in this country,” said Professor James Drife of Leeds University. “A powerbase in the US is producing phony research to validate its own role,” said author Sheila Kitzinger, a pioneering figure in the home-birth movement. Soon Woman’s Hour was debating the “backlash against home birth”; Sam Taylor-Wood, who had her third child at home, used her guest editor spot on the Today programme in December to discuss why her decision was labelled “brave” and even “irresponsible”.

In recent years, home birth has become a cause célèbre, particularly among a certain slice of the Mumsnet generation who advocate natural labour and “traditional” forms of care … NHS maternity statistics suggest that between 2000 and 2008, home births in the UK rose by 54% … Since 2007, government policy has stated that “women should be offered the choice of planning birth at home”. In Wales the number of women who give birth to their children at home has doubled since 2002 …

Despite such initiatives, the number of home births remains small … Holland is unusual among developed countries in having a home-birth rate of 30%. And, as the Lancet demonstrates, it is easy enough to find those who suggest that women who choose to give birth at home are committing a controversial act, even endangering the lives of their babies.

This may be the “controversy” attributed to minority activities, cultural anomalies. Or it may be the wages of a historical legacy: home birth has been “controversial” since the rise of modern obstetrics and the hospital, which moved birth out of the home. Before that there was no controversy, because there was no alternative. Women’s experience of childbirth was influenced by watching other family members give birth; now for most women their first experience of being present at a labour is their own. A major change came in the 1970s when the Peel Report advised that most women should give birth in hospital, although its findings were not based on statistical evidence. Now it seems we have lost confidence in our ability to give birth naturally: today one in four babies is born by caesarean …

… the home-birth debate is laced with words such as “risk” and “patient choice”. These words transport me back to the nerves and suspense of two recent pregnancies. I’ve given birth twice in the past four years, and I remember how my ordinary scepticism was destabilised by the edgy protective instinct I felt for my unborn child. I became a supplicant before sundry medical professionals, entreating them to tell me the right thing to do. I was transfixed by talk of risk: the risk of miscarriage in the early weeks, the risk of my baby having Down’s syndrome, the risk of miscarriage after amniocentesis, the risks of going beyond 42 weeks without being induced, the risks of induction…

I read about home birth versus hospital birth, felt buffeted one way then the other. Home birth: liberation from patriarchal control of the body. Home birth: unbridled agony promoted by macho women and their atavistic midwives. Modern technocratic medicine has saved you from pain and the fear of death. Modern technocratic medicine has silenced your body. Even in the depths of my confusion, I began to sense a gap emerging between these theoretical extremities and my own far more contradictory experience. Yet I couldn’t determine where theoretical extremity ended and individual experience began. And as soon as anyone mentioned a risk to my baby, I doubted myself, felt bound to comply.

The Lancet’s report demonstrates how emotive the issue is. It is also an example of the fraught relationship between statistics and the individual … the research is defined as a “meta-analysis” … All this data – derived from different countries, from several decades, but no study from Britain more recent than the 90s – was crunched together into sundry percentages and “findings”. The key finding, said the authors, was that the risk of neonatal death is trebled by home birth. The percentage rose from 0.04% for a hospital birth to 0.15% for a home birth. Yet the risks for perinatal mortality … were similar for home and hospital birth. Home birth was also found to reduce the risk of interventions …

Should a risk of 0.15% deter you? Is it real – and relevant to the UK – anyway? If a woman opts for a home birth here, is the risk of her baby dying definitely trebled, in Yorkshire as in Cornwall, in Powys as in Perthshire? Each woman, each baby? One of the authors of the American report, Dr Joseph Wax, suggested that the findings were “likely to be applicable to the UK”. Only likely, not definitely. For every meta-analysis from the US you can find another report, such as the Dutch study of 2009, which concluded that planning a home birth was as safe as planning a hospital birth, “provided… the availability of well-trained midwives and through a good transportation and referral system”.

How do women choose between home births and hospital births? I can only really speak for myself: the matter is so private, bound up with traits of personality, autobiography, circumstance. When I was pregnant for the first time, I thought at first I’d have a home birth. I hadn’t spent a night in hospital since my own birth and fragile infancy. (I was induced a month early by doctors who told my mother that the x-ray showed – for certain – that I was full-term. When I was born I was dramatically underweight, clearly premature. I was put in an incubator for two weeks; separated from my parents.) So perhaps this was significant. Also, I was attracted to the idea of giving birth where I lived. I didn’t want to be stranded in a hospital after the birth, calibrating the hours by the arrival of the drugs trolley, my partner banished each evening. Still, a month before I was due to give birth I was living in a tiny flat with no bath, scant room for a birthing pool, a half- broken church clock outside the window tolling furiously every quarter of an hour. I quite hated that flat, and I had no desire to give birth in it. So I booked myself into the John Radcliffe hospital, Oxford. I was faintly ambivalent about that, but then I was faintly ambivalent about the prospect of giving birth anyway.

A few friends had told me labour was painful. One explained how it made her understand what it was like for soldiers in the trenches, when their limbs were amputated in field hospitals without anaesthetic. A few others had told me it wasn’t as painful as they had expected. But what had they expected? I spent 36 hours in pain, a remorseless, probing pain which escalated even as I struggled to “manage” it, as the midwife encouraged me to do. As I wondered how I could possibly manage something that rolls you around like a crocodile, drags you deep down, so you can’t catch a breath, so you think you must be dying, I was given various “strategies for coping” – a Tens machine buzzing at my back. Suggested “labouring positions”, though no one compelled me to move my limbs in a prescribed way. Anyway, after a while I couldn’t move at all; I was bent double in a rocking chair, inhaling gas and air like an addict. Someone explained – so calmly it enraged me – that I was only a third of the way through. I was very tired; I felt as if I was being repeatedly impaled. So I asked for an epidural – I remember the midwife telling me it would take 10 minutes to work. Contorted on a thin, creaking hospital bed, staring crazily at the clock, I was indifferent to controversies about birth, technocracy versus the natural way and the rest.

My son was born 12 hours later, weighing nearly 11lb. I narrowly escaped a caesarean. It was gory and agricultural, and then there was the moment of surreal joy when I first held him. My daughter, too, was born in a hospital, for another complex of reasons. Neither birth “traumatised” me, as we are sometimes told they might. They are engraved on my memory, but as if I dreamed them. Yet I do, fairly distinctly, recall how kind and professional the midwives and doctors were.

At times, after the birth of my son, I wondered if we might both have died, in another era, without the Lethe of the epidural. It’s impossible to know. My experiences can be immediately counterbalanced by those of friends, including one who gave birth at home in two hours; her husband helped her deliver the baby while talking on the phone to the hospital. She felt no pain at all, simply mild discomfort, and recovered within hours.

Sheila Kitzinger had five children at home. She describes how “when you are on your own territory you don’t have to think about what you are doing. You are able to express the powerful emotions and excitement of birth.” Kitzinger’s daughter, Tess McKenney, had a “wonderful” water birth with a first baby who was just as heavy as mine: “The only injuries I sustained were red marks where my back rubbed the side of the birthing pool.”) Equally, a hospital will not inevitably dull the senses or force a woman into an escalating series of interventions. Abigail Reynolds, an artist, had a violent, elemental labour, without analgesics: “I felt as though I was in a dark forest howling away among the scrubs and prickles, performing some solitary act. I was sweating and struggling about on the bed. The midwife told me to stop screaming because I needed all the energy I had for pushing…” The location? Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospital, London.

… In Britain the Royal College of Obstetrics and Gynaecology and the Royal College of Midwives jointly support home birth for “low-risk” pregnancies, emphasising that “women have less pain at home and use less pharmacological pain relief, have lower levels of intervention, more autonomy and increased satisfaction”. However, in America (as in Australia and New Zealand), the College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) has stated its “long-standing opposition to home births” and advised women not to be “influenced by what’s fashionable, trendy, or the latest cause célèbre” …

This reveals a crucial problem for mothers-to-be trying to decide what to do: professional opinion is completely divided. Highly qualified, experienced doctors and researchers will tell them wildly contradictory things. Philip Steer, professor of obstetrics at Imperial College School of Medicine, suggests that first-time mothers should give birth in hospital because they simply don’t know if they are likely to have a good labour or not: “The figures for home births are that one in 20 women who eventually have a successful birth will need to be transferred to hospital at some point during the labour. But when you are considering first-time births, that proportion rises to one in four. Transfer is very bad.”

However, Lawrence Impey, consultant obstetrician at the John Radcliffe, doesn’t believe all first-time mothers should automatically go to hospital: “People forget that with home birth women are more relaxed. If you make someone scared and nervous, then you are more likely to have a complication …” …

Perhaps the debate isn’t as simple as homebirth versus hospital birth. There are many other variants that influence the outcomes for mothers and babies such as the model of care and the knowledge, skill and judgment of the care provider. Also important are the decisions that the woman ultimately makes. A birth can be very unsafe in a hospital, despite safe choices, due to a deficit in the skill of the care provider. A birth can be unsafe because of the choices that the woman has made. These things are ultimately not so much about place of birth, as much as the competence of the care provider and the quality of the decision making of the parents.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Health chiefs encourage more home births over caesareans

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HEALTH chiefs are aiming to slash the number of mothers giving birth by caesarean section and encourage more home births in Poole and Bournemouth.

The area has the highest rates of births by caesarean section in the south west, including the worst emergency rates – two per cent higher than the next primary care trust.

In Bournemouth and Poole, 11 per cent of mothers choose to have their babies by C-section, compared to eight per cent in the three best performing primary care trusts in the region, and seven per cent in Southampton.

NHS Bournemouth and Poole is working with maternity services to try and normalise the local pattern of births.

A spokeswoman explained: “We are concerned with the increase in planned and unplanned caesarean section rates because these procedures can present more risk to mother and baby.

“Women who have had a normal birth can return home more quickly to their family and their recovery is quicker.

“With appropriate care and support the majority of healthy women can give birth with a minimum of medical procedures and most women prefer to avoid interventions, provided their baby is safe and they feel supported.”

A spokeswoman for Poole Hospital’s maternity unit, the centre for high risk births in East Dorset, said: “The majority of caesarean sections are undertaken only where there is a clear clinical reason to do so – for example, if babies become distressed during labour, or for the safe delivery of breech babies or twins.

“However, we are working closely with NHS Bournemouth and Poole to reduce the number we carry out.”

The trust plans to recruit more midwives and use experienced obstetricians to increase the number of breech babies born normally.

Extra ante-natal clinics will be introduced to help women have a normal birth after previously having a caesarean, and the hospital will stop providing caesarean sections by choice instead of medical need.”

The hospital already has birthing pools and has just launched an on-call service to support women who choose home births.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Our legislation is a threat to the freedom to practise and women’s rights in childbirth

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or Medicare-funded private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

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Ireland is also going through the process of requiring professional indemnity insurance for all health practitioners, including midwives. Midwives will have access to insurance, provided that they practice according to strict guidelines, much the same as we now have in Australia.

The recently-reported horrors endured by home birth midwives in Hungary are but a pale shadow of those planned for midwives in Ireland.

Agnes Gereb faced five years in jail for assisting at a home birth: Irish midwives face up to 10, if they breach the HSE’s onerous terms and conditions.

… the Nurses and Midwives Bill makes it unlawful for midwives … to practice without indemnity.

Making insurance mandatory is key to compliance with State bureaucracy: lurking underneath Section 40 lies an invisible undercarriage of rules and regulations binding independent midwives hand and foot. Surveillance is tight: the HSE requires midwives to surrender client files before issuing payment.

Sixty years ago in Ireland, childbirth was women’s business. Having a child at home was the norm. Midwives were self-governing, albeit via a London board. Today, so powerful has the health bureaucracy become that women have lost their power over birth. Midwives have lost the freedom to practise autonomously, and women have lost a fundamental liberty: the right to decide how and where their child will be born; the terms under which midwives are legally required to work; and the conditions under which women are obliged to give birth.

However, there are signs of hope. The European Court of Human Rights recently ruled that denying women the freedom to give birth at home denies them their human rights.

The Court ruled that the circumstances of giving birth incontestably form part of one’s private life and that, under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, prospective mothers have the right to choose those circumstances. Only an independent midwifery profession can enable that choice.

Subordinate to a nursing board, midwives in Ireland have lost the freedom to rule themselves. They have all but lost the right to offer the services of their choosing in the community.

They can no longer decide whom to accept as a client, or when a pregnancy ceases to be normal. And when a mother exhibits some change in her condition, however minute, that is deemed a disqualifier for home birth and their indemnity lapses.

Care is to be withdrawn from the mother at home, even during the height of labour. New draft guidelines suggest the calling of ‘relevant stakeholders’ …/em>

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Controversy over Home Birth Brews in the Netherlands

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or Medicare-funded private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

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… a debate is “raging” in the Netherlands, the country which has always had the highest rate of home birth in Europe, about where women should give birth: home or hospital? There has been a dramatic decline in home births in the past two years … from 34 to 24%. Media reports have raised questions about the safety of home births. Some experts say these are merely scare stories and that a ban on home birth would have no impact on the the number of infant mortality at birth.

“Dutch women grow up thinking home birth is good for you, and that it’s part of mother nature. But I didn’t consider it at all. I think it’s too risky. If something is wrong, it’s better to be in hospital,” said a recently new Dutch mother. The Dutch government is worried by the fact that the rate of death among newborn babies is higher than in the Netherlands than other European countries.

The health minister said recently that obstetric care needed to improve, and there was sometimes “insufficient communication” between professionals. Some doctors say women are choosing hospital birth because they want a full range of pain relief and quicker deliveries.

Last year in the Netherlands, there were around 1,700 stillbirths and deaths among newborn babies. Everyone agrees that figure is too high, and that Dutch midwives and doctors should work more closely together. But are home births being unfairly blamed?

Some believe that home births are safe and even if totally abolished, wouldn’t make a small dent in the mortality statistics. “It’s very short-sighted. I think it would be really sad if choice disappears – and there’s a real risk of this happening in the Netherlands.”

Homebirth isn’t to blame as the death rates are high in hospitals too. I would suggest the cause of the high death rates are either a) non-adherence to the standard of care offered in other developed countries (eg intermittent auscultation in labour; a routine morphology ultrasound in pregnancy etc) or b) the heavy reliance on risk management approaches to maternity care when it is well known that risk is a poor predictor of outcome. Perhaps a more balanced approach would be care delivered by midwives and obstetricians with the offering of an appropriate standard of care, and homebirth to continue as an option for women and families. Homebirth has been shown to be safe in the Netherlands’ own research which showed that homebirth is no less safe than hospital birth for low risk women who are attended by a midwife. This research supports research from Canada and the US.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Midwife leader accuses GPs of discouraging home births

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or Medicare-funded private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

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GPs are scaring women out of giving birth at home by wrongly telling them they will come to harm if they do …

… “There are doctors that still tell women scary things that aren’t evidence-based that then put them off having a home birth,” Warwick told the Guardian. She was referring to GPs and not obstetricians and gynaecologists in hospitals …

… “The implication is that you will be safer if you come into hospital, and that’s not necessarily true. We know that things can go wrong whether women are at home or in hospital,” she added.

GPs who do this are not aware of the latest research about the safety of home deliveries, which means expectant mothers receive wrong information. “It tends to be people who don’t have real information about the evidence. Clearly some doctors aren’t up-to-date with the evidence about home births, and especially the safety of home births, in the UK,” Warwick said.

… The leader of Britain’s 45,000 GPs rejected Warwick’s claims. “I would be delighted if there were more home deliveries. In my experience GPs are not scaring women out of a home delivery. I don’t recognise that GPs are putting women off from having a home delivery,” said Dr Clare Gerada, chairman of the Royal College of GPs.

The issue affecting home births is the NHS’s lack of midwives, added Gerada. “Home deliveries are a bit of a luxury given the shortage of midwife resources. They need two midwives for a home delivery, which is a phenomenal use of resources at a time when resources are tight.”

… “NCT believes women are finding it more difficult to book a home birth,” she said. “There is no evidence of a reduction in demand, but we know maternity services are additionally stretched due to a rising birthrate and too few midwives. Low midwifery staffing levels can mean home birth is either not offered at all, or is withdrawn at short notice.

“For those who have had a straightforward pregnancy and like the idea of a home birth, the advantages include greater privacy and comfort in familiar surroundings, more control, one-to-one midwifery support, and the opportunity for the whole family to stay together after the birth” …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Midwives’ role curtailed

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or Medicare-funded private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

Progress?

An interesting letter below. As midwifery professionalises around the world, we begin to see two distinct outcomes: one is the idea of restriction of women’s birthing options; and the other is the increasing acceptance and validation of midwifery as a profession.

Whenever a professional group claims its rightful place as a profession, certain codes and guidelines come into effect, such as codes of ethics and conduct and guidelines for practice that establish accepted standards of care upon which the public can rely as a statement of safe and responsible care.

These standards can be viewed positively, but as the author of the letter below indicates, there is also the consequence of restricting women’s birthing options. An interesting ethical dilemma that has not been resolved to date.

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Madam,

… Irish midwives face up to 10 years if they breach HSE’s onerous terms and conditions. Now at Report Stage in the Dáil, the Nurses and Midwives Bill makes it unlawful for midwives … to practice without indemnity.

Making insurance mandatory is key to compliance with state bureaucracy: lurking underneath Section 40 of the Bill lies an invisible undercarriage of rules and regulations binding independent midwives hand and foot. Surveillance is tight: the HSE requires midwives to surrender client files before issuing payment.

Sixty years ago in Ireland, childbirth was women’s business. Having a child at home was the norm. Midwives were self-governing, albeit via a London board. Today, so powerful has the health bureaucracy become that women have lost their power over birth. Midwives have lost the freedom to practise autonomously. And women have lost a fundamental liberty: the right to decide how and where their child will be born. The terms under which midwives are legally required to work are also the conditions under which women are obliged to give birth.

However, there are signs of hope. The European Court of Human Rights recently ruled that denying women the freedom to give birth at home denies them their human rights. The court ruled that the circumstances of giving birth “incontestably” form part of one’s private life and that under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, prospective mothers have the right to choose those circumstances.

… midwives in Ireland have lost the freedom to rule themselves. They have all but lost the right to offer the services of their choosing in the community. They can no longer decide whom to accept as a client, or when a pregnancy ceases to be normal. And when a mother exhibits some change in her condition, however minute, that is deemed a disqualifier for home birth; their indemnity lapses …

We are headed for a similar situation in Australia if homebirth is ever indemnified and funded. Progress on the one hand, for those women who are low-risk enough to birth at home; but some will also view this as an infringement on the rights of all women to birth at home, low or high risk.

In a separate article, “New law does not threaten midwives“, the author explains why midwives’ roles are not being curtailed and how this is a process of professionalising midwifery.

I READ with interest Marie O’Connor’s letter … regarding midwifery practice. Unfortunately, however, her letter contains a number of factual errors.

Firstly, the … legislation will enshrine the position of midwifery as a profession, as evidenced by the proposed change of name from An Bord Altranais (the Nursing Board) to the Nursing and Midwifery Board.

It will establish for the first time a statutory midwifery committee to deal with midwifery matters, as well as providing statutory protection for the midwifery division of the register.

… It is worth noting that there is nothing in the proposed legislation prohibiting midwives attending at home births.

Ms O’Connor refers to a time 60 years ago when most women had their children at home. That was a time when perinatal rates were six times higher than they are now.

The safety of both the mother and child is of paramount importance in the new legislation. It is therefore right and proper that midwives attending at home births are accountable to their regulatory body for their professional conduct.

It is also fair to insist that they have the appropriate professional indemnity.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Midwives call for ‘seismic shift’ in maternity services

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or Medicare-funded private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

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The leader of the UK’s midwives says there needs to be “a seismic shift” in the way maternity care is provided.

Cathy Warwick said there was a “concerted and calculated backlash” against home birth and midwife-led care.

… “We want to make sure that all women know that the choice of a home birth is available to them.

“We feel that there is a concerted and calculated backlash by sectors of the establishment against homebirth and midwife-led care.

… “To begin providing more home births, there needs to be a seismic shift in the way maternity services are organised.

“The NHS is simply not prepared to meet the potential demand for home births because we are still embedded in a medicalised culture.

“The recently reported drop in the home birth rate in England from 2.9 % in 2008 to 2.7% in 2009 is a real disappointment.”

… the midwives’ leader claimed some researchers collaborated with the media to publish stories claiming home birth was less safe than hospital birth.

“We think people are comparing apples and pears,” she said, adding that it was not possible to compare services in the UK with those in other countries.

“Women should speak to midwives and ask them about evidence relating to their own circumstances, and be allowed to make an informed choice,” she said.

Wales has a higher rate of home births at almost 4%, after ministers made it a priority.

… In Scotland, 1.5% of women currently give birth at home, while in Northern Ireland the figure is 0.4% of births.

The parenting charity NCT backed the RCM’s views.

The NCT’s head of research and information, Mary Newburn, said: “The NCT believes women are finding it more difficult to book a home birth.

“There is no evidence of a reduction in demand, but we know maternity services are additionally stretched.

“The NCT calls on every NHS trust and board to ensure that choice of place of birth is available to all women.”

A Department of Health spokesperson said: “All mothers should expect consistently excellent maternity services.

“We have made clear that women and their families should be given the information they need to make informed choices about their maternity care …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Mom Has Home Birth After 3 C-Sections

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The CNN headline has now been changed, but it originally asked if mother Aneka of Maryland was a “hero or a danger?” for defying doctor’s orders and refusing to go in for a scheduled c-section after what she now realizes were three unnecessary previous c-sections, and choosing instead to birth with a midwife in her home.

… She saw Ricki Lake’s The Business of Being Born documentary that really questions birth in the United States, and it raised some questions in her mind. The more she researched, the more upset she got that her doctor refused to even consider the idea of a VBAC. Even then, it’s not like she just suddenly said, “Homebirth! Whoo hoo!” She tried three other hospitals, called around, and was told, “No, no, no, absolutely not!”

Despite all the facts out there that VBACs in most women are way, WAY safer than a repeat c-section, and even that they could just let her do a “trial of labor” first, everyone just flat out told her no and told her she had no choice but to schedule her surgery. The only place she found that would even let her try was over an hour and a half away, which she decided was just too far to be considered.

She got in contact with her local International Cesarean Awareness Network (ICAN) leader and got a lot of information from her, including the name of a midwife who would do a VBAC with her in her own home.

Her VBAC was an amazing, emotional, healing success, and yet she’s still being called a poor example. A spokesperson for the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ACOG) says not to look at Aneka’s story and come to conclusions because she took a great risk … and yet their own release earlier this year discussed how much safer VBACs actually are.

Aneka wasn’t a “hero” or a “danger.” She was a mom trying to figure out what was safest for her and her baby, according to all the science out there, without the intricacies of business and malpractice suits getting involved in her birth.

… If doctors really don’t want women doing what Aneka did, maybe one of those four hospitals she called in the first place should have actually followed the recommendations of the ACOG and allowed her to try. You can’t villainize a person who you’ve backed into a corner.

It’s a sad case when women are forced into homebirth because they cannot find a care provider and hospital to support them in their choices.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Caesarean rate continues to rise

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The number of women undergoing a Caesarean section in Ireland is continuing to rise, while the number of those opting for home births is on the decline …

… 26.7% of total live births were delivered by Caesarean section. In 1990, this figure was 20.4%.

There were 158 home births attended by independent domiciliary midwives in 2008, compared to 186 in 2007.

… Meanwhile, the perinatal mortality(death) rate was 6.8 per 1,000 live births and stillbirths in 2008. This figure has fallen by 17.1% since 1999, when it was 8.2 per 1,000.

The perinatal mortality rate was highest for babies born to mothers aged 40 to 44 (11.3 per 1,000). The lowest perinatal mortality rate was for babies born to mothers aged 35-39 (5.8 per 1,000) …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

‘We know the reality of childbirth’

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

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A new report on NHS maternity care has revealed divisions between midwives and obstetricians. One of the disputes … is over the best way to give birth. While midwives, and the government, advocate natural birth, many female obstetricians opt for a caesarean when they have their own children. Do they know something we don’t?

… Sher, 38, chose an elective caesarean … because she decided it was the safest method … Sher makes decisions on delivery and surgery every day, and she understands the consequences more than most – she is a consultant obstetrician.

One London study … reported that 31% of female obstetricians would personally prefer a caesarean birth. In the US, the figure is almost 50%. Many female surgeons and GPs quietly take this option too – though, as one told me, “to admit as much is still massively un-PC”.

In April 2007, the then health secretary, Patricia Hewitt, launched her strategy for the future of maternity care. Maternity Matters trumpeted “choice”, promising better access to “normal” deliveries via home births and midwife units. Her plans chimed with recent guidelines from the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (Nice) drawn up to reduce caesareans – currently 23% of all births – by advising obstetricians against granting them without medical justification. The official disapproval of elective C-sections means Sher daren’t talk under her real name; Stephanie Sher is a pseudonym.

So while the government promotes “normal” deliveries to the public, its employees are privately planning caesareans. Why do so many obstetricians opt not to push? What do they know that we don’t?

It’s important to remember that it is the obstetrician’s and the surgeon’s task to remedy the rarer complications and consequences of childbirth. Unlike midwives, who oversee successful, normal births every day, doctors bear witness to the worst-case scenarios.

Inevitably this difference in experience manifests itself in an ongoing debate on how best to manage childbirth. Midwife groups advocate normal delivery and “natural” births while obstetricians tend to see medical intervention as a benefit rather than a bane. Yesterday, the healthcare commission published a report highlighting several key problems in Britain’s maternity services, one of which was an inherent tension between midwives and doctors on maternity wards. Caught up in the middle are the mothers.

Maternity experts across the board believe that a straightforward vaginal delivery is by far the best for both mother and baby. Most women agree: 63% of mothers see childbirth as a natural experience that should not be interfered with unless necessary. In “putting women at the centre of maternity provision”, the government’s strategy reflects the overwhelming consensus.

Nevertheless, among all the furore that surrounds the issue of childbirth, for Sher and her colleagues, one thing is clear: the government’s promotion of delivery “choice” is a promise rarely kept. “There is nothing wrong with hoping for a natural event,” Sher says, “and for everything to happen beautifully. But it just isn’t like that for a large proportion of women.”

Sher’s greatest fear was not the pain of spontaneous labour. It was the prospect of emergency intervention, if the birth went wrong. According to the most recent NHS maternity statistics made available (2005-6), just under half (47%) of expectant mothers have a regular, uncomplicated “normal” labour. The rest have interventions ranging from induction, to forceps, to an emergency caesarean. In other words, when a woman tries for a normal birth and the best, safest kind of delivery, she has only a 50% chance of achieving it. For a significant number of others, the birth will be more complex.

I wonder if those women had access to one-to-one midwifery care for their pregnancy, birth and postnatal care? When women are put through a system that sees women having a different midwife at every antenatal visit, shifts of midwives in delivery suite and then shifts of midwives in postnatal, it’s no wonder that most women do not experience a natural birth. bur when women are cared for by the same midwife right from the first visit to 6 weeks postnatal, the outcomes are very different. The ability to develop trust, rapport and understanding are paramount to experiencing natural birth.

With odds like this, it is not illogical to consider alternatives, particularly not if your line of work exposes you to the most extreme of cases. Many obstetricians find the second safest solution is a planned caesarean. The National Caesarean Section Audit (2001) revealed half of obstetricians think this is the safest delivery method for the baby – though not for the mother.

The surgical risks of a planned caesarean include haemorrhage, thrombosis and infection. Scarring on the uterus means the more caesareans you have, the more risky later pregnancies become. But Sher knew she only wanted two children and made the choice that suited her best – both were delivered by C-section. The baby’s safety was her primary motive – but not, she adds, the only one. “The other issue was the risk of pelvic floor damage. Again small, but to me, just not worth it.”

… Michelle Thornton, a colorectal surgeon, sees around 100 women a year suffering from faecal incontinence. “I’m seeing the end result of a traumatic birth,” she says. “Very few of my colleagues would opt for a vaginal delivery and, if any of them asked me, then it’s an elective C-section.”

What about planning for a natural vaginal birth and preparing well for an intact perineum and a short second stage? Private midwives are expert at working with women to achieve these aims. Most women who birth with private midwives do not need stitches and experience a healthy return to normal pelvic floor function.

… Not all experts agree that the risks of a surgical birth outweigh the benefit of protecting the pelvic floor. But calibrating clinical percentages is different from witnessing the lives of women with faecal incontinence, says Thornton. “It’s definitely altered the way I think about childbirth. The thought of being faecally incontinent – to have a life like my patients – I don’t think I’m strong enough.”

… Thornton has half a dozen women in their early 30s. They have “bonding issues with their babies . . . as well as young partners expecting to resume a normal sexual relationship. Two of the couples have split up because of the traumas.” She counsels patients both psychologically and physically. “Emotionally it is tough,” she says. “Having those patients with you when they get upset is tough.” When treatments fail, “it’s terrible, because the patient is absolutely gutted”. Her patients know a permanent colostomy is the only solution. Imparting this news always makes Thornton anxious. “It’s a terrible feeling. It’s like giving them a cancer diagnosis.”

When it comes to medical matters, we assume that knowledge is a good thing. Looking at the childbirth choices made by some female doctors, we might think their superior professional experience makes them right. But many admit their exposure to complications inevitably taints their personal choices. Is it really better to know what they know? Perhaps it’s not that most women don’t know enough – but that female doctors, and particularly obstetricians, know too much.

… If you’ve seen deliveries, she says, “you know the reality.” And “maybe that’s why doctors go and have caesareans – they know it is quite a risky time”.

Interesting, as many midwives opt for homebirths when they have their babies.

Consultant obstetrician Virginia Beckett also puts it plainly: “When I was 14 weeks pregnant I dealt with 12 stillbirths in one 24-hour shift. You can imagine that might skew your view of how to manage your labour.” (Beckett has had two caesareans, the first because her baby was breach, the second was elective). On that particular shift, her baby was too small for her to feel any movement. Emotionally drained and anxious, she scanned herself in the middle of the night. She needed to know her own baby was still alive.

Beckett has worked in obstetrics for more than 16 years, but dealing with stillbirths “doesn’t get any easier”. As the obstetrician, you “go in with the machine and with the patient’s eyes boring in to the side of your head, make the diagnosis and break the news”.

Every time it happens Beckett finds it “heartbreaking, sometimes I do cry actually, not in front of the patient. You feel terrible . . . But there’s nothing you can do.” In the middle of a busy shift there is no time to reflect. “You can’t spend half an hour coming down from every case,” Beckett says, “because there will be another one along in a minute.”

Complications include “abruptions, where the placenta separates and mum and baby can bleed to death. We see people having seizures with pre-eclampsia or eclampsia. We see people’s uteruses rupturing when they’ve had a caesarean section in the past. We see acute fetal distress. We see very complicated vaginal deliveries using instruments, at which various degrees of injury can be sustained . . . All life is here as they say.”

It is the obstetrician’s job to control the less palatable, natural, consequences of childbirth. And they are very good at it. The UK is one of the safest places in the world to have a baby. And of the 1,917 babies born each day in this country, just 11 will be stillborn. “We know that when we work effectively we’re able to make a difference and that’s why we keep doing the job. When it goes to plan, you feel very positive.”

And when things go badly? “You feel absolutely awful: drained and disempowered, really.” Choosing a caesarean, admits Beckett, is one way of redressing this because “you realise how out of control things can be sometimes” and ultimately, “how fragile life is”.

The medics making this choice are unlikely to find support among their colleagues in the midwife unit or even, in some cases, their employers. Current Nice guidelines discourage obstetricians from offering C-sections on “maternal request”. Instead, natural births top the government’s maternity “menu”, with home births promised alongside other “normal” delivery options by 2009.

Privately, however, many obstetricians believe women should be able to choose a caesarean, if they are aware of the risks. Consultant obstetrician Sara Paterson-Brown has publicly asserted a woman’s right to an informed choice because “mothers must live with the consequences”. Her hospital has not since suffered a stampede of women eager for the surgeon’s knife. “Women are counselled and fully informed and recommendations are made,” she says. “We don’t feel threatened by women expressing their choice.”

Paterson-Brown won’t tell me how her own children were delivered, but resolutely feels “the best way to have a baby is normally with no complications. The trouble is, you don’t know if that’s going to be you or not.”

The vast majority of women want a vaginal birth. Just 3% of women even ask for a caesarean without medical indication. Almost 25% will end up having one anyway – largely in emergency circumstances – and a substantial number find their “normal” delivery will go seriously off plan. “There is a lot of luck involved,” says Beckett, “and sometimes the luck isn’t there for you.” Doctors know this, lay women don’t; and when things go wrong, they blame themselves.

Luck? Is it “luck” if we get a uni degree? Is it “luck” if we pull off a dinner party? Is it luck if we get through a very busy week with everything achieved as planned? Or, is it good planning, good information, good support and confidence in our abilities? There is so much a woman can do to achieve a positive, natural birth: she can inform herself, plan for a great birth, increase confidence and engage supportive care providers. Without this, intervention is the most likely result because that is the world we live in today: a world that is fear-ridden and that seeks to control that which we do not fully understand. I believe that most pregnancy and childbirth “complications” are mediated emotionally and mentally. When women are supported, informed, confident, prepared and cared for by a care provider who supports natural birth, she is most likely to birth her baby naturally.

Dr Abigail Fry remembers one birth as a medical student which turned from “calm” to “completely crazy” when a cautious doctor intervened. It became a difficult forceps delivery. Afterwards she remembers “the registrar doing the woman’s stitches and saying: ‘Do you think this bit, you know, should go there?’ And I was like ‘I don’t know!’ It was a mess.” Unlike her obstetric colleagues, Fry chose a home birth.

… “I really enjoyed it.” …

A recent study also found a huge polarity between pregnant women’s expectations of birth and the reality. Expectant mothers need not be frightened by rare, unlikely risks, but they should be given realistic information about the pain and unpredictability of childbirth.

How is that not frightening women? “It’s going to hurt like nothing else … it’ll be excruciating. Oh, and by the way, birth is also unpredictable so don’t have any expectations because they’ll be shattered”. How about, “The sensations of birth can be managed in many ways such as with water, hot packs, movement, position changes (etc). Birth can be unpredictable and so it might be helpful to spend some time going through some of the more likely issues that can come up and to look at how they might be managed at the time.” The latter is far more empowering and less fear-provoking than the former.

Instead there exists a misguided, competitive birth culture; where “lucky” or natural “birthers” are praised for their success, while mothers who “succumb” to medical intervention openly admit they’ve “failed”. Elective caesarean births are so low on the league table they can barely be mentioned without fear of acrimony.

“Women need education,” says Linda Cardozo, a professor in urogynaecology, who blames the “brand of doing it naturally” for this competitive approach as well as the trend for the “madness” of home births. “Most are perfectly safe,” Cardozo admits, “but if something does go wrong you’re in the wrong place to deal with it.” Childbirth is a natural process, but she thinks we’ve forgotten it’s also “a natural process for far more mothers to be damaged and far more babies to die, and medical intervention is absolutely wonderful because it’s prevented that”.

But this does not make Cardozo an advocate of elective caesareans. She remembers colleagues choosing them 20 years ago, but personally felt differently. “You see bad experiences in all deliveries, not just vaginal,” she says, besides which, “I truly don’t believe the risk is worthwhile.

Caesarean section is an operation and all operations carry a complication rate.” So Cardozo did what most women in the UK do, and delivered her three children vaginally, in hospital. Two were twins, one delivered by forceps. “And I’m not incontinent – yet,” she says …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Medicare … at last!

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

Many Sydney families may now benefit from legislative changes that enable women to claim medicare benefits for private midwifery care for homebirth or hospital birth. Melissa Maimann is thrilled to be one of the first 10 midwives nationally to receive a Medicare provider number.

A Medicare-Eligible Midwife meets certain advanced requirements in relation to experience, formal peer review, continuing professional development and competence to provide pregnancy, birth and postnatal care to women and babies. This provides an assurance to the public that services provided by a medicare-eligible midwife are of a high standard. In addition, in order to use the medicare provider number, the midwife must have a collaborative arrangement with a doctor to ensure a) continuity and b) a high level of care.

I am pleased to also let you know that I can now order all routine tests and ultrasounds. This saves women from having to have these attended by their GP. Medicare funding means that cost is no longer a barrier to women benefiting from private midwifery care. It is well known that when women are cared for by the same midwife throughout pregnancy, birth and postnatal, they are healthier, experience less intervention, are more likely to successfully breastfeed and are more satisfied with their birthing experience.

Melissa Maimann has negotiated a collaborative agreement with a private obstetrician enabling “Ultimate Continuity”: complete continuity of private midwifery and private obstetric care for pregnancy, birth and postnatal. Alternatively, women may obtain a referral to Melissa Maimann for private midwifery care. This referral would be from a GP Obstetrician (ie, a GP with a Diploma in Obstetrics). Please contact me if you are experiencing difficulty in obtaining a referral from your GP Obstetrician.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

New era born as Rossendale birthing centre opens

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

I’m impressed by the positive way in which the obstetrician in this article talks about the new midwifery models of care that are being offered.

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A NEW era for birthing in East Lancashire begins today with the opening of the Rossendale Birth Centre.

The unit … will have two home-from-home, en-suite birth rooms, with a birth pool in one of the rooms, and will be managed by midwives, encouraging healthy women to give birth naturally in a relaxed, friendly atmosphere.

… healthy pregnant women in East Lancashire can now choose between a birth at home, supported by midwives, at their nearest birth centre, or in the £32million centre in Burnley.

Women who are likely to have more complex births are advised to have their babies in hospital.

Rineke Schram, consultant obstetrician and medical director of East Lancashire Hospitals Trust, said: “Different women have very different needs during birth, and our new model of care allows us to make sure everyone’s needs are fully catered for.

“The midwife-led birth centres are a fantastic choice because they foster a relaxed atmosphere in which they can go through labour at their own pace, in the position most comfortable for them.

“A stress-free birth is the best possible start a mother and baby can have.”

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Midwives offered home-birth cover on HSE terms

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

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SELF-EMPLOYED community midwives will be indemnified by the State Claims Agency to attend at home births only if they sign a memorandum of understanding with the HSE …

Minister for Health Mary Harney told the Select Committee on Health and Children she was a supporter of home births for “low-risk” women.

… “If something goes wrong, the Clinical Indemnity Scheme will provide indemnity as long as the midwife has signed the memorandum,” she added.

… They say provisions in it will deny some women the right to have a home birth as self-employed community midwives will not be covered to attend at home births in some circumstances, and not at all if they refused to sign the memorandum.

Krysia Lynch, co-chairwoman of Aims Ireland, said the Bill was “taking away a mother’s human and constitutional right to choose where to have her baby, having informed herself of any risks”.

… Among the issues covered by the memorandum are the qualifications a self-employed community midwife must have, their professional conduct, performance management and risk-management practices.

The reason for the new arrangements are the withdrawal by the former Irish Nurses Organisation of insurance cover from community midwives in 2008 as they were deemed too high a risk …

… the memorandum of understanding would mean women could continue to have home births by guaranteeing insurance was available to midwives who operated to the highest clinical standards and offered their services to women who were low-risk cases.

… Any midwife who attends at a home birth for reward, who does not have adequate clinical indemnity insurance will be guilty of an offence and could be subject to a significant fine, a period of imprisonment or both.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Hungarian Government to Control Home Births

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

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The arrest of a midwife for attending three home births with a fatal outcome has created a storm of controversy in Hungary. The name of Ágnes Geréb is well-known to the Hungarian public. Several investigations are pending against her, since between 2000 and 2007, three babies died during births she attended. As a consequence, Ms Geréb was disqualified by the court for a while but never stopped attending home births and continued her work as a midwife. Now she is facing another investigation for a recent case which nearly had a tragic end.

The case has put in focus the regulation of home births in Hungary, an issue which has for twenty years awaited laws that could be satisfactory and serve the protection of mothers and babies. Five months after its taking up office, the new Government has started consultations with all parties concerned to regulate home births.

… Ágnes Geréb was arrested in early October and then placed under pre-trial detention as another baby had nearly died at birth attended by her at a birth centre … Following a series of home births in 2003, 2006 and 2007, the prosecutor’s office pressed charges for negligent malpractice causing permanent disability and death. Ágnes Geréb was indicted on three counts, the second defendant on two counts, and another three defendants on one count each. In the first case, Ms Geréb gave an injection to a mother delivering twins at Christmas 2003 as she found the heart beats of the second foetus too weak. The baby born soon afterwards was not breathing and lacked oxygen until the ambulance arrived, thus sustained irreversible brain damage and died six months later … In the second case, a foetus was trapped in the birth canal in September 2007. The attempts to free the baby failed and the baby died. The third case happened in October 2007, when a woman in labour developed complications and was rushed to hospital for being drained of blood.

… According to the ruling of the Court, ten years ago a healthy baby suffered serious brain damage because Ms Geréb, attending the birth, failed to clean the respiratory tract. In 2003 the midwife volunteered to attend a twin birth that was considered as risky, and one of the babies suffered irreversible damage due to lack of oxygen, and died at the age of six months. In 2007 Ágnes Geréb has been disqualified to practise the profession of obstetrician-gynaecologist for 3 years by a final court ruling, because in the so-called Birth Centre she led, a new-born baby got trapped in the birth canal and … the baby was stillborn … According to the conclusions of medical experts in all of these cases Ágnes Geréb has committed serious professional errors in delivering the babies.

The cases were united and first tried by the Central District Court of Pest in 2008, then transferred to Budapest Metropolitan Court in spring 2010 for the proposal that one of the indicted offences should be given a more serious qualification and adjudged as negligent homicide …

Although the 3-year ban was still in force, in October this year the ambulance service had to resuscitate a baby who was born in the attendance of Ágnes Geréb. Ágnes Geréb defends herself by maintaining that the pregnant mother only visited her for routine preparations, when she suddenly went into labour. Yet, Ágnes Geréb failed to call the ambulance service. The Court ordered the pre-trial detention of the midwife, which, according to the Central District Court of Pest, is justified because of the risk of re-offending and obstruction in collecting evidence.

The Hungarian Government understands the gravity of the situation and the lack of legal regulations in this matter. The cabinet, which is pursuing strong family-friendly policies is committed to ensure that mothers can give birth as they choose, but only in safe circumstances. Therefore, the Junior Minister’s Office for Healthcare of the Ministry of National Resources is currently developing the minimum professional standards for home births, and plans to pass them into law.

Mr. Miklós Szócska, Minister of State for Healthcare, started immediate professional consultations after the case to explore and remedy the current legal deficiencies concerning home births … The aim is to look at international practices and to involve all stakeholders with a view to a new legal regulation which, if all criteria required by professionals are in place, could offer an alternative to pregnant women when choosing a safe place for delivery.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Home birth Bill is open to legal challenge

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

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CAMPAIGNERS FOR better maternity services have warned that the Nurses and Midwives Bill currently going through the Oireachtas will end up in constitutional challenges.

The Bill, which contains controversial provisions for home births in the State, is due before the Seanad, having passed without amendment at committee stage last week. The Home Birth Association of Ireland, the Community Midwives Association and AIMS (Association for Improvements in Maternity Services) Ireland are among the groups lobbying for changes to the Bill.

… The most controversial provision would make it compulsory for an expectant mother who wishes to have a home birth to go to hospital if her labour lasts longer than 24 hours. The midwife attending could face a fine or a prison sentence if they do not comply.

Draft guidelines seen by AIMS Ireland could also lead to circumstances where the Garda is called if a midwife is refused entry by a mother who is in labour.
… “We cannot coerce women into hospital. If we are in a situation where as professionals we believe it would be safer to attend to the mother, we will do so. We are not prepared to withdraw care because that would compromise the mother and baby, and would be against our practice standards for midwives.”

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Ability to choose home births backed

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

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The Health Minister Kim Hames is standing by WA’s midwifery program despite a review recommending against home births.

The draft report by an expert committee found the death rate among babies born at home was four times higher than those delivered in hospital … [and] the risk of infants dying due to a loss of oxygen to the brain was 33 times greater in planned home births.

… Dr Hames says the review is based on data that is a few years old and he will not be withdrawing funding for the program.

“At the end of the day, do I think the Government should say home births will no longer be allowed and that all babies must be delivered in a hospital with a doctor?
“I’m not going to say that. I don’t think it’s what the public wants, I don’t think it’s what mothers want.” …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Until birth and death do us part

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

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They are two of the most natural and common occurrences in the world – birth and death – and coincidentally how we manage both of them has come under fresh scrutiny in a matter of months.

We can agree from the start that few things in life are more predictable – people reproducing, in good times and in bad, and at the other end of the spectrum, every life coming to an end, no matter how much we fight it.

Yet they are not as straight-forward as they seem. They raise controversial issues, from rising caesarean rates and debate about the risks of homebirth, through to calls for voluntary euthanasia for the terminally ill.

And they raise important questions about how much should we intervene in these two most basic of events at the start and end of life.

In particular, what is the role of medical professionals in both?

A few months ago the euthanasia debate was reignited in WA when Greens MP Robin Chapple sought to push a Voluntary Euthanasia Bill through State Parliament. It did not get the backing it needed and some senior WA doctors even threatened to quit medicine or boycott the laws rather than support legalised euthanasia.

In a candid moment, Health Minister Kim Hames admitted he once administered a potentially lethal dose of morphine to a terminally-ill patient but believed he stayed within the law and denied it was a form of euthanasia. He was making the patient more comfortable, not assisting in a death.

Interestingly, some doctors claimed the legislation was incompatible with their responsibilities as doctors and queried why they should have special authority to end a life, by virtue of a university degree and the ability to draw up a syringe.

Only weeks after the euthanasia debate went on the back burner again, the issue of how we manage childbirth and promote the various options for women also hit the headlines, when some doctors complained about a WA Health Department website.

The Australian Medical Association claimed the site provided a link to the Community Midwifery WA website which had misleading information about homebirths. The department defended its support of midwives but the information was modified to appease doctors.

But last week there was more controversy. Leading WA child health researcher Fiona Stanley waded into the homebirth issue, defending its safety record and calling on obstetricians to relinquish more low-risk pregnancies to midwives.

That in turn prompted the AMA to warn about the higher risk of death and complications in babies born from planned homebirths.

Meanwhile, a retired WA obstetrician has quietly self-published a book, Too Many Caesars, Not Enough Joy, which laments the overmedication of childbirth.

Like many of his colleagues, Ralph Hickling has seen plenty of babies born and has not tired of the wonder of a new life coming into the world.

But over the years before Dr Hickling retired from practice in 2002, he became increasingly concerned about the rising caesarean rate, and the medical domination of the whole management of pregnancy and childbirth.

Dr Hickling says childbirth has been taken over by consumerism. He says that if an obstetrician in 1960 was told that in 50 years time the caesarean rate would be more than 30 per cent, he or she would have been incredulous.

He is a strong supporter of Community Midwifery WA …

“Childbirth, when all is said and done, remains very much women’s business and that means women not only distinct from men (but) also from doctors and scientists, politicians and bureaucrats,” he says.

Dr Hickling, who has four children and 11 grandchildren, including one born at home, defends the right of women to choose less orthodox places to have their babies.

“If there are more risks if you have baby at home instead of hospital, they’re certainly within what should be the discretion of the woman herself and it’s not right to deprive her of that choice,” he says.

Perth GP and health commentator Joe Kosterich sums up the recent debate on birth and death, arguing it says a lot about how people want to “come and go”.

He says wherever possible most people want to be surrounded by family and friends, and not machines and depersonalised care.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Western Australia ‘in denial’ over home-birth risks

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

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WEST Australian health officials are in denial over the risks associated with home births, according to the Australian Medical Association.

It was responding to a leaked report showing the death rate among babies born at home is almost four times higher than those delivered in hospital.

… A departmental draft report leaked to the AMA reveals the risk of babies dying because of a lack of oxygen to the brain was 33 times higher in home births than in hospital deliveries.

Compiled by the department’s perinatal and infant mortality committee, the report recommends against home births because of the risks.

The committee said that if the government’s Community Midwifery Program continued, it needed to implement 24 recommendations from a 2009 review aimed at improving safety.

The report examined 458 home births between 2005 and 2007 and found that seven babies born at home died. During the same period in WA, more than 80,000 women delivered babies in hospital. The report found that the mortality rate of 7.81 per thousand among home births deliveries compared unfavourably with the death rate of hospital births, which was 2.03 per thousand.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Home birth fall ‘disappointing’

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

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The National Childbirth Trust and the Royal College of Midwives said the drop in the home birth rate, from 2.9% in 2008, to 2.7% in 2009, was “disappointing”.

… Recent government policy has been to give women choice over where to give birth – whether in hospital, at home or in a birthing centre run by midwives.

It followed a dramatic fall in births at home in the UK in the last 30 years.

… In England, 17,834 women (2.7%) had a home birth in 2009, down from 2.8% of home births in 2008.

Wales fared better, with 3.8% … an increase over the previous year.

In Scotland, 873 women (1.5%) had a home birth … in Northern Ireland, 91 women (0.4%) had home births …

Cathy Warwick, General Secretary of the Royal College of Midwives, said the drop in the home birth rate was “a real disappointment”.

… “These figures suggest to me that we are not providing the choice that women want and deserve, and that commissioners are not doing enough to offer them that choice.

“My worry is that increasing pressures and demands being made on midwives and maternity services are driving out choice for women.

“There is a real need to look behind these figures to find out why our home birth rate is so low and why it is falling.”

Mary Newburn, of the charity The National Childbirth Trust, said they believed women were finding it more difficult to book a home birth.

She said: “There is no evidence of a reduction in demand, but we know maternity services are additionally stretched due to a rising birth rate and too few midwives.

“The option of booking a home birth should be offered as a mainstream option for all women who want it, alongside options to book for care at a birth centre and at a hospital maternity unit.” …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

More risks in homebirths, doctors say

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

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Doctors have hit back at a leading child health researcher’s defence of homebirths, saying research from Australia and overseas showed the practice is significantly more risky for the baby.

… Fiona Stanley said last week she strongly supported the use of midwives. She said she did not believe there was evidence that homebirth was riskier than a hospital delivery, provided that it was a low-risk pregnancy.

… Australian Medical Association national president Andrew Pesce said at least four studies done in Australia … showed a significantly higher rate of death in planned homebirths.

He said it was important to compare only the outcomes of full-term healthy babies who would normally be expected to survive.

… AMA WA councillor Mike Gannon said Dutch research recently published in the British Medical Journal showed a three to four times higher risk of death in babies delivered in planned homebirths.

The study of more than 37,000 births found babies of women at low risk whose labour started under a midwife’s supervision outside hospital had a higher risk of death and the same risk of admission to neonatal intensive care compared with babies of high-risk women whose labour began in hospital under an obstetrician’s care.

“I strongly believe women have the right to choose what they want, but to say there is no evidence that planned homebirths are no more risky than planned births in more orthodox settings is just incorrect,” Dr Gannon said.
Professor Stanley stood by her comments yesterday.

It’s important to separate out issues here. The Netherlands study was not about homebirth: it was about midwifery care of low-risk women versus obstetric care of high risk women, and yes, it did find that midwifery care of low risk women resulted in worse outcomes for babies compared to those babies who had been born to high risk women under obstetric care. Does this mean that midwifery is unsafe, or is it a reflection of the system of care in The Netherlands? Consider that fetal heart monitoring (with a doppler) is not standard practice in birth care in the Netherlands. Also consider that midwives do not provide one-to-one care in labour. In fact, most women do not have a midwife present for most of the labour. The women have a birth support person present who has no midwifery education. The midwife pops in and out every 4 hours, examines the woman and listens to the baby’s heart beat and goes again, returning for the birth of the baby. A Dutch midwife cares for 105 women a year, compared to 20 – 40 in Australia. So now ask yourself, is midwifery care unsafe, or is the system of care unsafe?

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Childbirth ‘over medicalised’

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

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WA’s top child health researcher has stirred up the childbirth debate, claiming it is over-medicalised and saying she does not believe there is evidence that homebirth is riskier than a hospital delivery, provided it is a low-risk pregnancy.

Telethon Institute of Child Health Research director Fiona Stanley said she was strongly supportive of the use of midwives and that too many women were having caesareans, which could lead to complications for the mother and baby.

Professor Stanley said her own grandchildren had been delivered by midwives without medical intervention, and obstetricians needed to relinquish low-risk deliveries to midwives and trust there would be good outcomes.

Her comments came as pregnant women cared for by experienced midwives won the right to claim Medicare rebates from this week, as part of the Federal Government’s health workforce reforms.

“I’m strongly supportive of the increasing role that midwives are playing by preparing women for birth, by helping them plan for a spontaneous, normal delivery that will be better for mother and child,” Professor Stanley said.

“We published a study about a few years ago which showed a dramatic increase in caesareans, and that the majority of the increase was unrelated to medical risk, so it was either obstetricians wanting to deliver that way or it was the mothers demanding it.”

Professor Stanley said there were anecdotal claims that homebirth was dangerous but she had not seen the evidence.

“If people say homebirth is dangerous, show us the data, because the data we have shows they’re not if the right things are in place,” she said.

Retired Perth obstetrician Ralph Hickling, who has just published a book, Childbirth today: too many caesars, not enough joy?”, echoed the call for wider use of midwives.

Dr Hickling said the management of childbirth had been taken over by consumerism and there was a push towards an almost 100 per cent caesarean rate.

“In recent times Australia could claim having the highest caesarean rate in the world and I think WA could claim the highest in the country, and there’s no way the obstetric discipline can justify a caesarean rate of 35 per cent or more,” he said. “Pregnancy is being treated as a disease and childbirth is seen as an operation to cure the disease.”

Community Midwifery WA manager Pip Brennan said that under the program women with low-risk pregnancies were reviewed by an obstetrician and monitored by midwives during their pregnancy and labour.

“Typically women have very positive experiences,” she said … “I was in labour for quite a while but it was a wonderful experience being in my own home,” she said. “Soon after the birth I was having a cooked breakfast in bed and it was so relaxed.”

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Fight for home birth continues: Ireland

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

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Supporters of a woman’s right to have a home birth say the practice could be driven underground if new legislation is passed. Tomorrow, the Association for Improvements in the Maternity Services (AIMS) Ireland will deliver a petition to the Dáil while picketing the building to highlight their concern that the Nurses and Midwives Bill 2010 will effectively prevent the practice of professional midwifery in the home.

“This is taking away a mother’s human and constitutional right to choose where to have her baby, having informed herself any risks,” … Among those who would not be allowed to have a home birth are Caitríona Ellis … who delivered her second child at home last week.

If the legislation had been in place last week, Ellis would not have been allowed to give birth at home … The proposed bill states that a mother in labour must be transferred to hospital if 24 hours have passed since her waters have broken and she has not given birth. Ellis gave birth 32 hours after her waters had broken.

… “This is a human rights’ breach. The legislation takes away the woman’s right to choose the birth she wants,” …

Catríona Clarke … would not have been allowed to have her second baby at home five weeks ago either because her first baby was born by Caesarean section. Under the bill, all women in her situation would have to give birth in a hospital.

“I thought I was more likely to have a natural birth at home and more likely to have interventions in hospital. I really believe that childbirth is a natural process that has become medicalised and that home was the best choice for me,” says Clarke, who says hers was a “beautiful, gentle” natural home birth.

Any midwife assisting in a birth in situations where these criteria are not met would be liable for a fine of up to €160,000 and a prison term of up to 10 years …

These two stipulations mean that self-employed community midwives (SECMs) will need to have insurance managed by the State … since clinical indemnity is not available to midwives on the open market.

… If a home birth were to go wrong and the parents sued, the State could have to make an enormous payout. The legislation is an attempt to minimise that possibility.

It was decided that the scheme would cover only low-risk births, where there was no history of medical or surgical problems that might affect pregnancy and no present or previous complications.

… Canning says the proposed legislation could contravene both the constitutional rights of the midwife to practise and an EU council directive requiring member states to facilitate midwives in the practice of their profession.

“In the context of mandatory insurance, it is questionable whether a restrictive package of insurance constitutes the facilitation of the midwife to practise when insurance is otherwise inaccessible,” she says.

From a practical point of view, if a pregnant woman refused to go to hospital 24 hours after her waters had broken, the midwife would have to leave the scene under the new legislation.

… Canning … the the midwife has a duty to remain in attendance on the mother in childbirth, even if the mother refuses to comply with her advice.

She spends a lot of time with her expectant mothers, talking them through the experience of childbirth and securing their agreement that, if in her professional opinion they need to go to hospital, they will do so.

Any midwife is relying on the mother to trust her judgment and be willing to follow it. Under the legislation, were the mother to fail to comply, the midwife would be at risk of prosecution if she stayed on the scene.

Gillian Kane … had her first baby by elective C-section in hospital and planned a home birth for her second.

As the second birth progressed, Canning diagnosed a serious problem and transferred Kane to hospital, where she remained with her.

Kane had to have a second C-section, but she says her baby benefited from having a normal labour that was allowed to progress as far as it could at home.

“When the decision to go to hospital was made, it was by a medical professional I trusted – I had developed such a strong relationship with her and had such belief in her,” says Kane.

It is that relationship of trust that those opposed to the bill want to protect.

Canning says the legislation will make the role of a midwife one of coercing women to go to hospital … “The right to informed decision-making is a well-established minimum requirement for woman-centred care. Professional ethics demand respect for the choices women make.

“The home birth scheme and the terms for SECM insurance. . . give no recognition to the role of the mother as an active participant in her own care.”

I believe this is what we’re headed for in Australia once the 2-year exemption from the requirement of insurance for home birth passes. I would not be surprised if homebirth is funded and indemnified, albeit under stict guidelines for “suitability” for homebirth.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

NHS ‘scaring’ women out of home births, top midwife says

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

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Too many pregnant women are being treated as though they are “abnormal,” and told their age or weight could put their child in danger, one of Britain’s leading midwives has said.

Samantha Green had been looking forward to giving birth amid the comfort of her home, where she hoped the familiar surroundings would provide a perfect setting for the arrival her first child.

But when she told her hospital consultant of her plans she received a response which shocked her.

He informed her she was too overweight and that a home birth would lead to such difficulties that both her and the baby’s life would be at risk.

“I was so terrified by what he was saying. I was made to feel I had no choice, simply because I’m a slightly larger girl than many,” said Miss Green. “I felt I was being discriminated against.”

Her experience is far from unique. In fact the leader of Britain’s midwives is warning that too many pregnant women are being treated as though they are “abnormal,” and told their age or weight could put their child in danger.

Prof Cathy Warwick, general secretary of the Royal College of Midwives (RCM), says risks are being exaggerated, so that mothers-to-be who want to give birth at home or in a midwife-led unit, are being frightened into going to hospital.

So many women were now classed as “high risk” by the NHS – because they were young, old, or considered overweight – that it was becoming the norm …

Failure to meet the physical ideals set out in NHS guidelines left many mothers-to-be feeling “terrified” about the dangers they posed to their own baby, and “demonised” if they chose to give birth outside of a hospital.

… “It seems more and more we have got into a situation where it is actually unusual to be treated as a normal woman. It makes no sense at all.”

Latest figures suggest that half of all women of childbearing age are overweight or obese, while more than 40 per cent of those who become pregnant have a body mass index (BMI) above the range defined as normal.

Meanwhile, the number of births to women aged 40 and over has trebled in two decades.

Obesity and older age in pregnancy are associated with a number of risks – including miscarriage, foetal abnormalities and stillbirth.

Miss Green, 25, admits some people regard her as a ‘large girl’, but says there was no reason for her not to go ahead with a home birth.

At the time of her pregnancy she weighed 16 stone and had a BMI of 34, but she was fit and healthy with no history of high blood pressure.

When her consultant first saw her, however, he asked her if ate excessively and suggested she halve her portions.

Miss Green, a part-time receptionist who lives with her partner David, said: “He said he was against (a home birth) because he was concerned I was going to produce a big baby and its shoulders would get stuck on coming out.

“He also said my blood pressure would go through the roof because of my weight.

“The midwives had been encouraging about me having a home birth, but they said that once the consultant said something that was it.

“Basically I was terrified into not having a home birth. I didn’t feel I could insist on it because he had scared me so much.”

The consultant’s concerns about Miss Green’s weight led to her being admitted to Northampton General Hospital for her baby to be induced a week early.

“He had been predicting the it would weigh as much as 10lbs, but in the end Miss Green gave birth to a healthy baby girl, Charlotte, weighing 7lbs 8oz.

The hospital said it encouraged home births where it was safe to do so, and pointed out its home birth rate is one of the highest in the country.

… NHS guidance says all mothers-to-be with a BMI above 35 should be cared for in consultant-led units.

For women aged 40 and above, and those with a BMI above 30 – the lower threshold of obesity – weight and age factors should be taken account in deciding where the birth is planned.

The most recent advice says even a rise of one BMI point – around half a stone for most women – between pregnancies can increase the risks of diabetes and high blood pressure, even among those who are not overweight.

I’m not disputing that a higher BMI makes high BP and diabetes more likely than if the BMI were normal, but what is wrong with planning a homebirth and then changing to hospital birth if BP rises or the gestational diabetes is poorly controlled? Planning a homebirth doesn’t commit a woman to birthing at home: place of birth remains flexible until the birth of the baby.

Prof Warwick said the cumulative effect of all the guidance put midwives under pressure to restrict the options for many women.

“There is a danger that only a very small number of women are left believing that childbirth for them can be a normal and fulfilling experience,” she said.

… guidance, combined with an increasing culture of defensiveness, risked turning midwives into “unthinking automatons,” she warned.

Disputes involving maternity failures account for almost two-thirds of the £800 million NHS medical litigation bill.

Guidelines published earlier this year say babies born to obese mothers are 50 per cent more likely to be admitted to neonatal intensive care, while one third of deaths of mothers in childbirth involved women who were obese.

Sally Russell from Netmums, a website for mothers, said pregnant women needed to feel in control of their experience.

“If people are feeling under pressure to make choices, rather than feeling cared for, then the system is letting them down,” she said …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Agnes Gereb taken to court for championing home births

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An emotive article depicting the plight of a “midwife” who is thrown into jail for assisting at home births:

Twenty minutes after the expectant mother went into labour, the police were knocking at the door. While mother and child were taken to hospital and treated well, the midwife at the birthing centre was thrown in jail. Dr Agnes Gereb is now being kept in maximum security conditions in a Budapest prison, facing a five-year prison sentence.

Gereb … a highly experienced gynaecologist, midwife and internationally recognised home birth expert … has successfully helped deliver 3,500 babies at home. But her reputation means nothing to the authorities in Hungary, a country that has, campaigners say, relentlessly pushed to criminalise home births and make hospital deliveries compulsory.

In the hours after her arrest on 5 October, Gereb was subjected to intense interrogation before being called to a closed court at 10pm. Held for a further week without charge, she finally appeared in an open court on 12 October, shackled in leg chains and handcuffs, accused of negligent malpractice. She also faces several other charges, including one for manslaughter relating to an earlier home birth when a baby died after a difficult labour.

Gereb’s is the story of home birthing in modern Hungary and has sparked international outrage. A hero to women across Hungary, she has dedicated the past 30 years to defending the right of mothers to choose their birthing experience.

Her arrest is, say her supporters, the “logical climax of [the state's] campaign of vilification and criminalisation” of those who support a mother’s right to have a non-hospital birth.

… In addition to the most recent case, Gereb is facing four other criminal charges. Two involved births where postpartum haemorrhage was greater than normal – a fairly common occurence in obstetrical practice. In both cases, the mothers and babies were discharged from hospital after a few hours. The other two cases are more serious: one concerning an infant who died as a result of shoulder dystocia and the other a twin who suffered a lack of oxygen at birth and died seven months later. Only the parents of the child who died from shoulder dystocia are pressing charges. The others all support Gereb …

The article suggests that Agnes is the primary promoter of homebirths in Hungary, and that since homebirth is not a supported option (supported by obstetricians), she has been vilified. However, the truth is that this case is not about homebirth or its legality or the rights of women to access homebirth care. Gereb is not a registered midwife in hungary; she is an obstetrician, and a de-registered one at that. She has not qualified and is not registered as a midwife, but had provided care to women giving birth at home. This is clearly illegal in Hungary as she is not a midwife and is not allowed to practise obstetrics. All health practitioners have to have insurance to practice in Hungary, and as an unregistered practitioner, she would not have had access to insurance. The cases against her relate to poor outcomes in homebirths that she had attended, where the outcome was attributed to a poor standard of care rather than “bad luck”.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Bravo to the home birth mums

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The look on our faces – a mix of incredulity and horror – probably said it all. Our new friend was telling us her birth plans.

“We’re having our baby at home,” she said, without a hint of self-doubt.

What, without a doctor? “We’ll have a midwife. She delivered my sister’s babies and she’s just amazing. So calm.”

That’s, er, handy. What about pain relief? “My husband will massage my back and I’ll have the pool.”

The what? “The wading pool – the water makes it easier. We’ll set it up in the lounge room so everyone’s comfortable.”

Everyone? “Well, Mary (her two-year-old) and my mum, and my sister, and possibly my mother-in-law, although she’s a bit unsure about the whole thing.”

Bravo for the mother-in-law, we thought, trying not to roll our eyes. The woman was a fairly new member of our mothers’ group and we didn’t want to seem judgmental.

We were, of course, being just that, even though we had all vowed not to criticise each other’s parenting techniques – dummy or no dummy, breast versus bottle, to smack or not.

It was our choice, we’d just support one another through our first foray into the somewhat scary world of motherhood.

Here, though, in this apparent latter-day hippie we had found someone whose choices were more than a little confronting.

Why did she want the whole family watching? Why would she choose to endure pain? And, most importantly, why would she risk it?

As we got to know her, however, we discovered a strong and sensible woman who had good reasons for her choice.

She had followed the modern medicine route the first time and hated every minute of it.

An obstetrician with an appalling bedside manner who turned up twice for about 10 minutes each, but still managed to charge a small fortune, an ever-changing roster of midwives – she was in labour for 20 hours – and an epidural that didn’t take.

Mother and baby emerged physically unscathed, but she found the whole thing cold, clinical and totally lacking in joy. She blamed it in part for her inability to bond with her daughter initially. This time she was “going natural”.

I lost touch with her when we moved back here but was told she “absolutely loved” the water birth and her son arrived in six hours with the minimum of fuss in a candlelit lounge room (minus the still unconvinced mother-in-law and Mary, who fell asleep).

However, knowing someone who had chosen a home birth didn’t affect my own decision the second time around. The idea of giving birth at home in bed, let alone a pool in the lounge, still makes me go weak at the knees. And not with pleasure.

I don’t like pain. I love the anaesthetist and his trusty weapon, the epidural. I would have been more likely to eat my own toenails than “go natural”.

… And while I’m not fond of hospitals, I was privileged enough on both occasions to give birth in a private one, where the atmosphere was a notch up from cold and clinical and the staff weren’t as stretched.

Finally, call me a pessimist, but I wanted to be surrounded by experts in the event anything went wrong.

But having known someone who chose another path did give me pause for thought.

With the Australian Medical Association up in arms about the Health Department’s website link to the Community Midwifery Program last week, I wondered again why we were so quick to judge our new friend. She had done her research. She chose a professional midwife with years of experience. She wanted to be surrounded by her family in the comfort of her own home, not by strangers in a brightly lit delivery ward. She was only a few kilometres from the nearest hospital if necessary.

And, in the end, she had a birth experience that was borderline euphoric. She made an informed choice.

An independent review last year found that home births – about 200 a year, less than one per cent of all births – are generally no riskier than hospital births if well supported.

The report, conducted by an obstetrician and a professor of midwifery, wanted the government to expand the Community Midwifery Program, so that home births were not pushed outside the mainstream system, increasing the risks.

It also recommended that WA hospitals offer services such as water births to encourage a more home-like experience. Women, in short, want options.

It’s not surprising that medical specialists would get hot under the collar about home births.

They have a genuine concern for the health and wellbeing of the public. And they believe that is best served in the medical system.

But such an attitude ignores the fact that things can and do go wrong even in hospital.

Just recently I heard a story about a hospital birth that would make your hair stand on end. The young woman thought she had chosen the safest path and it turned into a traumatic experience for all.

Would she have been better off at home? Certainly, she would have been paid a lot more attention.

There are risks no matter what your choice.

Besides, even if government websites trumpeted the benefits of home birth from the rooftops, it is unlikely to lead to a stampede for wading pools and scented candles any time soon.

We live in an age in which we’re increasingly too posh to push, where the bottle is often favoured over breastfeeding simply for cosmetic reasons, and where most of us would, yes, rather, pull our own toenails than forgo pain relief.

Home birth is likely to remain the domain of the hardy few. And more power to them.

A fantastic article! I believe that if homebirth should become a more “mainstream” option, more women would choose it. It does need the support of the wider community to be and feel more acceptable to women; currently there is a “need” to make “acceptable” choices and once society becomes more accepting of homebirths, more families will feel comfortable making the decision to plan a homebirth.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Greens: `Make homebirths a suitable option for Australian mothers

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The Australian Greens are calling for a more unified approach to make homebirths a suitable option for Australian mothers.

… homebirth is a popular option in many countries … Australia is experiencing ongoing division over the issue.

“In other countries, medical practitioners are willing to work with each other, delivering better choice and better health
outcomes for families” …

“As it stands, we have one side attacking the other, with no room for collaboration, which once again marginalises the patient.

“Our maternity care system should support parents to make informed choices and enable a smooth and timely transition to higher levels of care as the need arises.

“The Greens believe that obstetricians and gynaecologists should be doing more to make homebirth a viable option, rather than hoping that if it is attacked, the option will go away …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Women may ‘go it alone’ on home births

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

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A campaign group has warned that some women may opt for home births without professional care as a result of problems with indemnity insurance for qualified home-birth midwives.

The Association for Improvements in the Maternity Services-Ireland (AIMS) says proposed new midwifery legislation will in effect make it illegal for a home birth midwife to provide antenatal and birth care if the pregnant woman’s circumstances do not meet criteria set in a current memorandum of understanding which midwives have to sign …

… the memorandum, which will be used in the legislation, outlines the criteria for State indemnity insurance cover for midwives in home births but these criteria were too restrictive.

… AIMS says the restrictive criteria could lead to midwives becoming uninsured in the middle of a home birth should the mother’s clinical circumstances change.

Midwives attending women having home births could face could face fines or imprisonment or both if they are found in breach of the new legislation …

… a growing number of women who do not want to attend maternity hospitals are saying that if professional midwife-led home birth services are not available to them, they will “go it alone” with their home birth without professional care providers …

I believe Australia will head down this same path in 2 years’ time when the exemption for homebirth insurance runs out. I foresee that homebirth will be funded and indemnified, albeit with strict criteria for homebirth.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Home birth with midwife as safe as hospital birth for women with low-risk pregnancies

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

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… Contrary to a recent American meta-analysis that found home birth was associated with a higher risk of neonatal death, several large, well-designed Canadian studies have found home birth with a midwife in a regulated system to be at least as safe as hospital birth for women with low-risk pregnancies.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

States Respond To Increasing Demand For Midwives, Home Births

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An increasing number of pregnant women are eschewing hospital deliveries for home births, prompting some states to consider legislation to license midwives who assist in home deliveries, the New York Times reports.

The number of home births in the U.S. rose by 5% from 2004 to 2005 and held steady at 25,000 in 2006 … Women who opt for home births cite several reasons, such as religious beliefs or a desire to avoid a caesarean section … medical interventions have increased significantly in the past 20 years, including interventions in low-risk pregnancies …

Midwifery advocates argue that recent figures showing an increase in the U.S. maternal mortality rate supports their position that a majority of c-sections are unnecessary and possibly dangerous. However, some physicians and medical groups argue that home births carry higher risks than hospital births …

The issue of how to regulate midwives is playing out in Illinois, where the state Legislature is considering a bill (HB 226) that would license direct-entry midwives … Illinois law considers legal home births to be those attended by a physician or a nurse midwife …

… Licensed home-birth attendants work in only seven of Illinois’ 102 counties, leaving a majority of the state home births unattended or attended illegally by someone whose license and education are unregulated … women often register home births as “unassisted” to avoid scrutiny of their midwives.

Supporters of the Home Birth Safety Act … argue that it strengthens and protects pregnant women and their infants from untrained practitioners. It also allows midwives to practice openly and transport pregnant women to hospitals in emergency cases without fear of reprisal or arrest. Opponents of the measure — including ACOG, the Illinois State Medical Society and the American Medical Association — argue that home births are riskier than births in medical settings.

Illinois’ midwifery organizations are cautiously optimistic that the measure will pass. Rachel Dolan Wickersham, president of the Coalition for Illinois Midwifery and vice president of the Illinois Council of Certified Professional Midwives, said medical groups’ opposition to the measure is “about power and control.” She added, “These women are going to have babies at home,” adding, “Why would anyone want to keep the situation so that the person attending them has no regulated training or is afraid to transport them to a hospital in an emergency?” …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Homebirth illegal in NY

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It is now illegal for women to give birth at home in New York City, following the closure of the only hospital that supported midwives in the practice.

“It’s pretty shocking that in a city where you can get anything any hour of the day a person cannot give birth at home with a trained practitioner,” said Elan McAllister, president of Choices in Childbirth.

New York state law requires that any midwife performing a home birth be approved to practice by a hospital and an obstetrician. Yet the only hospital in New York City that was willing to sign to do so, St. Vincent’s in Manhattan, closed at the end of April. Since then, the city’s 13 home-birth midwives have approached at least 75 hospitals looking for a new partner, to no avail.

Less than 1 percent of U.S. births take place in the home, in contrast to rates as high as 30 percent in European countries such as the Netherlands. And while midwives preside over most European births, calling doctors only in emergencies, 92 percent of U.S. babies are delivered by obstetricians. As a consequence, the medical establishment tends to view midwives as financial competition.

Yet the United States has the highest maternal mortality rate in the developed world, at 16.7 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births compared with 3.9 in Italy, 7.6 in the Netherlands and 8.2 in the United Kingdom. Critics of the U.S. system attribute this problem, in part, to an over-reliance in interventionist methods by doctors who may have never witnessed a natural birth.

… “There are 600 women who are going to give birth in the next year who want midwives with them at home, and to take away their rights and choices is so backwards it’s embarrassing,” Manhattan borough president Scott Stringer said.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Big hurdle for home births

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Private midwives have “yet to find” a doctor willing to engage in arrangements to gain access to Medicare rebates and the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme …

The college [of midwives] is building a case against the incoming arrangements … College members were asked to provide evidence of their difficulties in getting doctors to sign on to collaborative arrangements, in the hope of showing the new rules, which take effect from November, are unworkable.

President Hannah Dahlen pointed to the recent overturning of near-identical legislation in the United States, where “doctors were increasingly unhappy to sign contractual arrangements with midwives because they were worried about their own liability”.

“Doctors are quite happy to collaborate with us, but they don’t want to put their name on a document because they’re worried about their own vulnerability. They’re quite rightly saying ‘what’s in it for us’,” Professor Dahlen said.

The new rules are believed to be the result of lobbying by medical groups opposed to home births.

… Nadia Szimhart … gained access to [a] fledgling publicly funded home birth service … and gave birth to Hana Lanceley at home on January 28.

The experience was “absolutely beautiful”, but was possible only because hers was a low-risk pregnancy which met very stringent eligibility requirements – more strict than those of most private practice midwives.

Ten babies have been born through the publicly funded service since July 2009, with another six births expected by the end of 2010.

Private practice midwives are the only other option for women who want a home birth but don’t meet the public system’s stringent guidelines.

“The regulations being put in place are going to make it difficult because most of the doctors I have spoken to – including my GP – don’t agree with home birth,” Mrs Szimhart said.

The public models for homebirth have very strict entry requirements, and once accepted into the program, women must remain absolutely low risk of they will be asked to birth in hospital. Private midwifery care affords women are better guarantee of a home birth with lower transfer rates. Transfer rates for public programs range from 37% – 50% whereas private midwives have transfer rates of 5% – 20%.

Medicare funding was only meant to cover hospital birth, not homebirth. However, the catch is that doctors will not sign agreements with midwives who attend homebirths at all. This forces midwives to attend either home births or hospital births. This model does not provide for continuity of care and does not reflect the fact that along the pregnancy – birth continuum, some women will start out wanting a hospital birth and change to a homebirth later on, while other women will plan a homebirth but end up birthing in hospital.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Why Home Births Are Worth Considering

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A new analysis … comparing home births and hospital births … not only presents misleading conclusions, it drives a wedge between two groups that cannot afford a greater divide: medical doctors and midwives.

The study documents similar perinatal … mortality rates for home and hospital births, but claims a three-fold increase in neonatal … mortality for home deliveries. Yet this analysis contains serious limitations and concerns those of us who practice midwifery in an out-of-hospital setting.

Beyond the issue of the flawed methodology, which has been addressed by several national organizations … there are serious cultural implications to this study.

As a medical anthropologist, I am concerned with the chasm with doctors and the medical establishment on one side, and midwives and the home birth movement on the other. In Oregon, where we have both licensed and unlicensed midwives working in home and in birth center settings, research has shown deep mistrust between doctors and some midwives. Many doctors have expressed the belief that only hospital births are safe, while midwives say they often feel marginalized and disrespected.

Such studies only deepen this mistrust and have the potential to increase hostility during encounters when midwives and their clients have to seek hospital care for complications. The end result is a system that can be detrimental to women and their babies because of the impaired ability to communicate across a cultural divide. Instead of a maternity system based on fear and misinformation, we need a system based on collaboration and mutual respect.

The United States is already the butt of jokes in the international public health community. We spend more on health care than any other high-income nation, while simultaneously serving the lowest percentage of pregnant women, as several of our key health indicators continue to decline each year … the U.S. now has the highest number of maternal deaths relative to all other high-income nations, and we also rank second worst for perinatal deaths.

The U.S. has not reported a significant decrease in maternal mortality rates since 1982, and the Center for Health Statistics indicates that the rate of cesarean section in this country is now at a whopping 32 percent, marking the 11th consecutive year of increase. As the incidence of cesarean section rates rise, so do medical complications for mothers and babies, along with associated health care costs …

The answer among the U.S. medical establishment has been to throw more expensive technology at the problem rather than retracing our steps to see where we went wrong. Instead of admitting that something is fundamentally broken with the system, organizations like the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology continue to endorse the idea that medicalized hospital births are the only safe route for women.

We know that 99 percent of women in the U.S. are giving birth in hospitals, yet the United States has one of the highest infant mortality rates of any developed country … Meanwhile, the Netherlands, where one-third of deliveries occur in the home with the assistance of midwives, has a lower rate of 4.73 deaths per 1,000.

… other nations … have superior maternal and infant health outcomes, … and rely more extensively on cost-effective midwives as a public health strategy.

… homebirth midwives charge $2,000 to $4,000 — a fee that includes care from conception through the postpartum period. Exploring the option of home and birth center birth with midwives for low-risk women should be at the core of national health care reform and research. Instead, several generations of high-tech, low-touch birth and a pervasive cultural belief that birth is imminently dangerous — even in healthy, low-risk women — has led to powerful cultural blinders that limit options for women.

In anthropology, we say that “normal is simply what you are used to.” The power of socialization and the dominance of biomedicine have kept us from systematically examining a variety of birthing environments and providers as viable alternatives to the expensive and interventive hospital delivery that has become the norm in the U.S.

… [the] study found no difference between home births and hospital births when measuring perinatal death, which is the primary indicator for evaluating the safety of a mode of delivery. Yet, the study chose instead to focus on neonatal death, generally accepted as death within the first 28 days of birth and to emphasize this part of their research. A complex mix of psychosocial and clinical factors, including congenital anomalies, Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, unsafe home environments, and poverty, can all contribute to death in the first month of life … after removing low-quality studies and out-of-date statistics, the Wax study actually demonstrates no difference in outcomes between home and hospital-based delivery, even for neonatal mortality.

Yet the authors included faulty data in their total analysis, comparing apples to oranges by mixing different types of data sets, such as grouping low-risk with high-risk mothers, and including babies born unintentionally at home.

… There is something to be learned from the centuries-old traditions of midwifery, and I believe that if doctors and midwives, including those who work in the home setting, could be willing to learn from and respect one another, women and babies in our country would benefit. After all, we are all working for the same end result: a happy and healthy mother and baby. Our differing visions of how to get there will require an attitude of cultural humility and a willingness to listen. Studies like the Wax study take us in the wrong direction.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Shake-up of NHS ‘incentives’ in drive to curb caesareans

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Plans to reduce the number of caesarean deliveries and give women greater access to home births are being considered by ministers.

They want to remove incentives that see hospitals paid extra for surgical births, with or without complications.

The payments mean that one in four babies is delivered by caesarean section – almost double the World Health Organisation’s recommended rate.

… Ministers say they do not want to ‘demonise’ C-sections or discourage doctors from performing them when clinically necessary.

But they believe that equalising NHS payments for all kinds of birth, including those at home, could help bring down the number of surgical procedures …

The Royal College of Midwives has expressed concern over the fact that the proportion of caesarean births is 15 per cent in some parts of the country while hitting 33 per cent in others …

If only this could happen in Australia The UK College of Midwives and Collegs of Obs and Gynaes has a joint position statement on homebirth, providing support to homebirth in low-risk, midwife-attended births at home. We have no such statement in Australia and the Colleges remain opposed on the issue of homebirth. RANZCOG is outwardly unsupportive of homebirth and the Australian College of Midwives has no public position statement of support for homebirth, however they do support homebirth.

Australia’s caesarean rates vary less widely than those quoted in this study. We have a few small obstetric units with “low” caesarean rats of <25%, but it's not until you get to homebirth, midwife-led units and birth centres that you start to find low caesarean rates, under 15%. For the most part, our caesarean rates are shockingly high at ~30%+.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Politics of birth

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After five hours of active labour, Kate gave birth to her second, healthy baby boy. Holding him tenderly she is oblivious to the drama unfolding … She is hemorrhaging.

Her uterus has failed to contract after the birth causing massive blood loss … the registrar tugs at her umbilical cord in an attempt to remove her placenta. Unable to do so he proceeds manually. There is no explanation, sedation or consent as he plunges into her uterus.

Meanwhile a midwife has been instructed to ‘wring out’ her uterus by gripping her hands deep around Kate’s stomach. Kate is screaming in pain and her partner begs them to stop. Instead he is removed from the room and their baby is taken away … What happens next is hazy for Kate as she passes in and out of consciousness. But what is clear is since that day, four years ago, Kate has been managing posttraumatic stress. Unable to go back to hospital her following two births are at home with no medical practitioners present.

“I know it sounds reckless but … We just can’t fathom going in to the hospital because that previous experience had been so bad,” she says.

“… I felt an unassisted homebirth was safer for me than going back to hospital to let them do the things to me that they did that time.”

Kate is now planning her fifth pregnancy and wants an independent midwife to attend her birth at home. She has been advised to seek a collaborative agreement between her midwife and the Women’s and Children’s Hospital (WCH) as per new Federal laws governing homebirths.

Called the National Health (Collaborative arrangements for midwives) Determination 2010, they were passed by Federal Health Minister Nicola Roxon days before the election was called. They state that for an independent midwife to access Medicare and insurance they must have an obstetrician agree to care plans created for clients.

However when Kate contacted the WCH she was told that they “do not participate in collaborative agreements”. In a statement to The Adelaide Review the hospital says: “The public-funded Homebirth strategy from the Commonwealth is part of the broader National Maternity Services Plan which is yet to be endorsed by the Health Ministers of Australia.”

It reads like a straightforward strategy for insurance purposes, yet it has been met with confusion and anger. Firstly, insurance providers are yet to create a product that allows independent midwives indemnity while attending a homebirth.

The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (RANZCOG) does not support homebirths and believes women who choose them are putting the birth experience above that of risk. RANZCOG President Dr Edward Weaver welcomes the new legislation and hopes it will curtail the number of high-risk cases that do birth at home.

He believes: “Virtually every obstetrician would have had an experience where he’s been called in to a situation where a woman has been brought in to hospital by an independent midwife and has had difficulties dealing with that situation.”

In 2008 there were 115 planned homebirths or 0.5 percent of births in South Australia. While 94 of those occurred at home, 21 women transferred to hospital for care before they could birth.

RANZCOG advocated for collaborative agreements in submissions to the Maternity Services Review, which informed the legislation. However they concede they cannot make their members adhere to them.

And here lies the problem: a midwife needs to have a collaborative agreement to remain in practice, but there is no requirement on an obstetrician to participate in an agreement. This threatens the ability of women to access midwifery care at all, and threatens the midwife’s ability to remain in practice. At a time when there is an acute shortage of midwives, these moves only mean that there’ll be fewer midwives left to care for pregnant and birthing women and new mothers and babies.

Australian College of Midwives Vice President Hannah Dahlen has found obstetricians will not enter into these agreements because they do not want to take responsibility for a midwives’ practice.

It should not be a case of an obstetrician needing to take responsibility for a midwife’s practice. Midwives are autonomous and regulated practitioners. We do not require an obstetrician to be responsible for our practice any more than an ENT specialist, cardiologist or orthopedic surgeon is responsible for a GP’s practice.

“If our most moderate and collaborative obstetricians are telling us that they are not going to be entering in to signed agreements,” she says. “Then we are potentially stymieing the reform that is going to be rolled out from November.”

Yet one of Dahlen’s greatest concerns is that the reforms go against the World Health Organisation (WHO) definition of a midwife. The WHO states a midwife promotes a natural birth, can detect complications and is able to carry out emergency procedures if required. Hannah is concerned these new laws will end up seeing “one practice of medicine veto and regulate another”.

Christine is an independent midwife with close to two decades of experience in the maternity sector. She has birthed hundreds of babies both within a hospital setting and independently. More than 20 women who want to birth at home have employed her until April 2011.

“I’m happy to work alongside a doctor when it is required but I do not agree, and no midwife will agree, that it is ok for them to sanction our practice,” she claims. If this does not get resolved she is adamant homebirths will go underground with women birthing with unregistered midwives.

… RANZCOG and the Australian Medical Association deem homebirth a high-risk proposition. Of the 202 perinatal deaths in 2008, one was in a homebirth setting. In June the State Coroner ruled to investigate the circumstances surrounding a baby who died at a homebirth in 2007. While this was widely reported in the media, the coronial inquest of an obstetrician who lost two babies to ventouse extraction at the same time was left unreported.

“If a baby does not make it into this world, and not every baby is going to, and it is a midwife’s domain, (they) are really crucified,” says Christine. “But for doctors to lose babies and make mistakes, it is a very different thing.

South Australian MP Frances Bedford is an advocate for a woman’s right to birth at home. She was unable to be interviewed for this article but said in a statement to The Adelaide Review: “(I) find it extraordinary that a woman choosing caesarean section without any medical need is apparently acceptable to the medical fraternity (with Australian taxpayers funding most of those costs) yet a woman choosing to maximise her chances of health and wellbeing through homebirth is discriminated against.”

As this debate continues in the medical fraternity, Kate remains sceptical she will have the birth she wants. Instead her partner has become versed in birth advocacy.

“We should be able to share everything we need with (a midwife) and same for the hospital,” she says. “Our partners should not have to go in there and be aggressive and advocate on our behalf.” …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448