Expecting mothers prefer midwife-led labour

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Most women should be offered midwife-led care that uses fewer interventions and is just as safe as the consultant-led model, a major study recommends.

The study, commissioned by the Health Service Executive and conducted by the School of Nursing and Midwifery at Trinity College Dublin, found most women prefer midwife-led units.

It also discovered the number of babies requiring resuscitation at birth or admission to the special care baby unit was the same for both groups of women.

Almost six in 10 women in the consultant-led units (57%) had their labours speeded up by either having their waters broken or having oxytocin given intravenously by a drip, compared to only four in 10 women in the midwife-led units.

The study involved 1,653 women who had babies in the HSE Dublin North-East region from 2004 to 2007 and compared the consultant-led maternity care with a new model of care provided in two integrated midwifery-led units in Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital in Drogheda and Cavan General Hospital.

The two midwife-led units, which have hotel-like private rooms with birthing pools, were opened in response to recommendations made in the Minder Report in 2001 to provide more choice in maternity care in the north-east.

… fewer women in the midwifery-led unit group chose pain-relieving epidurals in labour.

Despite having fewer epidurals, 83% of women in the midwife-led units were satisfied with their pain relief compared with 68% of women in the consultant-led unit.

“When women are supported by one-to-one midwifery care, are encouraged to labour gently at their own pace and have the pain-relieving benefits of relaxing in warm water, they are far better able to tolerate pain and labour more effectively,” …

The study found that 85% of women attending the midwife-led unit would recommend the care they had received to a friend, compared to 70% having the usual care.

Although facilities in the midwifery-led units were quite luxurious, the cost of care for each women was €332.80 less than in the usual hospital system.

A recent KPMG report on maternity care in the greater Dublin region also recommended the introduction of midwifery-led units throughout the country.

These results have been found in other studies, particularly the claim around pain relief. It is interesting that epidurals don’t equate with a more positive birth experience; rather, a woman who feels well-prepared and who is supported with one-to-one midwifery care in a drug-free birth, will rate her birth as being highly satisfying.

Visit my website to explore birthing services.

Doctors claim homebirth risks ignored

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WA doctors have attacked a new policy for State Government-funded homebirths, saying it sidesteps serious concerns about the increased risk of newborn deaths.

The draft document says women have a right to choose a home delivery at taxpayers’ expense provided they are at low risk of complications and give their consent.

But women with risk factors such as a previous caesarean, obesity or a history of blood loss in childbirth should be excluded from publicly funded homebirths.

… Australian Medical Association WA said the policy fudged serious concerns raised by former members of the committee, who found the risk of death in babies born at home was almost four times higher and called for funded homebirth to be banned.

“Not only is the taxpayer entitled to think public monies are going to things that are evidence-based, if the evidence suggests it’s more dangerous they should have even greater concerns.” …

The WA homebirth policy is a very considered and thorough document that supports low-risk homebirth for women who are attended by experienced midwives with a back-up hospital booking and obstetric consultation. Unfortunately the doctors quoted in the above article seem to have mixed their research. Studies clearly demonstrate that low-risk homebirth is at least as safe as hospital birth, and with fewer interventions for mothers in labour. It is high risk homebirth that is associated with excess perinatal mortality and this is not supported under the WA policy, or any other publicly-funded homebirth programs.

Visit my website to explore birthing services.

Turbulent times

A lot has been happening in the world of homebirth and midwifery. Many will have read the articles about homebirth, freebirth, midwives and maternity care that are appearing in our papers on a daily basis.

I have not posted for a couple of weeks now, for three main reasons: one I have been really busy with my practice which has not been this busy for about two years. Second, I attended the Australian College of Midwives National Conference – the ACM worked really hard to deliver an excellent conference that was appreciated by all. I had the fantastic opportunity to meet midwives from around Australia and share ideas, discuss practice and talk birthy things. I was pleased that the conference was in Sydney, because as those of you who know me will know, in my non-midwifery life I rescue and care for injured and orphaned native birds, and so I was able to make a trip home most days of the conference to feed everyone at home. They were hungry but they all survived! I digress. The third reason for not posting was that the recent issues have made me re-assess things like responsibility, accountability, safety, choice, control, autonomy, beneficence, informed decision-making and many other issues. I have no answers to report. Just lots of reflection.

Midwifery and maternity care are going through turbulent times and as professionals and organisations, I feel that we have done a major disservice to women that they feel safer birthing at home – with or without a registered midwife – in the presence of risk factors – because they so strongly believe that the hospital system will not enable them to birth in the manner of their choosing. It is a sad reflection on the health system and the professionals who work within it. Women who cannot access midwifery care because they are planning a VBAC. Women who are told that if they insist on birthing vaginally with twins, they must accept continuous monitoring, induction, epidural and birth in stirrups for twin two. Women whose only option is to birth in a hospital that is two hours from their home. We have all heard the stories.

My biggest disappointment is the lack of midwife admitting rights. We are one year into the maternity reforms on November 1 this year. We have eligible midwives with Medicare provider numbers, ordering tests and working with doctors to provide safe care to women and babies – yet we cannot access hospitals to provide this care. I well understand that there are a lot of hurdles to be overcome with midwife admitting rights, and life has taught me that nothing in life is impossible.

The release of the homebirth position statement – which I fully support as an evidence-based and safe way to provide care – combined with the lack of midwife admitting rights, is disastrous for women and midwives. Higher risk women are forced into a position of birthing in hospital without their midwife if the midwife complies with the position statement but has no admitting rights – otr else freebirthing, potentially with disastrous consequences. Overnight, this change occurred and women are fuming.

It is impossible to believe, but an eligible midwife who crosses all the “T”s and dots all the “I”s will suffer incredibly in terms of restriction of clientele, however if she were to remove her name from the register – something that I understand is very easy to do – she may do just as she pleases with no accountability, regulation or practice standards. Midwives are placed in the untenable situation of a dwindling practice, or unregistering and having a flourishing practice. Until admitting rights are in place, midwives will have no place to birth with their higher-risk clients. This situation does not see the Government supporting midwives or women. It is creating a disaster.

The various politics of homebirth and midwifery has created an enormous rift between midwives. It seems that there are the bunch who have elected to become eligible, forge ahead with collaborative arrangements, push for admitting rights and accept the increased regulation that is upon us as our profession matures. The other group opposes the increased regulation and restriction of choice, supports midwife- (or non-midwife)-attended homebirth for any woman who wants it and really wants things to just go back to how they used to be, before insurance became mandatory. Many midwives sit comfortable in the middle of this debate. It is sad to watch such division and animosity amongst midwives. We seem to lack a capacity of saying, “We don’t share each other’s vision and we have made different choices, but we are midwives and we will support each other”. As one midwife said to me, “We are each doing the best we can for the women we care for and we’re making the best of a rotten situation”.

I know 2012 will be better than 2011. Who knows? Maybe it’ll be an historic year where for the very first time, women will birth on their own terms, with their chosen midwife, at home or in hospital. I wonder how many women will insist on homebirth in spite of significant risks, if they are able to birth in hospital with their own midwife and in the manner of their choosing.

Visit my website to explore birthing services.

Natural birth in hospital?

Here are some ideas to birth naturally in hospital:

Read, read, read. Books, websites, any written info from your care provider … read it all. You also need to know the difference between facts presented to you in an honest and unbiased way, and facts that are being filtered through hospital policy. This is where women benefit from having a private midwife by their side.

For example, “Some risks rise slightly when a woman has high blood pressure. I am uncomfortable with letting your pregnancy continue with high blood pressure because of the risks to the baby and to you if something happens” is an honest and factual statement. You have the right to accept the risks and refuse induction. However, some women hear “I’m going to induce you today because if we don’t do this now, there is a good chance your baby will not make it”. This statement is dishonest, using a woman’s fears and her maternal instinct to encourage her to accept intervention. There is also no discussion of alternative options. Informed consent requires that women are presented with options so that they can make the best decision for them, in their situation.

Be assertive As with most human relationships, a great deal can be resolved with a calm, respectful and firm manner. Know what you want and why you want it. Engage a private midwife to assist you with obtaining relevant and impartial information.

Listen. If you are choosing to use a hospital and an obstetrician for your birth, then you acknowledge that their presence, education and experience have some value. Your wishes are important but be willing to listen even when what’s being said is really not what you want to hear. You must also acknowledge that an obstetrician is trained in all things that go wrong, and they are on the look-out for any sign of things going wrong. Midwives, on the other hand, will promote normalcy and assist your pregnancy and birth to remain normal. These differing philosophies do result in big differences in intervention rates.

Be Flexible. Understand that sometimes things don’t go the way we had planned. There might be some occasions where you’ll be happy to accommodate the hospital policy, and other times when you’ll want to stand your ground.

Ultimately, it is true that the most important aspect of birth is safety and a healthy mother and baby. But that doesn’t mean the other aspects are unimportant, and I firmly believe you can have a great birth – and a safe birth – in any location.

Visit my website to explore birthing services.

Push to get new babies home in four hours

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HOSPITAL to home in four hours? It would have been unheard of a generation ago when new mothers regularly spent up to two weeks in hospital, ”lying in” post-birth.

But in the NSW maternity wards of the future, it won’t be unusual for women to give birth in the morning and go home in time for lunch.

Early hospital discharge for women with low-risk pregnancies, uncomplicated vaginal births, a healthy baby and good support at home, is part of NSW Health’s Towards Normal Birth directive, to be implemented by 2015.

Women who opt to go home early would be visited by a midwife for up to two weeks after the birth …

… there was no reason why more women could not leave hospital soon after giving birth, particularly when they were under the care of the same midwife throughout.

… if women could be well cared for at home, it would alleviate pressure on maternity staff.

… ”I don’t really like hospitals and my feeling is that if you’re not sick there is no need to be in one,” she said. ”I wanted to go home as early as possible if I was healthy and the baby was healthy. I would rather be in my own home, in my own bed.”

… NSW president of the Australian Breastfeeding Association, had concerns about early discharge programs. She said the state was over-represented in calls to the association’s helpline, which she suspected was due to women leaving hospital before feeding was well established …

Early discharge hospital programs typically delivery one to three home visits per woman. Although the woman may be under the care of the hospital for up to two weeks, on some of those days, the woman will be called instead of visited and on other days, there is no phone call or a visit, but the woman is always able to call in if she has any issues and a midwife is always available for help over the phone. Private midwives provide a wide ranging schedule of postnatal visits, ranging from one or two visits only, to as many as 12 postnatal visits over a 6-week period. Most private midwives will provide postnatal are for 6 weeks. It is best to ask your private midwife for her schedule of postnatal visiting before you engage her services and to always ask if you feel that you would like more visits.

Visit my website to explore birthing services.

Charging women for non-medical caesareans?

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The health minister has said that women in Northern Ireland who choose to have a Caesarean for non-medical reasons may have to pay for the operation.

Edwin Poots is launching a consultation on a review of maternity services.

Women at low risk will be encouraged to consider having their baby in a midwife-led unit or at home, if appropriate.

Around 30% of deliveries are by Caesarean section – the highest level in the UK and Ireland.

… giving birth was a natural process and superb assistance was available to help women through the delivery.

“It costs several thousand pounds more for a Caesarean section so there are savings to be made,” …

“… what we want to encourage, is more people to give birth naturally because it has better outcomes for the mother and the baby.

… “We want to ensure that people take the natural choice where they can and to have that back up where they need Caesarean section to take place.”

… At present, women who elect to go private to have a Caesarean on non-medical grounds pay for their pre and post-natal care.

But the cost of the delivery is met by the health service.

… women will be encouraged to have their baby in a midwife led unit

“If you want to go down that route, if you want to pay for it, it is totally up to yourself, but I don’t feel that we the public in Northern Ireland should be paying additional money for people to have the choice.”

The minister said he expected to see a “considerable” number of midwifery units being established.

“A lot of them would be set up in association with the main maternity unit, so they would be on the same site as existing hospitals,” …

“Women would be giving birth totally with the midwives but there would be a fallback position of having an obstetrician nearby if things do not work out.”

Breedagh Hughes from the Royal College of Midwives said the focus was on trying to “normalise” child birth.

… “One of the things we hope will come out in the review will be asking trusts to look at … the reasons for the Caesarean sections and to focus on trying to prevent women from having that first Caesarean section, which very often leads to the old adage – ‘once a section always a section’.”

She said a “fear” of child birth stopped many women from choosing a natural birth.

“When one in every three women gives birth by Caesarean section, you lose that critical mass of people who know what it is like to give birth normally, and women are losing confidence in their own body’s ability to give birth,” she said.

Ms Hughes also welcomed proposals to shift the focus to midwife led care.

“I think if women are given the opportunity to get to know and trust their midwife and to trust their own bodies, we’re more likely to see women saying, ‘OK, this is what nature intended me for and this is what I’m going to do’,” …

Visit my website to explore birthing services

Private midwife at public hospital

Our local newspaper wrote an article about the model of care I am able to offer women:

THE owner of Essential Birth Consulting at Bexley, Melissa Maimann, 33, has become the first private midwife in Sydney to be accredited to deliver babies in a public hospital.

She said this was exciting news for expectant mums who want a personalised delivery but might be experiencing a high-risk pregnancy.

Ms Maimann said her model of care was unique in Australia because it included access to a back-up obstetrician.

“I am able to support women with risk-associated pregnancies because obstetric care is available,” she said. “This is a real benefit to women as often those with high-risk pregnancies are limited to obstetric care with little, if any, midwifery input.”

Ms Maimann, who established Essential Birth Consulting five years ago, has helped deliver about 76 babies.

She was profiled in the Leader last December for becoming the first private midwife in St George to receive accreditation to provide Medicare-funded private midwifery services. This has equated to savings of about $2500 a client.

Ms Maimann limits bookings to an average of two births each month to ensure a high quality service for families. She supports natural births, including water birth, and vaginal birth after caesarean, vaginal twin and vaginal breech births.

“We know that continuity of care is the single most important factor for women in the pregnancy and birth care and I am proud to offer it,” she said.

“Women may have care conveniently in their home or in my Bexley clinic.”

There were 295,700 registered births in Australia in 2009, Australian Bureau of Statistics figures showed.

Details: 0400 418 448 or essentialbirthconsulting.com.au

Midwives still ‘on the fringes’

A fantastic article that my colleague in WA was interviewed for. It explains the issues perfectly.

REFORMS to the way midwives operate in WA may have been introduced last year, but unless doctors and hospitals get on board, the reforms are meaningless according to Gosnells midwife Pauline Costins.

Mrs Costins is the first eligible private practice midwife in the State following the reforms.

The changes made it possible for her to provide a midwife service not attached to a hospital that women could claim a Medicare rebate for.

Hospitals and doctors play a part in births, at least for most women, especially those with high-risk pregnancies, so there is a level of interaction required between private midwives, doctors and hospitals.

But Mrs Costins said doctors and hospitals had not been receptive to the reforms.

… “I’ve written to 40 doctors and received one response, which was a polite ‘no’.”

… She added many hospitals would not allow her to provide her services in their hospitals

“I can’t take women into hospitals as a midwife, I have to drop them at the door. They don’t want me operating in their hospital.”

Mrs Costins said Kelmscott Armadale Memorial Hospital had made her a casual employee to let her provide her services at the hospital, but that was just a temporary solution.

She added that as well as giving a personalised service, a private midwife … offered six weeks of postnatal care in comparison to hospital midwives who provide about three days.

A spokesperson for the Australian Medical Association WA said the association was willing to meet with midwives to discuss collaborative agreements.

Our experiences in NSW have not been too dissimilar. I have contacted 26 obstetricians requesting a collaborative agreement; I am very fortunate that one Obstetrician has agreed and our model of care is working really well. As for admitting rights (recommended in the Maternity Services Review), NSW is yet to finalise a policy directive to enable midwife admitting rights. This is disappointing for women and midwives alike.

Visit my website to explore birthing services

6 essential tips for a natural birth

Choosing a natural birth can be the most empowering and transformational experience in a woman’s life. In our culture, childbirth is viewed as a medical event and an emergency waiting to happen. We only have to turn on the TV and we witness birth being portrayed as a major emergency, and thank goodness those doctors were there to save the mother and baby.

As well as this, when we ask our mothers about their births, we’re bound to hear more horror stories. Forceps, stirrups, the dreaded episiotomy. Shaves, enemas, being bound to bed, not allowed to get up, let alone even sit up. Nothing to eat or drink. Husbands were not present. Is it any wonder that we are so fearful of birth?

Fear guides many birth experiences and results in the overuse of interventions and medications. As a result many women feel out of control and dis-empowered by their birth experience. It doesn’t have to be that way.

When you take responsibility for the outcome of your birth experience by becoming educated, exploring all your options, consciously choosing and creating what you want, and taking the right steps to prepare yourself, you ultimately will transform yourself and your family.

The following suggestions are designed to help you prepare to have the best birth experience possible:

1. Understand and trust the process of birth
If you understand what is happening with your body during labour, you will have more confidence and a better ability to cope. Trusting the process and knowing that everything is as it should be, is the key to “letting go” and allowing birth to happen normally and naturally. But before you can trust, you have to know what to expect. Seeking out independent childbirth education classes is the key.

2. Good nutrition
Good nutrition is essential to good health. The food we put in our mouths today will build the cells of tomorrow. In pregnancy, the food we eat also builds our baby, so we have an added responsibility to ensure that nutrition is optimal.

3. Exercise
Birth is a physical event. Staying fit can minimise pregnancy discomforts and ease the birth process. Walking or swimming and prenatal yoga are very beneficial to the health of you and your baby.

4. Relax
The key to dealing with labour is your ability to relax. Your body instinctively knows what to do and releases hormones that help you cope in labour. It is when you become scared or tense, that you interfere with the natural process and pain increases. Relaxation takes concentration and practice. I recommend Calmbirth to all women who plan a natural birth.

5. Address fears and concerns
We are constantly bombarded with negative images and stories of childbirth. Over time these messages can become ingrained in our way of thinking. It is important to recognise our attitudes and beliefs and understand how they shape our experiences. Any negative thoughts or beliefs about childbirth should be explored prior to giving birth.

6. Care provider

Your choice of care provider has a great impact on the sort of birth you will have, despite points 1 – 5 above. Having strong support throughout pregnancy and birth is critical in positively influencing the outcome of your experience. Interview and select your care provider to ensure a good “fit”. Consider engaging a private midwife to maximise your chance of a natural birth, if this is your aim. If you do not feel supported, make the necessary changes no matter how far along you are in your pregnancy.

Birth is natural and women have done it for centuries. But in today’s society, a birth without preparation may not be the one you envisioned. You have all the resources available to help you prepare for the birth experience you desire. You can choose to become empowered by your birth experience or you can give your power away. It’s up to you.

Visit my website to explore birthing services.

Birth Plan – Preparing a Birth Plan

Visit my website to learn more about my services.

An article I was interviewed for for Essential Baby:

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There are so many forms to fill out during your pregnancy. From Medicare forms to Family Assistance Office forms, health insurance forms and hospital pre-admission forms – life can seem like a constant procession of paperwork. There is one document though which is more interesting than most – your birth plan!

What is it?

Well, firstly a birth plan isn’t a record of how your baby’s birth will proceed; rather it is a record of your birth preferences, covering issues such as the type of birth you would like, the people who will be in attendance, and your preferred medication options. It can be a fantastic communication tool for your healthcare professionals – particularly at a time when you may be quite preoccupied!

Melissa Maimann, founder of Essential Birth Consulting, is a Sydney-based private midwife and spends a great deal of time talking her clients through their birth plan options. “A well set out birth plan is a really good way for a woman to communicate with her care providers about what is important to her in relation to the birth,” she says. “This can be particularly important for women who may not have met all of their care providers before going into labour. Depending on where you give birth and the length of your labour you might have several different midwives looking after you at various points in time and each of those midwives might be in and out of your room, looking after other women as well. A well-presented birth plan can help all of these carers to see at a glance what your stated preferences are.”

What goes in it?

What goes in to a birth plan depends on what is important to you personally about the birth. As such, every woman’s birth plan will be different. Some of the common inclusions though are:

  • Birth companions. The people who will be with you throughout your labour might include your doula, partner, parents or other friends.
  • Environment. Do you want the lighting dimmed? Aromatherapy oils? Particular music? Anything that is important to you about your environment can be included in your plan.
  • Pre-delivery activities. Some people wish to keep as active as possible during their labour, others may prefer to be resting as much as possible. Any special items, such as a bean bag, fitball or birthing pool that you particularly want could be listed here.
  • Medical monitoring. You may wish to be constantly monitored or to reduce your monitoring and examination to a minimum.
  • Pain relief. There are many pain relief options, including breathing exercises, gas, pethedine and epidural. You may wish to outline which pain relief options you are willing to try, and in what preferred order.
  • Preferred delivery position. While you may change your mind at the time, you might want tor record your preferred birthing position.
  • Any procedures that you would like to avoid if possible. Some examples might include induction, rupture of the membranes, use of forceps.
  • Post-birth procedure. Cord-cutting, skin-to-skin contact, specialist examinations and immunization could all be covered in your birth plan.
  • How to write it.

    As well as spending plenty of time researching your birth options, Melissa Maimann stresses the importance of presenting them in an easy-to-read way, so that your busy medical carers can understand at a glance the things that are important to you. “Putting together a birth plan is almost like doing an assignment,” says Melissa. “Although it is the result of hours of research and preparation, the end result should be short and concise and well laid out.”

    Melissa advises that a birth plan should be one to two pages maximum – otherwise the midwives may not have time to read it all. “Also, pick out the top three things that are the most important of all to you and put those in bold writing at the top of the birth plan,” suggests Melissa. “That way even if the whole plan doesn’t get read, hopefully those most important things will. Set it out neatly and make it easy to read with clear headings and bullet points.”

    Who should have one?

    Everyone! Birth can be unpredictable but just the exercise of researching your options and deciding what your preferences are is a great experience – and usually it will happen. “Even if you are intending to have a cesarean you should still have a birth plan to cover issues such as lighting, skin to skin contact and feeding, says Melissa Maimann. “In my experience, ninety-five percent of what a woman wants happens when the birth plan is reasonably open and flexible.”

    Visit my website to learn more about my services.

    Ob-gyn guidelines often based on opinion, weak data

    I am not sure of the intent of the article below as although guidelines may not be based on good, solid evidence (which is often in scarce supply), that is no reason for experts not to work together to create guidelines that are based on the best available evidence and experience. If we did not have guidelines for clinical practice, we would not have a standard to inform best clinical care. The guidelines that are created may well turn out to be ineffective, inappropriate or otherwise unworkable, and on that basis they would be reviewed and changed if necessary.

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    Solid evidence is often missing from the practice guidelines used by obstetrician-gynecologists …

    Less than a third of the recommendations from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) are based on gold-standard scientific experiments …

    The rest are based on … expert opinion, which is subject to personal biases …

    “That is often the fall-back when there is no data,” … expert opinion is helpful in pointing out what we don’t know, but might not always translate into what’s best for patients.

    … Guidelines help doctors keep up with the latest developments in their fields and are widely perceived as a recipe for good patient care.

    But there is often surprisingly little hard data behind them …

    … guidelines panels conduct extensive reviews of the medical literature to find all relevant evidence and also take care to exclude experts with financial conflicts of interest.

    … those are two key elements in creating good guidelines.

    … “For many of the recommendations there simply is not enough data, or it is disputed,” … “So there has to be a role for expert opinion.”

    Visit my website to explore birthing services.

    Mum has the power over trends

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    Seeing that little blue line appear on a pregnancy test is the start of an exciting and daunting journey, but before expectant parents can welcome their new bundle of joy there are an often bewildering array of options to be negotiated.

    When it comes to deciding how parents would prefer their baby to be born, choosing whether to go through the private or public health system is just the start.

    Pharmaceutical versus natural or alternative pain relief options, elective caesarean or low-intervention labour, a step-by-step birth plan or see-how-it-goes attitude, obstetrician or midwife … hospital versus a birthing centre or … home birth are all options expectant parents will have to consider …

    Royal Australia and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists vice-president Louise Farrell said women were subjected to trends in birth and child raising just as they were in other areas of life, but it was important for mothers to ask themselves early in the pregnancy what they wanted to achieve.

    “There has been a strong move towards reducing intervention into childbirth …

    “People who would like a less medical setting may opt for a home- birth experience …

    … Caesarean sections accounted for about 30 per cent of all births in Australia …

    Private hospitals generally recorded a higher rate of caesarean births than their public counterparts, while just one per cent of births happened in the home.

    … midwifery director Margaret Davies said while caesarean rates were increasing, vaginal deliveries remained the most popular option.

    Epidurals were perennially popular, but there was a growing trend for women to explore non-pharmaceutical pain relief options.

    … water births … were increasingly in demand by mothers …

    The push for water therapy had seen many hospitals and birthing centres upgrade their facilities … but parents needed to investigate whether their preferred labour setting had the qualified staff and equipment to offer it as a safe option.

    Community Midwifery WA director Pip Brennan said one trend that continued to grow was the desire for continuity of care from pregnancy through to a baby’s early months.

    … Ms Brennan said regardless of what the current trends were, women had more power than they realised in determining the future direction of birthing policies …

    We live in exciting times where we have so many birthing options available to us. The challenge is to ensure that every pregnant woman is aware of the full range of options available to her: public, private, midwife, obstetrician, birth place, type of birth – and then the all-important preparation for the type of birth she wants.

    Visit my website to explore birthing services.

    Is caesarean now the ‘normal’ way to give birth, and should we be worried?

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    There’s no doubt that caesarean sections are an essential procedure that can save the lives of women and babies. But around one in three Australian women will give birth by caesarean section – and that’s not just to save lives.

    … The rising caesarean section rate in most of the developed world has not resulted in reduced rates of stillbirth or infant death – quite the contrary.

    One Australian study showed that babies were more likely to be admitted to a neonatal intensive care unit if they were born by elective caesarean section than other types of delivery. A previous caesarean section also increases the risk of stillbirth.

    In terms of outcomes for women, those who have emergency and elective cesarean sections are less likely to exclusively breastfeed. And there is growing evidence that caesarean operations increase the risk of the mother dying or becoming ill with blood loss, blood clots, abdominal organ injury and the need for a hysterectomy.

    It’s important to consider the risks of caesarean births. But rather than just focus on the polarised “vaginal birth vs caesarean birth” debate – which pitches doctors against midwives, and doesn’t help women who are stuck in the middle – we need to focus on the ways we can support all women to have the best outcome from childbirth.

    It seems that one of the driving forces behind the rising caesarean section rate is fear … about labour and birth, and from doctors and midwives who are themselves fearful of the birthing process.

    … we should be examining why women are fearful of labour and birth and what our health system can do to reduce this fear.

    Our health system is generally an unfriendly one for pregnant women and it’s likely that this compounds the fear of birth. It’s common for a pregnant woman receiving care in the public system to see up to 30 different caregivers through pregnancy, labour and birth and the postnatal period.

    The opportunity for pregnant women to develop a meaningful relationship with her health care provider, discuss her fears, affirm her needs and develop confidence in labour and birth are minimal.

    … One of the disturbing elements of birth in the 21st century is the lack of respect for privacy for labouring women. The entourage of people appearing uninvited into labour rooms in most hospitals is astonishing. Each labour and birth can have a multitude of spectators, including a midwife, obstetrician, registrar, resident, student midwife, medical student and on it goes.

    … To address this problem and encourage Australian women to give birth normally, … In NSW, the Towards Normal Birth Policy was released last year and provides 10 steps towards supporting more women to go into labour and ultimately have a normal birth.

    The policy recognises that ”… unnecessary interference in the natural process may disturb the expected course and may lead to a cascade of intervention.”

    The challenge is to redesign the health system to facilitate women’s confidence and trust in birth. Fundamental changes need to occur to ensure all women are supported during pregnancy and feel confident in their ability to give birth, including:

  • Continuity of caregiver;
  • Increased options for the style of birth, with access to a birthing pool;
  • A positive environment, free of disruptions; and
  • One-to-one midwifery care in labour so women are never left alone or fearful.
  • Visit my website to explore birthing services.

    I’m pregnant! What are my next steps?

    If you have just found out you are pregnant, congratulations! You might be feeling a range of emotions: excited, fearful, overwhelmed, happy, anxious … this is all very normal! Many women who contact me feel unsure about what to do next and are anxious to know all their options before making a choice, so I have put together a few tips to make you feel a little more confident.

    Although many women see their GP as their first port of call when they are pregnant, it’s handy to know that women may also see an eligible midwife who can order all the necessary pregnancy tests and any scans that are needed. An eligible midwife can also talk with you about the available options for your pregnancy and birth care, in a relaxed and unhurried setting. An eligible midwife can help you determine your due date and arrange any referrals that you may need. She can book you into a hospital, refer you to an obstetrician if needed, and also provide full pregnancy, birth and postnatal care.

    Visit my website to learn more about my services.

    I’m pregnant. Who should I go to for care? A Midwife or an Obstetrician?

    Private Midwife:

  • Provides autonomous pregnancy, birth and postnatal care for women who are experiencing normal, healthy pregnancies
  • Provides care in consultation with an obstetrician when a woman’s pregnancy has risk factors (eg high blood pressure, prem labour, concern for baby’s growth, gestational diabetes etc)
  • Transfers responsibility for care to an obstetrician if complications emerge and continues to provide care within the midwifery scope of practice
  • Supports women to birth normally with a high rate of natural birth
  • Supports women to breastfeed
  • Provides pregnancy, birth and postnatal care
  • Pregnancy appointments allow time for questions, education and discussion with appointments typically 45-60 minutes in duration
  • Women are highly likely to report satisfaction with their care and experience
  • Private Obstetrician:

  • Provides autonomous care for women regardless of risk factors
  • Receives referrals from midwives for women with risk-associated pregnancies or births
  • Always provides labour and birth care (including caesarean) in collaboration with a midwife
  • Obstetric care on average results in a high degree of intervention such as induction, epidural, caesarean and episiotomy
  • Provides brief in-hospital consultations after the baby is born, followed by a 6-week check
  • Pregnancy appointments are generally no more than 15 minutes in duration
  • Collaborative care: private midwife and private obstetrician

  • Receive autonomous pregnancy, birth and postnatal care from one midwife and one obstetrician regardless of risk factors
  • No transfer of care if risk factors emerge
  • Supports women to birth normally with a high rate of natural birth
  • Supports women to breastfeed
  • Provides pregnancy, birth and postnatal care
  • Pregnancy appointments allow time for questions, education and discussion with appointments typically 45-60 minutes in duration
  • Women are highly likely to report satisfaction with their care and experience
  • Provides autonomous care for women regardless of risk factors
  • Supports women to birth naturally, including with twins, a breech baby or a VBAC
  • Visit my website to explore birthing services.

    Choosing the right care provider

    Choosing the right practitioner is a very personal decision and there is no right or wrong choice. Some women will make an initial choice of care provider and decide to change care providers during the pregnancy other women will make one choice in their first pregnancy and then a different choice in a subsequent pregnancy. What’s important is understanding all the options available so that you can feel confident to choose the best option for your needs.

    When you are considering a care provider, it’s also necessary to consider where you would like to give birth and to ensure that your care provider can attend you in your chosen setting. You might choose to birth your baby in a public hospital as a public or private patient, in a private hospital as a private patient, in a birth centre or at home. It can be helpful when trying to make a decision to write down a list of questions you may have and also consider what is important to you as you make your choices. For example:

    What do I want from my care?
    What type of practitioner would I feel most comfortable with?
    Do I want public or private care?

    These are questions only you can answer. Other questions are for your care providers, and it’s a good idea to interview a few care providers – midwives and obstetricians – before making a choice. Midwives and obstetricians will charge a fee for interviews and you are able to claim this through Medicare (your midwife will need to be eligible in order for you to claim a Medicare benefit). It is important during the interview that you ask all the questions that are on your mind, and to be aware of how you feel throughout the interview. Your care provider should inspire you with confidence, help you to feel at ease and comfortable, and the appointment should feel unhurried.

    Likewise, your care provider may like to “interview” you, and this is so that your care provider can be sure that s/he can meet your needs. Maternity care is provided in a partnership and so it’s important that both parties feel really comfortable with the other.

    There are many questions you might wish to ask your care provider; the best suggestion is to consider what is important to you and write a list of questions.

    Visit my website to explore birthing services.

    I’m pregnant and I have private health insurance. What are my options?

    Great question! There are a few options available to you as a private patient, as well as all of the options that are available to public patients. Specifically, the private options are either a private midwife, or a private obstetrician.

    Private midwife
    To receive care from a private midwife and obtain Medicare benefits, your midwife will need to work with an obstetrician or a doctor who provides obstetric services. Some private midwives are able to provide labour and birth care in hospital settings, while others are only able to provide labour and birth care at home. All private midwives can provide pregnancy and postnatal care. Hospital options may include private or public hospitals; it’s best to ask your midwife which hospitals she attends births at.

    Private obstetrician
    Private obstetricians can provide pregnancy, birth and postnatal care, although birth care would also be provided by hospital midwives who may be unknown to you until birth. Private obstetricians deliver babies at public and private hospitals.

    Visit my website to explore birthing services.

    Are home births safe?

    Link

    Jon Barrett is accustomed to dealing with anxious mothers-to-be. As chief of maternal-fetal medicine at Toronto’s Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, one of the main concerns he hears from patients involves unnecessary medical interventions during delivery.

    He acknowledges that the rate of Caesarian sections and episiotomies is far too high … But he’s more unnerved by what that phenomenon appears to be triggering: a surge in demand for home births.

    Barrett’s concerns about home births stem from experience. Between 1990 and 1992, he was part of an obstetric “flying squad” in Newcastle, England. His job was to travel, by ambulance, to the bedsides of women whose home births had gone awry …

    Two incidents are particularly vivid. The first occurred in winter. Navigating the ambulance through snowy laneways, Barrett’s team arrived to find two midwives frantically working over an unconscious woman. She was in shock and hemorrhaging badly. “I’ve never seen so much blood in my life.” She survived, but only after a massive blood transfusion in hospital. The second woman developed pre-eclampsia, which caused seizures, and went into cardiac arrest as his ambulance pulled up. His team was able to restart her heart and intubate her before rushing her to hospital. She also survived. He says both conditions were unpredictable and could have occurred anywhere, “But I know they would have come less close to dying if it would have happened in hospital.”

    Unlike some of his colleagues on the squad who witnessed fetal deaths during home births, if Barrett’s memories were reduced to pure data in a typical study, they’d be unremarkable. That’s because most home birth data measures deaths, not complications, and his patients survived. “If you want a retrospective study, there’s no maternal mortality there . . . and so is that safe? No, it’s just bloody lucky.”

    The question of how best to measure home birth safety has long plagued researchers … what is counted — mortality rates for mothers and babies during childbirth — offers little insight on the maternal side because … maternal deaths from childbirth are rare … But stories like Barrett’s suggest the numbers don’t tell the whole story. In his view, the bottom line should be obvious: “Sooner or later you’re going to get a disaster because that’s the nature of obstetrics.” He adds, “It’s very rare that it will happen, but it’s got to happen more in home birth.”

    That assertion is at the heart of a furious debate in the birthing community. Mothers who choose to give birth at home often cite research showing there are fewer medical interventions and no increased risk. But in the past year, a new study has emerged that contradicts this. It shows that home births are associated with significantly higher death rates for babies. If correct, the rights of women to control their own bodies and birth experience would seem to conflict with the best interests of their children.

    When the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology (AJOG) released the now-controversial “Wax Study” last summer, it created the medical equivalent of the Rift Valley amongst birthing experts … [It] confirmed significant benefits to mothers who gave birth at home, including less hemorrhaging, vaginal tearing and epidural use, and fewer infections and Caesarean sections. Unfortunately, these benefits seemed to occur at the baby’s expense: … the report showed that neonatal deaths (defined as deaths within 28 days of birth) were two to three times higher for home births. Clearly, no woman who chooses home birth believes she’s jeopardizing her baby’s health, but the study suggested such faith in the safety of home birthing is undermined by medical evidence. For those who accepted Wax’s results, the benefits of giving birth at home suddenly appeared trivial compared to the risks.

    In many ways, Wax’s study was groundbreaking … a meta-analysis, combined and re-analyzed existing studies, in order to create a bigger sample and, ideally, a more accurate result. He looked at more than 230 peer-reviewed papers published between 1950 and 2009, and selected a dozen that compared planned home births with planned hospital births by low-risk mothers in industrialized countries (Australia, Sweden, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Canada and the U.S.). The study’s vast scope—it encompassed more than 500,000 deliveries—boosted its credibility. As one doctor put it, “half a million births cuts out a lot of noise.”

    Perhaps, but the momentary silence was followed by an outraged roar from home birth supporters, including some whose research showed very different results. “The Wax study is full of mathematical errors,” says Patti Janssen, a professor at the University of British Columbia’s School of Population and Public Health, and lead author of a 2009 cohort study that showed home births to be as safe as hospital births, for women and babies. “The design was wrong, and the calculations were wrong, and it just has to be thrown out the window.” …

    … Wax initially defended his work, but then began refusing interviews … As a flood of letters poured into the AJOG … the publication convened an independent panel to examine the main complaints. In April, it published a sample of those letters, along with a detailed response from Wax. It also released the panel’s conclusion that the study did not need to be retracted.

    But the debate has continued, and gained force, in the wake of a second study … out of the Netherlands … it concluded that babies born to low-risk women, under a midwife’s care (in hospital or at home) are more than twice as likely to die as those born to high-risk women who give birth under an obstetrician.

    Although these results were specific to Holland, and may indicate problems in the way the Dutch system categorizes women as “low- risk,” the study nevertheless provided fresh ammunition to those who believe babies are best delivered by obstetricians, and added fuel to the home birth debate. More letters began to fly, adding to the stack of seemingly contradictory information through which pregnant women are required to sift in order to make an educated decision.

    Nathalie Waite could be the poster mother for the perfect home birth. Waite’s considerations were largely pragmatic when she decided, two years ago, that her fifth baby should be born at home. She had four children attending three different Toronto schools, no nanny, and wanted her delivery to disrupt life as little as possible. It wasn’t a decision she made lightly. Her husband was nervous, but Waite’s midwife reassured them both. They lived near a hospital. Two attending midwives would be in close contact with Waite’s obstetrician and, at the slightest sign of trouble, an ambulance would be in her driveway. Most importantly, Waite knew her own body. She’d had four hospital births. During the two deliveries in which she’d fought … for a natural birth she’d experienced far less pain …

    Had she known what a home delivery would be like, Waite says none of her children would have been born in hospital. “It was purely beautiful.” … “it just felt so natural. It just felt right.”

    This is why home births are special, says Anne Wilson, president of the Canadian Association of Midwives. “It’s a non-medicalized environment where birth becomes a normal part of your family life.” …

    … there is no debating the fact that home births have lower intervention rates. And everyone, on both sides of the argument, agrees that hospital intervention rates are too high …

    His daughter’s birth, in Kingston, Ont., in 2007, was such “a spectacular experience” he and his wife decided to repeat it at their new home in Guelph this year. Unfortunately, their son was born with fluid in his lungs, which concerned their midwife enough to send them to hospital. Everything they experienced from that point on, Shaw says, reinforced their preconceptions. Their son was given blood tests, a chest X-ray and an IV for a condition Shaw believes would have cleared up on its own after several hours. They had to fight for permission to breastfeed … and, he says, when the pediatrician went home without leaving instructions for release, their son remained in an incubator for an additional 15 hours. “Our rights were completely taken away and doctors more or less said this is what we’re going to do to your baby and there’s nothing you can do about it.”

    … Shaw’s mistrust of the medical system runs deep. “I’ve hung around scientists enough to be skeptical of everything I’m told,” … He and his wife refused vitamin K and erythromycin ointment for their children, two treatments hospitals and midwives administer as standard protocol after birth. (Vitamin K ensures the baby’s blood can clot until it starts making the vitamin itself, and erythromycin is an antibiotic that protects against infections from the birth canal that can cause blindness.) …

    In many ways, Shaw and Waite represent opposite ends of the home birth spectrum. Certainly Shaw’s rejection of many of the fundamental tenets of modern medicine contrasts with Waite’s attempt to adapt its benefits to a home birth. But they share an important piece of common ground: both chose to deliver their babies with the help of a midwife.

    Freebirthers, women who deliver without assistance (and often shun prenatal care), represent the smallest sub-section of home birth mothers, and aren’t included in studies on home birth safety. Among their most famous advocates is Janet Fraser, an Australian woman who made famous the term “birth rape” to describe an emergency episiotomy during the birth of her son. “I don’t care if you don’t like the word or the idea, it’s real so get used to it,” … In 2009, Fraser’s baby daughter died after five days of home labour. She continues to advocate for freebirth.

    Freebirthers make most midwives nervous and they horrify obstetricians. Freebirth is the equivalent of playing “Russian roulette with your child,” says André Lalonde, executive vice-president of the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada (SOGC). “You don’t play with a child’s life. Especially not where [health care is] free.” That said, the SOGC does believe that midwife-assisted home births are “a reasonable alternative for low-risk women.”

    Yet, asked if he would consider home birth a reasonable option for his family, Lalonde is unequivocal. “No. Definitely not.” He falls back on experience for explanation. “I’ve participated in over 6,000 deliveries in my career and I know that everything looks very fine and suddenly disaster strikes.”

    That conflict between medical experience and faith in a woman’s body to deliver naturally lies at the heart of the home birth debate. But is the concept of natural childbirth in danger of being romanticized? … There is a documentary, popular amongst home birth advocates, entitled Orgasmic Birth; its website invites viewers to “witness the passion as birth is revealed as an integral part of woman’s sexuality and a neglected human right.” Ami McKay’s award-winning novel The Birth House makes a compelling case for home births to a more mainstream audience. In it, the doctor is portrayed as a condescending, patriarchal figure who knocks out his protesting patients with ether, then yanks out their babies. In contrast, the methods of midwife Dora Rare are equally suspect (think mandrake root and witchcraft) yet portrayed with exquisite humanity …

    That kind of experience need not be exclusive to home birth, insist obstetricians. “We should be working to make the environment of the hospital conducive to the home birth experience, rather than having more deliveries at home,” Sunnybrook’s Barrett says.

    But midwives like Anne Wilson maintain there’s nothing to equal the experience of a home birth. “If I am delivering a baby in the hospital, you’re a guest in my house. If I’m delivering a baby at home, I’m a guest in your house. And there’s quite a lot of psychological difference there.” Wilson hopes the demand for home births will continue to rise in Canada … she believes that all low-risk women, including those who choose to give birth in hospital, should deliver with a midwife.

    That’s the system adopted by the Netherlands — and the Evers study suggests it’s failing dramatically …

    “I don’t think it’s that important to debate whether [homebirth is] safe, safer or not safe. I think it’s very important to debate how we can make home birth safer because women are going to do it anyway.”

    In the United States, one way to improve safety is by improving midwifery. Training and regulations are a patchwork across the country; in some states, midwives aren’t even required to finish high school. In that respect, the U.S. lags many industrialized countries, including Canada. It’s one of the reasons Canadian midwives bristle at comparisons.

    In contrast to the U.S., {Canadian] midwives are university educated, highly regulated, and well-trained in emergency skills …

    Obstetricians and midwives are in broad agreement on the key measures necessary to reduce risk during home birth. They are the steps taken by Waite: ideally, a low-risk woman would deliver with the assistance of two highly trained midwives who are in close contact with an obstetrician at a nearby hospital. When those steps are put in place, Wald­man says, “it can work almost as safely as the hospital situation.”

    Is “almost” good enough when you’re talking about the survival of a newborn baby? Although he describes himself as a long-time supporter of midwives and birthing centres, the ACOG’s Waldman echoes his Canadian counterpart, Lalonde, when he says he wouldn’t want a home birth for his wife or daughter. “The intrapartum loss rate has got to be higher at home, it’s just intuitional for anybody who does this work. How big that number is could be debated.”

    And is being debated. As larger and larger studies are undertaken, Sunnybrook’s Jon Barrett believes the data will start to show consistently higher risks associated with home births …

    Visit my website to explore birthing services.

    Hospital births continuing through our service

    Given the troubled times for midwives attending hospitals in a birth support role – either for planned hospital birth or in a homebirth transfer situation – I have had many calls from current clients and women who are exploring their birthing options, asking if hospital births are still going ahead through this service. I wanted to provide reassurance that yes, my hospital birth service is continuing! I am continuing to take bookings for hospital birth and I am able to attend hospital births in the full capacity of a midwife.

    Owing to an ongoing collaborative agreement and hospital arrangements, hospital births are continuing. Women book with me early in their pregnancy and have all of their care with me. Women also see an obstetrician twice in their pregnancy. Birthing takes place in a hospital setting complete with waterbirthing. We support VBAC, twin and breech births. It is an all-risk model too, so women don’t need to be “low risk” to benefit from continuity of midwifery and obstetric care. It also means that there is no “transfer” if a woman’s pregnancy becomes high risk: she can still receive the same wonderful care and support from her chosen midwife and obstetrician.

    Hospital staff are not routinely involved in the care of women who book through our service and we have gone to great lengths to create a birth centre feel to the birthing rooms. Rooms are quiet, warm and peaceful and we have a variety of tools available to support natural, active birthing such as floor mats, bath, shower and birth balls and of course many women also choose to bring personal items from home.

    After the baby is born, we support early discharge with many women choosing to go home four hours after the birth. Of course women may stay longer if they wish. I visit daily for the first week, twice in the second week and then weekly until discharge at 6 weeks.

    Should there be any issues along the way, we have ready access to a specialist obstetrician who is known to the woman from pregnancy.

    So the short answer is YES! I am able to continue to attend hospital births and am receiving many calls about the popular model of care.

    Visit my website to explore birthing services.

    ‘Illegal’ midwives: Is Australia destined for the same?

    An article from Canada explains their midwifery system which includes unregistered midwives.

    Ann (not her real name) operates outside the regulated profession, living life on the edge, exposed to a constant threat of legal action should births under her watch go wrong.

    She knows five other unregistered midwives working in Montreal’s so-called “parallel network.” They typically help women who are unable to secure legal midwife services to have their babies at home or in a birthing centre, and who reject the official alternative of giving birth in a hospital

    There is no shortage of demand for their services. With just 140 registered midwives able to practise across the entire province, the parallel network fills a yawning gap in the market. Much of the birthing industry – obstetricians, gynecologists and some registered midwives – would consider its covert practitioners to be charlatans. But, to women determined to choose how, where and with whom they give birth, they are valued allies.

    Take Teprine Baldo, who had her eldest child, now 2 years old, at home with the help of what she calls a “midwife recognized by the community. I prefer the term. It’s more respectful. People tend to talk about illegal midwives the way they used to talk about witches,” she says.

    There has been one prosecution over the years. In 2006, Diane Boutin was forced to transfer a woman in her care to … Hospital after complications set in mid-labour. Following an emergency Caesarean, the gynecologist on duty filed a complaint with the provincial order of midwives … which went on to successfully pursue Boutin for illegal practice under Quebec’s professional code, a felony carrying a fine of up to $6,000.

    In the days before the profession began its slow march toward legalization in the 1990s, all midwives were renegades operating outside the system, some entirely self-taught, others holding foreign qualifications unrecognized by the province. But, times have changed and as the now-regulated profession wages a PR battle for public acceptance, pushing against residual resistance from an often skeptical medical establishment, it cannot be seen to condone illegal practice.

    parents are likely to be the biggest losers when things go wrong, should newborns be left damaged as a direct result of negligence or malpractice.

    It’s a hugely sensitive issue. Sinclair Harris, a registered midwife at Pointe Claire birthing centre, is sympathetic with her unregistered counterparts. But, she says, “You need an understanding of pathology, of the things that can go wrong, if you are to be available for the mainstream public.”

    Women like Baldo are incredulous that they are still being denied that choice, outraged that the black market midwives helping the most determined to exercise basic rights over their bodies risk prosecution.

    “It’s like we’re being told we can’t birth properly,” she says. “I’m not against hospitals. My issue is that there’s often no alternative.”

    At 32 weeks, she dropped out of the system, switching to an unregistered midwife

    Seeking closure after a traumatic first birth in hospital, Caroline Gauthier gave birth to her second child at home with an unregistered midwife.

    She was living in British Columbia, pregnant with her first child, when her dream of an intervention-free home birth went awry. Transferred to hospital by her registered midwife after her cervix was slow to dilate, she was administered hormones to speed up labour.

    “I was like Jabba the Hutt, hooked up to the monitor,” she says. Staff forgot to turn on the oxygen supply to her mask, leaving her flailing about for help. When her baby finally arrived after a traumatic final push, she was barely able to touch his foot before he was whisked away.

    Pregnant with her second child in Quebec, she immediately set about trying to secure a midwife at the Du Boisé birthing centre in the Laurentians. However, her place was contingent on her delivering at the birthing centre.

    But Gauthier had already set her heart on giving birth at home. At 32 weeks, she dropped out of the system, switching to an unregistered midwife. Again, her labour was long, but she sat out the hours in the bath and in bed. “This time, I had a midwife who didn’t have a system to please,” she says.

    After three days of labour, the baby’s head popped out while she was on her way to the bath. “In less than two minutes, the whole body was out,” she says. He didn’t immediately cry, “but nobody made a circus out of it.”

    Vindicated by her second experience, she is now a fierce advocate of women’s right to give birth as they choose. “I was given the time my baby needed,” she says. “My neighbours tell me I was so brave delivering at home. My reaction is: ‘My God, you’re brave giving birth in hospital. You’re putting yourself at their mercy. You don’t know what you’re getting yourself into.’ ”

    The midwife: With no insurance, every new client is a gamble

    On D-day, Ann arrives on the scene with a case containing oxygen supplies, a heart monitor, synthetic oxytocin, herbal remedies, suture material and local anesthetic for stitches.

    She has been practising midwifery in the parallel network for more than 10 years. Clients find their way to her by word of mouth. She has a busy schedule year round, attending to three or four clients a month.

    Clients are generally women who have been unable to find a registered midwife …

    Occasionally she has transferred cases to hospital …

    With no insurance, every new client is a gamble. “My insurance is the trust I develop with the parents. I trust people who have the deep belief that it’s best for the birth of the baby. Nobody can be sure of the end result.”

    There is a contract, though she is clearly ill at ease with cold legal realities. “It’s about ensuring the parents understand what they’re getting into,” she says. “But, sometimes I forget to get people to sign. We’re on another level. It’s not about business.”

    She describes herself as a self-taught midwife eschewing a system where midwives are “too stressed, too watched.” …

    The four-year university program didn’t appeal to her. “I thought it was too focused on pathology. There was no alternative medicine. No spirituality,” she says. “It’s as if only one kind of intelligence is allowed. Forget emotional intelligence.”

    Midwifery was legalized in Quebec in 1999, following a five-year pilot project. Home births with the assistance of registered midwives have only been allowed since 2005.

    In a 2007 Statistics Canada report, 71 per cent of women who had delivered with a registered midwife rated the experience as “very positive,” compared with 53 per cent of women who had delivered in a hospital.

    According to research … midwife-assisted home births are associated with lower rates of obstetric interventions and adverse outcomes. Newborns born at home were also less likely to require resuscitation or oxygen therapy.

    Australia is heading for a similar situation, brought about by a few factors: the recent position statement on homebirth which effectively prevents midwives from attending high risk births at home, the lack of visiting rights to enable most midwives to birth in hospital with their clients, dissatisfaction with current hospital-based maternity services that are seen by women to be impersonal and highly interventionist, and a differing view of things such as risk and responsibility. Although some midwives are making the choice to unregister and continue to attend births, they do face the same issues that are explained in the article.

    Visit my website to explore homebirth and hospital birth.

    Well-off mothers spend thousands on private midwives

    An article
    from the UK explains that women are spending thousands of pounds on private midwives to achieve the ‘perfect’ birth. The situation is not too different to the Australian experience.

    In the UK, private midwives charge between £1,800 and £5,000 for a birth, but their services are in high demand from professional, well-educated women who have become disenchanted with the hospital experience. The number of mothers paying for private midwives to attend home births has tripled in the last eight years.

    Demand has become so high in parts of London and the South East that some expectant mothers have been unable to find a private midwife to assist them.

    Many of the expectant mothers are older and have been put off by previous experiences in NHS maternity wards.

    Women who engage private midwives claim they can form a relationship with one person rather than seeing a succession of strangers.

    Midwives understand that women want continuity of care and someone to talk to them and answer their questions. Women don’t want routine and unnecessary interventions in their pregnancy and birth, and they want more extensive postnatal care.

    The Australian experience is the same as that in the UK. Women seek private midwifery care for home birth or hospital birth so that they can form a relationship with one person who will be with them from their first antenatal appointment, through to birth and 6 weeks after their baby is born.

    In Australia, eligible midwives can provide medicare-funded care which makes private midwifery care more affordable to women, thanks to the maternity reforms.

    Visit my website to explore homebirth and hospital birth.

    Caesarean section? Vaginal birth? Your choice!

    Visit my website to explore homebirth and hospital birth.

    Much has been said and written about an article in The Age this weekend. The article is about a randomised study that will compare the outcomes of 500 women who choose a caesarean and 500 women who choose a vaginal birth. The study will explore psychological and physical outcomes for the women and their babies, including depression and breastfeeding rates. It will only compare vaginal births with caesareans for healthy women with uncomplicated pregnancies.

    The study has created much debate, including issues of ethics (beneficence, autonomy, non-maleficence) and professional duty of care. I wonder if part of the “answer” will not be answered by this study, since the study only addresses outcomes from the first pregnancy, but most women do not have one child, they have two, on average. It’s reasonable to assume that a woman who has an elective caesarean for her first baby, will go onto have an elective caesarean for her second baby.

    In the current maternity system in NSW, a woman who chooses a vaginal birth for her first baby has the following outcomes:

  • only 52% women having their first baby will have a normal birth
  • 33% will be induced
  • 23% will have forceps or vacuum
  • 25% will have a caesarean – and of these women, only 12% will have a vaginal birth in their subsequent pregnancy.
  • In other words, only 75% of first time mums who elect to have a vaginal birth will actually have one.

    In contrast, a first time Mum who chooses a vaginal birth with a private midwife has about a 95% chance of having a vaginal birth.

    The real question isn’t the outcomes of a first-time Mum’s pregnancy when she chooses a vaginal birth or a caesarean, but rather, what happens for the average woman who has two children, who has elected a caesarean with her first versus a vaginal birth with her first baby. In other words, how about we compare the outcomes of women who have two caesareans, with women who elect to have a vaginal birth the first time around, 75% of whom will birth vaginally, and 25% of whom will have a caesarean.

    Such a study would address the issue of second caesarean risks. Serious maternal morbidity (eg placenta praevia, placenta accreta, uterine rupture, need for hysterectomy and blood transfusion) increases progressively with increasing number of cesarean sections a woman has. The first caesarean is generally very safe but increasing numbers of caesareans are perhaps not so safe.

    A further issue with the study is that it does not suggest any method or support for the women who elect to birth vaginally. Will they be supported with one-to-one midwifery care, as this is known to increase vaginal birth rates? Will they include homebirthing women who are highly motivated to birth normally and without interventions? Or will it be standard obstetric / hospital-based births with high rates of intervention that are already known to result in reduced breastfeeding rates and a dissatisfaction with the birthing experience? I will wait to read the results.

    Dutch abandon home birth

    A recent article informs us that:

    RISK OF DEATH INDUCES DUTCH WOMEN TO ABANDON HOME BIRTHS

    It goes on to say that in the last 10 years, the percentage of Dutch women who are giving birth in hospitals has risen from 37% to 75%. They state that reasons for this include:

  • concern at the disproportionally high baby death rate in home birth
  • the rising popularity of epidurals, a pain relief option in labour which is only available in hospitals.
  • The Dutch system of home births has been promoted as one which other countries should emulate, including New Zealand. However, last year a large study found that the perinatal death rate was greater in low risk women who were cared for by midwives than in higher risk women who were cared for by obstetricians. The researchers concluded that the Dutch system of risk selection is not as effective as was once thought.

    I have read the study that has been referred to above. The study concludes that:

    The main finding of this study is that the Dutch obstetric system that is based on risk selection and obstetric care at two levels may not be as effective as was once thought. The Dutch obstetric system itself possibly contributes to the high perinatal mortality compared with most European countries. We found that delivery-related perinatal death was significantly higher among low risk pregnancies in midwife supervised primary care than among high risk pregnancies in obstetrician supervised secondary care.

    The Dutch system relies on a risk assessment. Women are either in primary care or secondary care. Women who are in primary care have midwifery care and they have the option of home birth or hospital birth. The Netherlands currently has a 22% homebirth rate. Women with risk-associated pregnancies have obstetric (secondary) care and give birth in hospital. They might have issues such as high blood pressure, diabetes, twins, a previous caesarean and so on. Overall, 49.5% women remain in primary care at the start oaf labour, and 35% women remain in primary care throughout labour and birth. 65% women either start their pregnancy in secondary care or are transferred to secondary care at some stage in their pregnancy or labour. It is a system that has worked well for many years.

    However, the study has found that the intrapartum (labour and birth) death rate among term babies without congenital malformations (birth defects) was as follows:

  • For babies who started labour in primary (midwifery) care: 0.96/1000
  • For babies who started labour in secondary (obstetric) care: 0.24/1000
  • For births that took place in primary care: 0.91/1000
  • For births that took place in secondary care: 0.45/1000
  • For births that were referred from primary care to secondary care in labour: 1.09/1000
  • Babies of women who were referred from a midwife to an obstetrician during labour had a 3.66 times higher risk of delivery-related perinatal death than did infants of women who started labour supervised by an obstetrician.

    The study concludes that:

    The obstetric care system in the Netherlands may contribute to the high perinatal mortality

    and:

    the Dutch system of risk selection in relation to perinatal death at term is not as effective as was once thought.

    I suggest that there is another major issue involved that has been ignored in the above suggestion. In the Netherlands, midwives book 105 women per year. You read that correctly. While in Australia, midwives care for around 20-40 women per year, in the Netherlands it’s a huge caseload of 105 women per year. Therefore it is impossible for the midwife to personally attend every labour for the duration. Instead, there is a system in place where the women are cared for by a Kraamverzorgenden who stays with the woman during labour and for the first week after the baby is born. This person does not perform any midwifery care but provides support to the woman. The midwife pops in and out every two or four hours to examine the woman and perhaps listen to the baby’s heart beat – I say “perhaps” because there is no official guideline in The Netherlands that this ought to be attended at any specified interval. Hence the midwives check the baby’s heart beat as and when they choose. Acknowledging that the midwife does not sit with each women in labour, it’s plausible that the baby’s heart beat would only be checked every two or four hours. The standard of care for the UK and Australia is that the baby’s heart beat should be checked every 15 minutes in labour and after every contraction in the second stage of labour when the baby is being born. This is identified in the article:

    Of major concern is the fact that the highest mortality was among the infants of women who were referred from primary care to secondary care during labour because of an apparent complication. Hypothetically, this high mortality could have several causes … diagnosis in primary care can be delayed because the midwife is not always present during the first stage of labour and fetal heart beats are often checked only every two to four hours.

    I am interested in why this fundamental issue has not been addressed; rather, a complete review of a system that is in place in other countries – successfully – has been called for?

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    Homebirth Position Statement

    The Australian College of Midwives (ACM) is Australia’s professional body for midwives. Recently, ACM was charged with the task of preparing a position statement on home birth. This position statement will have a great impact on the future of home birth services in Australia, so it is of enormous significance to home birthing women and their midwives. As well as a position statement, ACM has developed a Guidance which clarifies the expectations for private midwives when providing midwifery care for a planned homebirth.

    The documents are:
    Literature Review
    Homebirth position statement
    Guidance for private midwives attending homebirths

    Probably the best way to read these documents is to start with the literature review because it provides the context for the guidance and position statement.

    ACM’s literature review was restricted to studies which met all of the following criteria:

  • Studies of planned homebirths with a registered provider/s, compared with planned hospital birth
  • Research articles that also addressed maternal and neonatal outcomes
  • Articles from developed countries, written in English and with a publication date between 1995 and 2011.
  • Any articles that did not describe studies which included a comparison group, investigate planned homebirths or relate to maternal and/or neonatal outcomes were excluded. This rigorous process identified eleven studies which formed the basis of the literature review. The review covered 352,655 homebirths from Australia and around the world.

    In general terms, the studies say that for a low-risk, healthy woman and baby, midwife-attended home birth does not increase the chance of the baby dying or being harmed. Home birth does, however, increase the chance that the woman will have a drug-free, intervention-free birth: that her labour will most likely start on its own, progress normally and lead to a normal birth with little likelihood of needing any stitches. Also, she is far more likely to breastfeed and to experience her birth as very positive and satisfying. This is important because it is well-known that interventions carry risks and that there can be a cascade effect, so that when you begin with one intervention, you often end up doing more interventions as the labour progresses (eg induction leading to long labour, leading to epidural, leading to forceps delivery). This is all minimised in the group of women and babies who birth at home with a qualified midwife who has a link in to the hospital with ready access to obstetric and paediatric care if needed.

    However, a small number of studies demonstrated that home birth increases the rate of perinatal mortality. The research suggests that the inclusion of high risk factors in home birth, increases the chance of a baby dying or being seriously harmed during birth (most commonly through low levels of oxygen). Other issues may relate to the time and distance to travel from home to hospital during labour if transfer is needed, as well as the woman’s acceptance or refusal of recommended interventions once she has transferred. It is important to note that the outcomes of women and their babies who transfer to hospital during labour will generally compare unfavourably with those not transferred due to the change in risk status of the women.

    The ACM concludes that, “It seems evident from the literature that planned home birth is a safe option for women who are at low risk of complications and who receive care from qualified attendants with adequate access to support, advice, referral and transfer mechanisms.”

    With that conclusion in mind, the ACM has developed a position statement on home birth, and following on from that, guidance for private midwives who attend home births. Much discussion has been had about these documents on various forums and email lists. Some excerpts from the position statement and guidance follow:

    It is the position of the Australian College of Midwives that home is an appropriate place of birth for women considered to be at low obstetric risk, and that women must be supported in safe, planned homebirth, by midwives and/or other appropriately qualified and regulated health professionals with adequate access to support, advice, and referral and transfer mechanisms.

    Some women may choose a planned homebirth even when this is not recommended by her care providers. In such circumstances, a midwife should, after discussions with each woman and in consultation with other health professionals, work with the woman looking for options and resolutions within midwifery professional standards to address the woman’s needs.

    Following documented discussions and appropriate consultation and referral as may be indicated, a midwife has the right to decline to continue to provide, or to accept, midwifery care if it is felt that this would require the midwife to practise outside of the midwife’s scope, skills and competencies.

    Midwives have a duty of care to each woman they provide care to, and this means that in labour, or urgent situations, a midwife must attend the woman.

    In the absence of a consistent definition of ‘low obstetric risk’, low obstetric risk is considered to be a pregnancy, labour and birth that are anticipated to be problem free.

    There are some contraindications to a planned homebirth which women should be informed of at booking. These are;
    • Multiple pregnancy
    • Abnormal presentation (including breech presentation)
    • Preterm labour prior to 37 completed weeks of pregnancy
    • Post term pregnancy of more than 42 completed weeks
    • Scarred uterus

    Issues identified as “B” or “C” in the Australian College of Midwives National Midwifery Guidelines for Consultation and Referral (“the Guidelines”) would require consultation with an Obstetrician prior to proceeding with a planned homebirth. Consultation is mandatory for the midwife providing care.

    Women must be made aware of the midwife’s obligation to consult at – or prior to – booking-in.

    Ideally, midwives should meet the criteria for gaining notation as an Eligible Midwife.

    Midwives must ensure that they have documented processes in place for consultation and referral

    Any decision to provide care for a planned homebirth should take into account the possibility of transfer to a hospital and the time needed for transfer to that hospital in the event that this is deemed necessary. Women should be counselled on the possibility of transfer, and midwives should ensure that the supporting hospital is provided with a care plan/documentation around the woman’s intention for a planned homebirth.

    Midwives must utilise documented evidence-based guidelines to support antenatal, intrapartum and postnatal midwifery care.

    Midwives should undergo a formal professional peer review process at least once every three years.

    At – or prior to – booking, the midwife must advise the woman of situations where homebirth cannot be supported. At any time, the midwife is not obliged to participate in a homebirth that the midwife considers will increase the risk of harm to the woman or her baby.

    Women must be respected in the choices that they make, and that includes choices to refuse a recommended course of action at any stage of her pregnancy,

    An information pack should be made available to women that should include a ‘Terms of Care’ document outlining the terms under which midwifery care will be provided.
    Information should also include the potential for transfer to hospital for unforseen complications.
    The following information must be provided to women at the onset of their care, ideally in writing, followed up in discussion and signed by the woman:
    • Midwifery scope of practice, including the Australian College of Midwives Guidelines for Consultation and Referral;
    • Philosophy of care;
    • Choice of birth setting, including requirements for homebirth;
    • Contact information for the midwife;
    • Back-up arrangements;
    • Standards of practice and protocols, including consultation and referral
    • Responsibilities of the woman;
    • Confidentiality and access to the woman’s records (privacy agreement); and
    • Financial arrangements

    It’s fair to say that ACM’s position statement and guidance are not ideologically- or belief-driven. It’s clear that the documents are driven by evidence. ACM has tackled the conflicting issue of the woman’s negative right to autonomy versus the midwife’s responsibility to practice safely and within accepted standards of care. While much is being said on various forums, email lists and face-to-face about these documents, somehow, I can’t help but wonder if the issue is really about the restriction of home birth to low-risk women, or the fact that at this point in time, a woman and private midwife have no option but to birth at home.

    In the whole of Australia, there is currently no clinical privileging except in one small hospital. A high risk woman’s only option via this new position statement is to birth in hospital, however her private midwife would not be able to attend in the full capacity of midwife – or even as a support midwife: it has recently come to our attention that the midwife cannot legally attend in hospital at all.

    I’ll explain why: the MIGA insurance policy covers privately-admitted patients. If the woman is admitted as a public patient after being transferred from a home birth (either in pregnancy or during labour), MIGA insurance does not provide indemnity cover to the midwife in respect of the birth. Most women planning a home birth will have a back-up hospital booking as a public patient. Hence, when the midwife goes in with the woman, the midwife’s insurance does not cover her. It is against the requirements of registration to work without insurance, except at a home birth. In other words, the midwife would be attending the woman in hospital against the requirements of registration.

    In time (hopefully sooner rather than later), midwives will have admitting rights where we can admit, care for and discharge our own private patients, all funded by Medicare and indemnified by MIGA but in the meantime, this is not possible.

    Visit my website to explore home birth, hospital birth and Medicare-funded private midwifery care.

    Expectant mothers need facts, not fear

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    Here we go again. A debate about home vs hospital birth.

    There is only one thing … that’s more emotive than where you give birth to a baby, and that is how you feed it.

    This week, the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists … proposed that more women give birth away from doctors and hospitals. I really want to see how this works, because if there’s anyone more scared of home births than the parents, it’s doctors and midwives. (Note: not all, I know.)

    I’m not a doctor, nor a midwife. I have slightly more experience of pregnancy and birth than some, by virtue of being co-founder of a parenting website for the past seven years and working as a lay rep in a large maternity hospital for four. But really, my opinion, just like so many birthing women, counts for little.

    Look at what this report says: “The model we are proposing focuses on the needs of the woman and her baby by providing the right care, at the right time, in the right place, provided by the right person and which enhances the woman’s experience.” Sound great, doesn’t it? But who will decide what the right care, at the right time, etc, is? Who listens to what a mother … wants?

    Hospitals are so tied by NHS policy and guidelines, and are so scared of being sued that midwives who once were perfectly capable of delivering breech babies, big babies or twins at home (yes, it can be done) no longer can, or do. So it’s easier to book everyone into the hospital. What will change? How will it change? There aren’t enough midwives as it is.

    When I decided to try for a home birth I had to take myself out of the NHS system (an option that may no longer exist soon because of the threat to our independent midwives, but that is another story, for another time) because the idea so terrified almost everyone I met. I was simply deemed too high-risk. But this wasn’t based on any analysis of my actual, individual risks. It was because I ticked two boxes: “over 40″ (this is still being cited as a reason not to have a home birth) and “previous C-section” (ditto). One of the paediatricians at the hospital where I was a lay rep told me I was being irresponsible, that my scar would tear (the risk of uterine rupture is, in fact, very small) and that I’d kill myself and my baby.

    “Don’t expect us to attend to you” were her actual words. Amazingly, because I wasn’t on a dual suicide/infanticide mission, and I didn’t want to leave my firstborn motherless, I asked two separate, senior midwives to go through my previous notes with a fine-tooth comb. Conclusion: no reason at all not to try for a home birth if you want to …

    For many … the thought of giving birth at home is terrifying. I toyed with the idea of a home birth with my first for about 10 minutes. It was only when I saw firsthand what hospitals could offer and after five years of researching birth that I was brave enough even to think about it for my second baby.

    I’ll cut to the chase. I had my home birth without drugs or incident. Yes, it was fantastic. No, you shouldn’t have to have a home birth if you don’t want to, no more than I should have had to go to hospital if I didn’t want to. This brings me on to something that no report can ever address, and that’s the baggage we all – health professionals included – bring into maternity services: our own experiences. They should inform, but not dictate.

    There is one bit of the report that I think is underplayed: … “Women themselves need the support and encouragement of society, including the professionals, to take responsibility for their own health”. Indeed, we all need to take responsibility for how babies are born. Women need to stop dramatising labour, especially to their daughters. (Maternal influence is huge on a daughter’s subsequent expectation of her own labour.) Health professionals need to stop lecturing a woman on how to give birth and start listening to what women want – and then provide consistent, accurate, non-emotive information to help her set the agenda.

    We all need to stop projecting our own experiences and think that’s how it will/should be for everyone else. Only then can we hope to reverse this collective hysteria that surrounds giving birth. People who make TV programmes and films: I have a special message for you, because how you portray birth is so hugely influential. I know it makes for better TV to have a woman on her back, in a hospital, screaming and tearing off her husband’s earlobes, but please, counterbalance this with women also giving birth quietly, in a position other than prone and sometimes at home. It’s partly because of you that it took me nearly 40 years to realise that it could be done.

    Melissa Maimann & Andrew Pesce: Collaborating for success

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    ALTHOUGH only a handful of collaborative arrangements have been signed between obstetricians and midwives since national maternity reforms were introduced in November, calls for a policy rethink are premature and counterproductive.

    In fact, the reforms provide an exciting opportunity for collaborative maternity care that is safe, locally responsive and woman-centred.

    A variety of private maternity care models are possible and we are confident these will build on Australia’s strong record of safety and quality in maternity care. They will also meet the needs of women who want the familiarity and the comfort of knowing the obstetrician and midwife who will be with them through their pregnancy, birth and new parenting experience …

    Obstetricians may be concerned that the new arrangements mean they will not be directly involved in patient care until something goes wrong, while some midwives fear that the arrangements will be used to control midwifery practice, adversely impact on childbirth choices and promote anticompetitive restriction of trade.

    We believe we are the first private obstetrician-midwife team in Australia to have successfully negotiated a formal collaborative arrangement and we are very happy with how it has progressed since our first discussions.

    The first woman under our joint care gave birth in March this year and we have several others booked through to January 2012.

    We share a similar philosophical approach to maternity care and have agreed practice guidelines that we believe to be safe, evidence-based and woman-centred …

    … Women appreciate the continuity of care, and the assurance that an obstetrician they have met will be involved if medical assistance is required. Feedback from women so far has been outstanding. The main criticism has been that this model of care is not available in other hospitals.

    One of the reasons why there are currently so few collaborative arrangements has been the time taken by the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency to endorse eligible midwives and by public maternity units to credential midwives in private practice.

    … Our agreed guidelines are explained to patients before they engage our services and childbirth choices are not restricted. In fact, choices are enhanced as the midwife is able to attend births in the full capacity of a midwife in hospital.

    Importantly, our model of care does not dictate “transfer” of care, merely a shift in the balance of obstetric and midwifery care because we recognise that every pregnant woman needs her own obstetrician and midwife. We support midwife care during waterbirth, vaginal birth after caesarean section, physiological birth positioning and physiological third stage.

    Change is often difficult as we all tend to be creatures of habit. This change brings with it many opportunities for obstetricians and midwives in private practice to work together in ways that are beneficial to both and, importantly, to the women in their care.

    … The maternity reforms will succeed if we remember that midwives and obstetricians are in it for the same reason — to provide safe care that meets the needs of our patients, within a respectful, professional environment.

    Dr Andrew Pesce is an obstetrician practising in Sydney and immediate past president of the AMA. Ms Melissa Maimann is a midwife in private practice based in Sydney.

    Steep rise in first-time mothers being induced

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    A huge jump in first-time mothers having their labour induced is a worrying trend that is putting women at unnecessary risk …

    The proportion of labour induction among women who carried their babies to term rose from 18.6 per cent of all births in 1990, to 26.2 per cent in 2008.

    … and the majority of those [inductions] were carried out before the 41st week of pregnancy.

    … at the same time, the rate of stillbirth remained steady.

    “Induction seems to be increasing and that doesn’t seem to be improving the outcomes for babies,” …

    More older mothers and increases in instances of medical conditions, such as gestational diabetes, explained only some of the rise … Women who were more likely to undergo induction … tended … to have private health insurance.

    … the study was worrying because it showed inductions were often not done for conventional reasons such as high blood pressure or prolonged pregnancy.

    ”Unspecified” reasons were given for between a third and half of all inductions …

    … as the rates of induction had gone up, so had the rate of caesareans. Between 2001 and 2007, fewer than half of the women who had their labour induced went on to have a natural birth, with a third of inductions resulting in caesareans.

    … women were often put under subtle pressure by doctors to undergo inductions and did not have the risks of further interventions explained to them.

    “If you knew your chances of having a normal birth were less than half, you would think more carefully about what is being advised,” she said. “They trust us and they trust the advice that they are getting is correct and that is very concerning.”

    … Women who had a caesarean for their first birth were more likely to have the procedure for subsequent births, leading to increased risks of complications such as the placenta growing through the uterus wall …

    Perhaps a policy needs to be developed whereby all inductions need to be cleared by a committee of at least 2 senior doctors and 2 senior midwives, prior to authorisation by the induction committee. Sometimes a meeting with senior clinicians can help to generate other options instead of resorting to induction. This would, however not be applicable in the private sector, where most of the inductions are performed.

    In NSW in 2008, one private hospital had a 38% induction rate, while another private hospital had a 41% induction rate. At those hospitals, only 1 in 5 women went into labour spontaneously. Interestingly – and perhaps in conflict with this article – at those same hospitals, while around 50% first-time Mums were induced, only 1 on 5 first-time Mums had a caesarean – so it doesn’t necessarily follow that a high induction rate leads to high caesarean rates. Both of those hospitals have caesarean rates that are in-line with the NSW State average.

    I am not suggesting that inductions are wonderful and all women ought to be lining up for them – and the increase in non-indicated inductions is indeed worrying because there should always be a valid reason to bring a pregnancy to an end sooner than nature (and the baby) had intended. There’s no doubt that induction rates and caesarean rates are very high – too high – in private hospitals. But I’m not sure that one is leading to another because the bulk of the caesareans are performed electively, ie, prior to labour starting. The most common reason for an elective caesarean is a previous caesarean (I’ve never accepted that this is even an indication because VBAC is safe … but I’ll have to concede to the majority view that “previous caesarean” is somehow a justifiable reason for another caesarean). Also, as my stats have shown above, despite the huge rate of inductions in first-time Mums, there’s not a corresponding increase in the caesarean rate amongst first-time Mums.

    So, I wonder if there’s something else at play here. I wonder if it has something to do with continuity of care and trust being protective. So that women may be augmented and induced without it impacting the caesarean rate, provided that those women receive continuity of care from someone they trust. In private hospitals where induction rates are higher than in the public sector (along with all types if intervention), women receive continuity of obstetric care and although we might assert that, “women were often put under subtle pressure by doctors to undergo inductions and did not have the risks of further interventions explained to them”, it is also true that, “They trust us and they trust the advice that they are getting”.

    On the other hand, in the public system, continuity of care is not generally a feature of the care provided. Women are often seen by a different midwife or doctor at every visit, they receive impersonal care from a stranger, and by-and-large, they are terrified. Add “induction” to the mix, and viola! You have a caesarean. I wonder if the cause of the caesarean was the lack of continuity of care and trust, rather than the intervention itself. More on that later!

    Home birth has pros and cons

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    The number of at-home births is small but growing as pregnant women weigh the idea of a drug-free and surgery-free birth in a familiar setting versus the risk of harm to the baby in case of complications.

    When most pregnant women go into labor, they pack their bags for the hospital. When Lara Carlos felt the contractions in November 2008, she set up a birthing tub in her bedroom.

    For the next several hours, Carlos alternated between padding around her home and squatting and pushing in the tub. Her midwife poured water down her back and dabbed her forehead with cold towels. When the baby (they chose the name Vincent) arrived at 1:21 a.m., he spent his first few hours cuddling with his parents in their bed.

    Carlos … is one of a small but growing number of women who are choosing to deliver their babies at home. Her first son, Ivan, had been delivered in a hospital, and she says she found labor at home a dramatic improvement.

    “In the hospital, there were seven medical students in the room when I was pushing my son out,” she said. “At home, it was a very quiet, slow experience, and the water helped me to relax.”

    Though home births account for only about 1% of all births each year … they increased by 20% from 2004 to 2008 … The practice is most popular among well-educated mothers who favor natural childbirth without the drugs or surgeries a hospital might use.

    … The increase has reenergized the fierce debate over the safety of at-home delivery. The practice is officially frowned on by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists … because the absence of emergency medical equipment and specialists accustomed to dealing with complications means that problems during labor could cost the baby’s life.

    “All the existing scientific evidence, as well as state and national statistics, make it ultra-clear that home birth increases the risk of death,” …

    The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists does acknowledge that home births are associated with fewer medical interventions than hospital births … 61% of women who had vaginal delivery received an epidural in 2008, the year the report studied. And a 2006 national survey of women’s childbearing experiences showed that 55% were given Pitocin to speed labor.

    “There’s no doubt that once you end up in a hospital, you end up with more interventions — that’s what drives some families away,” … home birth is reasonable as long as women have few risk factors …, have an emergency backup plan and understand the risks involved.

    Women also turn to home birth in order to avoid caesarean sections, which have become more common as obstetricians became increasingly reluctant to take chances at the slightest sign of fetal distress …

    What’s more, many hospitals do not allow women who have previously had a caesarean to attempt a vaginal birth because of the risk of uterine rupture, even though a 2010 National Institutes of Health advisory panel concluded that the risk of uterine rupture during a vaginal birth after one caesarean was just 1% and that more women should be offered the choice. Women wishing to have a VBAC (vaginal birth after caesarean) may have no option but to do so on their own turf.

    Sarah … had two caesareans but chose a home birth for her third pregnancy, successfully delivering a baby girl in January 2010.

    “We had visited numerous hospitals, and the first time I mentioned a VBAC, I was just shut down completely,” Bolson says. Doctors refused to consider it because of the chance of rupture, she recalls, and one said he couldn’t risk having his medical malpractice insurance skyrocket.

    She eventually found a certified professional midwife who was willing to help her deliver at home, with a backup plan of transfer to a nearby hospital. Though initially worried about complications, “after I was able to release the fear, I was free to birth without any inhibition.”

    Many home-birth moms also say they object to other aspects of hospital births, such as having to lie in a bed, abstain from food during labor and be monitored by an army of nurses.

    “I believe in the intuitive power of the human body,” said Mayim Bialik, an actress and natural-birth advocate who has given birth at home. “I believe in having as much privacy as possible, in being able to move freely, to eat when I want, drink when I want, and to be surrounded by the sounds and smells of what is familiar to me.”

    “Other mammals go off on their own to labor,” adds Dr. Stuart Fischbein, a Los Angeles-based obstetrician who has been delivering exclusively in homes since 2010. “When a patient goes to a hospital, she gets told to lay flat on her back strapped down with monitors with constant interruptions from hospital personnel — does that sound conducive to having a normal labor?”

    Arrangements for a home birth go something like this: Early in the pregnancy a woman finds either a … midwife … The midwife provides some or all of the woman’s prenatal care and is on call as the woman approaches her due date …

    During labor, many women use water tubs because they find the water soothing and pain-relieving; others choose to just move about their homes as they see fit. The midwife monitors the fetus’ heart tones with a Doppler device, and most also bring equipment such as oxygen tanks, anti-hemmorhagic medication, local anesthetic and suturing supplies in case of tearing or bleeding. If an emergency arises that the midwife can’t manage, home-birth moms are advised to transfer immediately to a hospital.

    The core of the home-birth debate lies with the safety of the baby — and here, opinions and the data are sharply divided. A 2005 study of 5,418 births in the U.S. and Canada during 2000 … found that the neonatal death rates of at-home births were comparable to those of births in hospitals.

    But a July 2010 analysis published in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology examined the outcomes of 12 home-and-hospital-birth studies and found that babies born at home die at two to three times the rate of those born in hospitals …

    … the distance to the nearest emergency room can sometimes mean the difference between life and death. “Saying, ‘trust birth’ is like saying ‘trust the weather,’” she says, referring to a slogan occasionally used in natural-birth groups.

    Just as vocal online communities have sprung up to promote home birth, so too have others populated by women whose home-birth attempts turned into tragedies … Liz Paparella’s fourth child was stillborn on her living room couch because her midwife failed to take Paparella to the hospital when she began bleeding during labor.

    “I never thought it was more dangerous to have a baby at home than at the hospital,” says Paparella, who had given birth successfully at home two times previously. “In birth, the risk can change from low to high in a matter of minutes.”

    … A clear answer to the safety question is hard to find because nearly every home-birth study has some flaw that is flagged by one side of the debate or the other as invalidating the results. Given this uncertainty, Ouzounian cautions women to research, prepare and choose wisely.

    Home births, he says, should be considered only by those who have a well-trained midwife and are experiencing no complications with their pregnancy …

    “Under the right circumstances, with the right patient selection and with a … midwife attending, the overall maternal complication rates with home births are comparable” to those of a hospital birth …

    But he also advises women not to think about birth in black-or-white terms: There are many ways to make delivery more “natural” even if it takes place in the hospital …

    Fischbein says that doctors could be more accommodating to their patients by providing them with information about all of their birth options — at home and in the hospital — and stand ready to serve as backups for those who wish to labor at home with a midwife.

    “There’s room in this world for low-risk home birthing and for hospital birthing,” he says. “We really should support each individual woman’s right to choose how to deliver her baby.”

    Rules on patient safety hit midwives

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    Homebirth supporters claim bureaucrats are restricting women’s choice by stopping some midwives from managing higher-risk homebirths, particularly women who have had a caesarean delivery.

    Homebirth Australia said it was aware of more than 20 recent cases … where midwives had been deregistered or had conditions imposed on their registration because of claims they were working outside safe guidelines.

    … The Weekend West is aware of a WA midwife who was ordered last week to stop providing care for planned homebirths in women at higher risk, including those who had a caesarean and wanted to have a normal birth in the next pregnancy.

    The Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency wrote to the midwife, saying the condition was imposed by the WA Nursing and Midwifery Board because the midwife had not proved he or she could provide a safe homebirth environment for a planned vaginal birth after a caesarean.

    “The board formed the reasonable belief that because of your alleged conduct issues, you pose a serious risk to persons, and it is necessary to take immediate action to impose conditions on your registration to protect public health or safety,” the letter said.

    … the move could force women to have unattended homebirths, putting them and their babies at risk. “We can’t by stealth deregister or pose conditions on midwives which rob women of access to a registered health professional,” she said.

    Australian Medical Association WA president Dave Mountain … questioned whether the health system should allow higher-risk women to exercise the choice of homebirth when there were clear risks for them and their babies.

    What a huge ethical debate – largely unresolved. All women have the right to autonomy – the right to make choices, have control over what happens to their body, to accept or reject advice and interventions, to decide when, where and by whom they will be cared for, to access care – or not. It is a fundamental human right that is enshrined in law.

    On the other side – the health practitioner has a duty of care to the woman and her unborn baby and is obliged to provide safe care at all times. Safety is defined in terms of what the average midwife would do, or by accepted professional standards, or by laws relating to practice. A health practitioner cannot be incited to practice unsafely: they must make a judgment and adhere to professional standards.

    So where does this leave us all when the two positions collide? Although we have guidelines on what we ought to do in those situations, as we can see from the above article, they do not hold water. The consequence for now is an increase in the number of women opting to freebirth – that is an unassisted homebirth (no midwife present). I am hopeful that in time, the regulatory authorities will support midwives to support all women.

    Thank this doc for the episiotomy you won’t have

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    When you picture a birth activist, you probably imagine a 20-something woman marching in the streets with an enormous belly.

    You are less likely to envision a 70-something academic and grandfather.

    And yet physician Michael C. Klein has had – and continues to have – a remarkable impact on the lives of mothers and babies around the world.

    Klein is the first to admit that he owes a good measure of the birthing wisdom that first sparked his career to a group of midwives he met in Ethiopia, back when he was on a year-and-a-half leave of absence from medical school at Stanford University.

    … “The midwives let me catch babies,” …

    He was fascinated by natural childbirth: by the way midwives delivered babies without episiotomy …

    What he learned from those midwives set the stage for Klein’s entire career, igniting his interest in old and new birth technologies and the need to improve maternity care.

    It also set him on a collision course with his professors when he returned to Stanford. “If you want to practice primitive medicine, you will have to go to the county hospital,” he was told. His crime? Delivering babies without episiotomy.

    Fortunately, Klein is not someone who is easily dissuaded. Faced with resistance, he simply applies additional gentle, consistent pressure. That was his style then and it continues to be his style today … he reviewed the information on episiotomy in every edition of Williams’ Obstetrics from the 1920s through the early 1990s in his quest to challenge the traditional wisdom about the procedure …

    His best-known study … turned decades of obstetrical thinking on its head by demonstrating that episiotomy caused the very types of trauma that it was believed to prevent …

    … What drives his research is his concern about mothers and babies … he’s also troubled by the fact that technology is becoming a routine part of the birth environment, even though research suggests that epidurals and non-stop electronic fetal monitoring should only happen when specifically warranted.

    “The fundamental problem is not about normal childbirth; it’s about making normal childbirth abnormal,” he explains. “When we treat high-risk women in high-risk settings, we lower their risk. When we treat low-risk women as if they were high risk, we increase their risk and create complications. That is what we are doing today.”

    His research has shown that the younger generation of obstetricians (those age 40 or younger) is more likely to support the routine use of technology during birth than older obstetricians … Klein blames this on fear of normal birth, the result of simply not having attended enough normal births to build confidence in the process.

    Today it’s midwives who tend to be the guardians of normal birth … midwives’ thoughts and beliefs about birth are very much in synch with those of normal birth.

    … the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada (SOGC)… recently issued a press release objecting to comments he made in a press release issued by the University of British Columbia describing his most recent research.

    Klein, in turn, describes the SOGC as a very progressive organization. His issue is with the obstetrical profession as opposed to the SOGC itself: “The problem is that society has invested surgeons with control over normal childbirth.”

    He’d really prefer to sidestep the politics entirely to focus on what matters most to him. “I’m primarily interested in the well-being of mothers and babies rather than the internal politics of medicine. I see nothing incompatible with promoting family practice and midwifery.”

    Physiological third stage for women at low risk of postpartum haemorrhage

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    No previous study has focused on true physiological third stage for women at low risk of postpartum haemorrhage. Physiological third stage is often chosen by women who birth at home or in a birth centre, however hospital policies urge active management of the third stage (injection of syntocinon, immediate clamping and cutting of the cord and then pulling the placenta out) because studies have shown that this form of management reduces bleeding. However, it is unfortunate that those studies have either a) not clearly defined physiological management or b) have not managed the “physiological” third stages in a physiological manner. Hence, those studies have shown that active management is the safer option and hospitals have gone with those recommendations.

    This study clearly defines what is meant by physiological management and also the women who are suitable for physiological management. Some women are at a higher risk of PPH and so active management was recommended to those women in the study.

    The study compared active management which was standard at the tertiary hospital, with physiological management which was the norm at the free-standing birth centre. At the tertiary unit, 11.2% low-risk women experienced a PPH. At the midwifery-led unit, where physiological management was practiced, PPH only occurred in 2.8% women. Active management was associated with 11.5% PPHs compared with physiological management which was 1.7% PPHs. Active management was associated with a seven to eight fold increase in PPH for low-risk women.

    Lack of collaboration stalls maternity reform

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    Midwives urge government to relook at legislation.

    The government’s maternity reforms are “doomed to fail” as a result of obstetricians refusing to enter into collaborative arrangements with midwives.

    … “We always feared that these arrangements would be more about control than collaboration,” … only … three [collaborative agreements have been signed] …

    “Midwives are asking obstetricians in writing and calling up to 10 times to organise collaboration. Some get no response, some a polite no and others a very rude no,” …

    “We did expect that this would be the case. When you put one competing professional group over another group competing for the same market share, the group in control isn’t going to do something that threatens their sizeable share. I can understand that they are threatened.”

    It is true that there are only one or two obstetricians who have signed collaborative agreements with midwives, and only one that I know of whose agreement covers labour and birth care. This is disappointing because the models of care that are possible with collaborative agreements between private obstetricians and private midwives are so beneficial for women.

    Mothers Deserve Options: Ricki Lake

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    I made my 2008 documentary The Business of Being Born to educate women about choices in childbirth, and raise questions about maternity care in the U.S. …

    The impact of the documentary was monumental … It’s seems that the more we know, the fewer choices we have. In the last five years, New York City alone has witnessed the shuttering of its only freestanding birth center, two hospital-based birth centers, a popular childbirth education center and a major hospital that offered privileges to a large number of hospital midwifery practices and home birth midwives. This has left many parents-to-be struggling to find birth options outside of the traditional OB/GYN approach.

    But why is all of this important? Why does it matter if a mother’s prenatal visits are 10 minutes long or last more than an hour? Why does it matter if the care provider at her birth is someone she has built a trusting relationship with over 9 months or a stranger-on-call? Why does it matter if a woman brings her child into this world in a way that makes her feel empowered and respected, as opposed to feeling pushed through a delivery where she is not an active participant in her care? Does how we are born really matter if mom and baby are pronounced “healthy” in the end?

    Well, I have seen that it matters quite a bit … at its core, the birth process is directly connected to most important thing in this world — loving and caring for our children .. mothers who receive attentive prenatal care and have a positive birth experience are in a better position to create a healthy attachment to their babies, have more success breastfeeding, and enter the experience of motherhood feeling empowered and energized … that concept … is what has become sorely lost in our mainstream medical system …

    … It concerns me to see that a growing number of mothers feel coerced and undermined during the birth process, and rates of post-traumatic-stress disorder after birth are on the rise. There is a blasé attitude toward rising cesarean rates, which now make up one third of all births …

    The entire pregnancy and birth process is physiologically designed to prepare women emotionally and physically for motherhood. Mother nature has endowed us with a complex interaction of hormones that literally reshape the human brain for motherhood. Doctors have not even begun to crack the surface of understanding the neuroscience behind the hormonal interactions between mom and baby during the time of birth. In fact, they do not even understand what causes a woman to go into labor, which is why labor induction methods remain crude and statistically double one’s chances of ending up with a cesarean … my true passion is making sure that new parents are informed …

    Birth plans

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    You’ve dreamed about the moment you get to hold your little one for the first time. Perhaps you’ve envisioned the entire process of childbirth from contractions to delivery. Maybe you’ve been so distracted by the pregnancy and the impending arrival of your newborn that you haven’t even thought about delivery. Wherever you are on the spectrum, it is wise to have a pre-established birth plan to make sure your childbirth wishes are as closely followed as possible.

    What is a birth plan and why do you need one?

    Some people think having a birth plan sounds too new-agey for them, or too controlling – they feel like they are trying to tell their caretakers how to do their jobs. A birth plan is a written guide for your medical professionals … that helps articulate your desires for the delivery …

    A birth plan isn’t a legal document … It is something that can be as simple as a handwritten list of instructions and desires …

    What goes into a birth plan?

    A birth plan should include your vision for how you want the birth to go. It can include things like wanting to be able to walk during labor versus being restricted to bed, or when and if you want to receive pain medication and what type … It can include directions as to who to allow into your delivery room – you want your partner there, but not your overly enthusiastic second cousin once removed. You can also include requests, such as who you want to cut the umbilical cord …

    Birth plans are a great idea for communicating to your care providers the sort of care that you would like for your labour and birth. It helps your care providers to understand exactly the sort of care you would like to have so that they can do their best to help you to achieve the experience that you want to have. It’s best if birth plans are written with flexibility in mind. No birth ever goes strictly to plan, and sometimes there is a valid reason to depart from the birth plan, including your change of preference at the time of your labour and birth. Some families feel that because they have a birth plan, it will protect them from certain interventions or guarantee a certain birth experience. But, things happen in birth. Sometimes things work out exactly how you want them to, but sometimes labour is a little longer, or a little shorter, sometimes women become exhausted, sometimes pregnancy lasts a bit longer than we expect – or a bit shorter than we expect … or blood pressure plays up … I am sure you understand my point. There are certainly things that you can do to lower your risk of certain complications or interventions, but you cannot really “plan” a birth so I think the wording gets confusing. All of that said, I encourage all of my clients to write a birth plan. It gives women a sense of ownership over their experience.

    Maternity Reforms: Good news for expanded birthing options

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    Maternity reforms came into effect in November 2010 which gave women access to Medicare benefits for private midwifery care for the very first time. In addition, eligible midwives were to be able to order relevant tests and ultrasounds through Medicare. Medicare benefits are available to clients of eligible midwives for pregnancy and postnatal care, however there is no benefit for birth care at home.

    So, 6-odd months on, how are things looking for maternity care and what possibilities await us?

    Well, for a start, we had around 200 private midwives in Australia. 6-odd months into the reforms and we have at least 30-40 eligible midwives. Some of those 200 midwives have ceased private practice, leaving about 100 in private practice. So 30-40 eligible midwives represents a 30%-40% update of the maternity reforms by the current private practice workforce in just 6 months. That is phenomenal. As well as this, private practice has become a more attractive option to employed midwives now that private practice is medicare-funded and indemnified. So in months and years to come, we will have more midwives in private practice, and less in the hospital employed system. This is not a concern as the hospitals would not need their own staff: women will bring their midwife with them to the hospital when they come in to birth their babies. From the hospitals’ perspective, this is excellent news: they may benefit from significant cost savings in terms of recruitment, retention, staff education, pay-roll, rostering, management and so on.

    What about for women? Well, it is well-known that women benefit from exclusive one-to-one midwifery care through pregnancy, labour, birth and the postnatal period. When women are cared for exclusively by one midwife, we know that they experience lower rates of interventions without compromising safety, and they experience higher rates of satisfaction with their birth and new parenting experience. When women choose a Eligible midwife, they can access significant medicare benefits that do reduce the cost by quite a lot. Depending on the number of pregnancy and postnatal consultations a woman has, the benefits range from say $1,000 – $2,500.

    However, in order for eligible midwives to provide medicare-rebatable services, midwifery care needs to be delivered within a collaborative arrangement. And this does open the possibility for private midwives and private obstetricians to work together in collaborative practice. The huge benefit to the woman is that she has midwifery care right the way through, from early pregnancy to 6 weeks after her baby arrives, with the reassurance of having a known obstetrician who is available is needed. Women meet the obstetrician twice in pregnancy, and the obstetrician is available for labour and birth if his care is needed, and in this way, women can benefit from the ultimate in continuity of carer. This model of care is now available for the very first time in Australia history, and we are very pleased to be able to offer it to women. So far it is a very popular option! More to come.

    Women, docs misinformed about childbirth tools

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    A trio of studies … shows many women and doctors are ignorant about the adverse effects associated with caesarean sections, and many mistakenly believe vaginal births are more dangerous.

    … when it comes to decisions like whether they should have a natural childbirth, first-time moms follow their health-care provider’s lead.

    While listening to your doctor seems like the best idea, most women choose obstetricians over midwives, and obstetricians are more likely to opt for C-sections …

    Women who saw midwives were a bit more knowledgeable about their options …

    … “But regardless of the type of care providers they attended, even late in pregnancy, many women reported uncertainty about benefits and risks of common procedures used at childbirth. This is worrisome because a lack of knowledge affects their ability to engage in informed discussions with their caregivers.”

    A second study … shows younger obstetricians are more likely to recommend a C-section than a natural birth because they believe a C-section is less likely to cause sexual issues or urinary incontinence.

    But a number of recent studies show C-sections pose health risks for mothers and children.

    A New England Journal of Medicine study from 2009 says repeat C-sections double the risk of complications for newborns, including neonatal death.

    A 2007 study in the Canadian Medical Association Journal said C-sections increase a mother’s risk of cardiac arrest, infections and hemorrhage requiring hysterotomy.

    The third study shows family practitioners who deliver babies are much less likely to fear vaginal birth, and are more likely to opt for natural birth themselves or for their partners …

    Choose your care provider carefully! Interview several midwives or doctors before choosing one. Ask questions about the things that are important to you. For example, if you want a normal birth, ask your potential care provider what % of the births they attend are by caesarean. If you want a waterbirth – ask your care provider if they attend water births.

    Docs to Women: Pay No Attention to Ricki Lake’s Home Birth

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    Ladies, the physicians of America have issued their decree: they don’t want you having your babies at home with midwives.

    We can’t imagine why not. Study upon study have shown that planning a home birth with a trained midwife is a great choice if you want to avoid unnecessary medical intervention. Midwives are experts in supporting the physiological birth process: monitoring you and your baby during labor, helping you into positions that help labor progress, protecting your pelvic parts from damage while you push, and “catching” the baby from the position that’s most effective and comfortable for you — hands and knees, squatting, even standing — not the position most comfortable for her.

    When healthy women are supported this way, 95% give birth vaginally, with hardly any intervention.

    And yet, the American Medical Association doesn’t see the point. Yesterday at its annual meeting it adopted a policy written by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists against “home deliveries” and in support of legislation “that helps ensure safe deliveries and healthy babies by acknowledging that the safest setting for labor, delivery, and the immediate post-partum period is in the hospital” …

    … The trouble is, they have no evidence to back up their safety claims. In fact, the largest and most rigorous study of home birth internationally to date found that among 5,000 healthy, “low-risk” women, babies were born just as safely at home under a midwife’s care as in the hospital. And not only that, the study, like many before it, found that the women actually fared better at home, with far fewer interventions like labor induction, cesarean section, and episiotomy …

    Which is why the American Public Health Association and the American College of Nurse Midwives support women choosing home birth. The British OB/GYNs have read the research, too, and have this to say: “There is no reason why home birth should not be offered to women at low risk of complications… it may confer considerable benefits for them and their families. There is ample evidence showing that labouring at home increases a woman’s likelihood of a birth that is both satisfying and safe…”

    The other trouble with the American MDs is that they seem to have lost all respect for women’s civil rights, indeed for the U.S. Constitution — the right to privacy, to bodily integrity, and the right of every adult to determine her own health care. The “father knows best” legislation they are promoting could indeed be used to criminally prosecute women who choose home birth, say, by equating it with child abuse.

    Research evidence be damned, the doctors want to mandate you to go to the hospital. They don’t want you to have a choice.

    … The docs are on the defensive.

    After all, birth is big business — it’s in fact the most common reason for a woman to be admitted to the hospital. And if more women start giving birth outside of it, who will get paid? Not doctors and not hospitals …

    Re-thinking Maternity Care Systems

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    … fewer than 30 per cent of women approaching their first birth attend prenatal classes, and books and the Internet are their primary sources for information about birth.

    Women attending obstetricians were more favourable to the use of birth technology and were less appreciative of women’s roles in their own delivery. In contrast, women attending midwives reported less favourable views toward the use of technology and were more supportive of the importance of women’s roles …

    Even late in pregnancy, questions about epidural analgesia, Caesarean section and episiotomy solicited the most “I don’t know” responses from women who took the survey. But women attending midwives appeared more knowledgeable on these issues.

    “Our findings suggest that obstetricians, midwives and family physicians are caring for different populations of women, with different attitudes and expectations towards childbirth,” … “But regardless of the type of care providers they attended … many women reported uncertainty about benefits and risks of common procedures used at childbirth. This is worrisome because a lack of knowledge affects their ability to engage in informed discussions with their caregivers.”

    A second study, published last month in the journal Birth, compared the attitudes toward birth technology and women’s role in their childbirth between the younger generation of obstetricians and their predecessors.

    Klein and colleagues surveyed 800 Canadian obstetricians who include birth delivery in their practice. Out of 549 respondents, 81 per cent of those 40 years or younger were women (vs. 40 per cent over 40 years of age) …

    … younger obstetricians were significantly more likely to favour the use of routine epidural analgesia and were more concerned about the perceived adverse effects of vaginal birth …

    … the younger generation sees Cesarean section as a solution to many labour and birth problems, and incorrectly sees C-section as safer for both mothers and babies … younger obstetricians are more likely to choose C-section for themselves or their partners, and are less likely to believe women missed out on an important experience by having a C-section.

    … “This study shows it’s generation, not gender, that affects obstetricians’ views about procedures like C-sections,” … “this could present a challenge to efforts to decrease C-section rates in both U.S. and Canada.” As well … up to a third of obstetricians were not evidence-based in their views. This creates concern about informed decision-making, especially for women who are uncertain about procedures that might be used in birth.

    … 75 per cent [of obstetricians] thought home birth was more dangerous than hospital birth … even though home birth by regulated midwives has been shown to be safe in Canada.

    … “These three studies taken together show us that educational leaders and provincial policy-makers need to seriously examine the educational models and experiences that appear to teach the non-evidence-based view that vaginal childbirth is primarily a dangerous activity,” … ” … we need more midwives … while obstetricians in training will need to have more experience with normal birth, and in the future, restrict their role to that of consultants to midwives … In this way they can maximize the appropriateness of their surgical training.

    “This means rethinking the design of the entire Canadian maternity care system. Finally, if women are to be empowered with the information that they need to dialogue with their providers, new forms of accurate information transfer will need to be developed.”

    The birth junkies: Why women can become addicted to giving birth

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    The offer of a Caesarean section might seem heaven sent to any pregnant woman approaching delivery day with rising anxiety.

    When I discovered I was expecting my first baby, I’d have paid good money for a general anaesthetic to spare me the agony of childbirth with which I was all-too-familiar, thanks to soap operas and the horror stories other mothers are strangely desperate to share.

    I thought, as many women do, that the act of giving birth was a nightmare from which I needed saving — with drugs, surgery, medical intervention and, frankly, anything that might numb me to what was certain to be the most terrifying experience of my life.

    But by the time I was expecting my third (and final) baby, I had discovered a secret that the majority of women giving birth in the UK today never have the chance to discover for themselves: I had found out that childbirth could be the ultimate natural high, an experience so powerful and yet fulfilling that it can be nothing short of addictive.

    … ‘It was the most amazing experience of my life and I was high on it for months. That’s the part I want to do again and again,’ says one. Another says she loved giving birth so much, she’s considering a career in surrogacy. ‘It just felt so good (OK, it did hurt a little) but it’s hard to explain. I would definitely be a surrogate.’

    So when my obstetrician broke the news that baby number three would have to be delivered by C‑section, because the placenta was blocking the way for a natural birth, I burst into tears of utter disappointment.

    … I believe women who have had a positive birth experience and enjoyed an unadulterated dose of Mother Nature’s magic recipe should be shouting it from the rooftops. For in the majority of cases there is no need for birth to be the trauma we believe it to be — and that it therefore becomes.

    Of course, women who need medical intervention should have the best that can be provided; intervention saves lives. But some 75-80 per cent of births should go as smoothly as nature intended.

    The problem is that just a fraction of the number of women who don’t have a medical requirement for intervention are getting to the finish line without being subjected to meddling from midwives and doctors. Meddling that supersedes a woman’s own desires and instincts, and impairs her body’s ability to cope as it is designed to do.

    Under normal conditions, a woman is best left to be her own director, behaving in an instinctive and uninhibited way. Only when that is allowed to happen will she get the rush of Mother Nature’s feel-good cocktail: a hormone boost designed specifically to flood her body with exactly what it needs — not just to get her through every stage of labour, but to ensure that she won’t find the process so physically and mentally difficult that she never does it again.

    … If you mention oxytocin to most women who have given birth in a UK hospital, they will think of it as a drug, administered by drip, to speed along her contractions.

    In fact, in its natural form, it is the ‘love hormone’ — the same one that floods our brains during orgasm, and is also boosted by cuddling, breastfeeding and other positive, loving experiences.

    We produce it naturally in massive quantities during labour and birth, and its effects cannot be artificially replicated.

    This wonderful stuff reduces fear, increases trust and promotes a sense of connectedness with those around you. There is nothing like it for making a woman feel that everything is in her control and that everyone is on her side.

    It is also what gives a new mother that ‘loved-up’ feeling after the birth, helping any memories of pain or anxiety to fade almost immediately.

    It is a primal reaction that when our adrenaline levels rise, labour halts, because our brain is telling our body that it’s not safe to proceed. By counteracting fear, oxytocin keeps adrenaline levels in check, which ensures that labour progresses steadily.

    What’s more, as a pheromone, oxytocin is contagious, transmitted through the air and picked up by the nose. Studies have shown that when a father attends the birth of his child, his oxytocin levels rise as well, making him part of the love-in and — importantly — more ready to connect with his child.

    … After a totally natural birth, it is often very difficult to remember the specifics of it, and that’s the way it should be.

    It’s also why a lot of women will often say that … the earlier part of their labour was more difficult than the later parts, when they were much more ‘out of it’ and more flooded with endorphins.

    And it’s the reason why inductions are generally harder to cope with, because they artificially accelerate the labour process, hitting the mother with back-to-back contractions, before the body has had time to produce sufficient quantities of hormones and natural pain relief.

    I can’t help but think that the shrieking and wailing that make TV programmes like One Born Every Minute such compulsive viewing are merely an indication that something — be it fear or unnecessary intervention — has prevented the woman’s instinct from taking over and allowing the release of the endorphins she needs …

    Is ‘tribal’ obstetric culture endangering mothers and babies?

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    How we are born, who supports mothers and the quality of the care provided during birth are vital to good public health and personal well being. But all is not well in modern birthing in spite of the advances of modern medicine.

    In the United Kingdom, health policies aim to keep childbirth normal or natural and dynamic …

    In Australia, a national Review of Maternity Services (MSR) in 2009-10 generated heated public debate. It spawned critiques of the medical control of birth and the self-interest of privately practising obstetricians.

    Its outcomes remain hotly contested, particularly over women’s access midwives and home birthing.

    Much health policy now promotes strategies to improve quality and safety as being critical to good patient-centred care.

    But the Maternity Services Review overlooked some problems in the culture of obstetrics.

    … It is their philosophy and practices that have shaped the system of modern hospitalized childbirth care.

    The obstetric profession … is accountable for making sure neither practitioners nor the systems of care cause harm to women and their babies.

    … several public inquiries … showed that harm was not just being caused but was covered up.

    … painful details of serious harm done by doctors to women in maternity units, including unnecessary hysterectomies, assault, and even genital mutilation.

    … Most worrying were the common patterns of denial: stories of damage to women were mostly not reported by colleagues out of professional or “tribal” loyalty.

    Until the cases became public, they were seen just as “mistakes” or medical “misdemeanours”, or as caused by individual “bad apples” in the profession.

    Even many anaesthetists, pathologists and midwives colluded in keeping silent about women’s tragedies.

    … Individual, institutional and systemic problems are interwoven. Viewing childbirth care as a field full of power though allows us also to see how it can be reformed.

    Encouragingly, the public inquiries point to changing times: women as health care consumers used the press to agitate for these inquiries and have lobbied for wider reform.

    Midwives have also been speaking up about problems in the system.

    Some obstetricians, too, are committed to the reform of professional practice …

    But we need to go even further.

    Obstetric undergraduate and postgraduate education also needs reform. More critical reflection on the profession’s gendered and racialized power is necessary, and greater awareness of public health and social issues.

    Professional bodies … should also be expected … to develop mechanisms for critical self-examination of attitudes toward women.

    Similarly, doctors need to engage seriously with midwives’ concerns about policies pushing “inter-professional collaboration”.

    Too often, these seem to be on medical terms and experienced as continued domination rather than an equal, respectful relationship.

    High quality obstetric care remains essential for women with complex medical problems … It should be effectively supported by public funds but obstetricians are accountable for how they use them.

    … “Birth is not an illness”. Quality and safety in maternity care should not be equated with providing obstetric care.

    Women deserve real choice and autonomy in childbirth. Improving care requires more than good hospital incident-reporting systems and support for staff to report medical errors. These are valuable but not enough.

    Cultural change in maternity care institutions and health professions, and in the broader society’s views of childbirth care, is essential if we are to keep mothers and babies safe from harm.

    C-section not best option for breech birth

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    Physicians should no longer automatically opt to perform a cesarean section in the case of a breech birth, according to new guidelines by the Society of Obstetricians and Gynecologists of Canada.

    Released yesterday, the guidelines are a response to new evidence that shows many women are safely able to vaginally deliver babies who enter the birth canal with the buttocks or feet first …

    … Since 2000, C-sections have been the preferred method of delivery in breech births. Studies suggested that breached births were associated with an increased rate of complication when performed vaginally.

    As a result, many medical schools have stopped training their physicians in breech vaginal delivery.

    The problem now, according to Dr. Lalonde, is that there is a serious shortage of doctors to teach and perform these deliveries.

    With the release of the new guidelines, the SOGC will launch a nationwide training program to ensure that doctors will be adequately prepared to offer vaginal breech births .

    The new approach was prompted by a reassessment of earlier trials. It now appears that there is no difference in complication rates between vaginal and cesarean section deliveries in the case of breech births.

    … Ms. Guy started the group after the birth of her second child in the fall of 2006. Although she had given birth to her first child at home with a midwife, Ms. Guy delivered her daughter in the hospital because of the baby’s breech position.

    “I was cornered into an unneeded and unwanted C-section because the obstetrician that I had didn’t have the experience to catch her,” said Ms. Guy.

    The aim of the coalition is to ensure that women know what their options are when it comes to breech birth. Ms. Guy believes that many women don’t realize that vaginal breech births are even possible.

    … The new decision to offer vaginal breech birth aligns with the SOGC promotion of normal childbirth – spontaneous labour, followed by a delivery that is not assisted by forceps, vacuum or cesarean section. In December of 2008, the society release a policy statement that included its recommendation for a development of national practice guidelines on normal childbirth.

    “The safest way to deliver has always been the natural way,” …

    … The SOGC believes that if a woman is well-prepared during pregnancy, she has the innate ability to deliver vaginally …

    In NSW, we have the Towards Normal Birth Policy which also promotes normal birth, waterbirth, vaginal breech birth, vaginal twin birth and VBACs. The policy directive recommends one-to-one midwifery care for all women having their first baby, twins, breech or VBAC. It’s a very encouraging policy.

    QLD: Mums-to-be pushed into caesareans with private hospitals leading the way

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    SOME of the state’s biggest private hospitals are performing caesareans on more than half the women giving birth …

    The caesarean rates among the highest in the country were uncovered in hospital birth statistics from 2007-2010 obtained by The Sunday Mail under Right to Information laws.

    Queensland’s “caesars palace” was the North West Brisbane Private Hospital, which performed the surgery on 56.8 per cent of women giving birth. Toowoomba’s St Vincent’s Hospital and The Wesley Hospital in Brisbane rounded out the Top 3, with rates of 54.8 per cent and 51.8 per cent respectively.

    The latest figures … will reignite the turf war between midwives, who espouse natural birth, and obstetricians who defend surgical intervention.

    Caesarean births are recommended as safer options for women having large babies, twins or breech births, as well as older mums and women who have had previous caesareans.

    Latest recommendations from Canada suggest that vaginal birth is safest for most breech babies. NSW Health promotes vaginal birth for twins and of course we know that vaginal birth after a caesarean is safer than elective repeat caesarean provided that the birth takes place in a facility that has resources available to perform an emergency caesarean if needed. And “big” babies? This cannot be known with any accuracy ahead of time and the current recommendation is for a planned vaginal birth.

    But some critics say growing numbers of medical professionals are convincing mothers to undergo caesareans just to streamline private maternity ward schedules and maximise revenue.

    Across the state the figures add weight to the theory, with caesareans accounting for 27.6 per cent of births in public hospitals and a huge 48.3 per cent in private hospitals.

    We know that this difference is not comprised of women requesting caesareans: only 2-3% women actually request a caesarean. Most are told they “need” a caesarean because their baby is “big” (3.3Kg), “late” at 39 weeks and 6 days, a previous caesarean, breech, twins, IVF, mum is “overweight”, mildly elevated blood pressure (130/80) and so on. I have heard all of these and more, as “valid” reasons for caesarean.

    Several new mothers approached by The Sunday Mail last week said they had been pushed into having caesareans by private hospital obstetricians after initially wanting to give birth naturally.

    One Coolum mum, 45, said her obstetrician told her she had “no choice” because the baby would “not fit through my birthing canal”.

    This can not be known ahead of time. The only way to find out is to labour and see how it goes. Dedicated, exclusive, one-to-one midwifery care in labour from a midwife who is know to the woman by name and trusted by the woman, is the most important factor in ensuring a normal birth.

    … “I just wanted a natural birth, to me that was important …

    I think personal responsibility also plays a part here. If a woman genuinely wants a natural birth, she needs to consider which care provider will maximise her chances of achieving this. Consumers of any service are wise to research options thoroughly before they go ahead with them. We do more research about buying a car, house or holiday than we do when choosing our care providers. Having chosen an ill-suited care provider, it is never too late to change.

    Another mum … desperate to avoid a caesarean, said her obstetrician also tried to book an induction because she had passed her due date in the Christmas-New Year period.

    “The obstetrician said we can book you in for an induction because we just don’t like calling people in on public holidays,” …

    But doctors point the finger at today’s “too posh to push” mothers, who they say demand caesars, as well as older mothers who have an added risk with vaginal births.

    Australian College of Midwives spokeswoman Professor Jenny Gamble said the health system was driven by profit.

    “It’s all about less night disturbance and more throughput; it all comes down to money,” she said. “It’s a fee-for-service model the more women obstetricians see, the more they earn.”

    Australian Medical Association Queensland president Dr Gino Pecoraro rejected as “urban myth” claims that obstetricians earned more for caesarean births.

    Private Hospitals Association Queensland said birthing decisions were not made by the hospital.

    This is true: hospitals do not make any decisions about birth: those decisions are made by the doctor and patient. As we have read in this article, many of the decisions are “guided” by the doctor. The other factor in these escalating caesarean rates is litigation. When caesarean rates increase and doctors are reluctant to attend VBACs, the caesarean rate will automatically increase.

    Not all doctors have high caesarean rates and some are very supportive of normal birth BUT … if a woman genuinely wants a normal birth, the best advice is to go a normal birth specialist.

    Mom-to-be says her hopes were destroyed by midwife

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    A … mother says things went tragically wrong when she used a midwife …

    … after her baby died, she was surprised to learn, there are different kinds of midwives …

    … Muhsin lost her daughter Alia before she even gave birth …

    … when she was 7 months pregnant, she felt like her OB/GYN office was a bit impersonal, so she did some research online …

    “I walk in this place, very serene, very organized. They have a wall full of babies’ pictures,” …

    Muhsin says the midwife who handled her care was also the director … [the midwife's] resume on her website seemed impressive.

    “She sold me a very good story, and I believed her,” said Muhsin.

    … her original obstetrician had diagnosed her with gestational diabetes. But Muhsin says [the midwife] convinced her that she didn’t really have the condition, which can jeopardize the life of a baby if it’s not properly treated.

    Muhsin and her husband got worried when she went nearly 4 weeks past her due date. Muhsin says the midwife kept reassuring her that everything was fine – but it wasn’t.

    “I just feel really sick and I told her, I don’t feel contractions anymore, nothing. She told me, it’s okay, you stay home,” …

    … “She said, okay, now you have to go to the hospital, because I don’t know what’s going on. We went in; they asked my husband, what is her due date? And they start running.”
    Hospital records indicate both mother and baby had a severe infection …

    “The baby had no heartbeat,” …

    … Direct Entry [Midwives] … are not required to have any formal training – in fact they can be self-taught.

    “They’re operating on their own without any oversight by the legislature, without any oversight … ”

    … the baby could have been saved if the midwife had transferred Muhsin’s care to a doctor before she went nearly 4 weeks past her due date.

    … “Gestational diabetes can be very risky to the baby,” …

    … “There’s a great increased risk from 39 weeks onward of in utero fetal distress, and even fetal demise,” …

    … [The midwife] denies that she waited nearly 4 weeks after Muhsin’s due date to advise her to go to the hospital. She also says that she’s still working as a midwife …

    “We want to be licensed because we want to make sure there’s a standard of care. That consumers are protected,” said Kate Mazzara.

    Kate Mazzara is a Certified Professional Midwife … she’s trying to get Lansing to pass a law to license midwives … a licensing board would then be able to hear complaints, and take action against midwives if problems arise.

    “I want to make sure that these moms and babies are birthing in a safe way, and the midwifery model of care has been shown to be an extremely safe option for families, but there should be that safety mechanism to which midwives can be held accountable,” …

    … the sad stories are rare … home births are a beautiful, natural experience … the number of home births has jumped 20% in recent years …

    Part of this article deals with the fact that in the US, there are different types of midwives, from certified nurse midwives who have degrees, work collaboratively with obstetricians, and have visiting rights, through to certified professional midwives and finally direct entry midwives. In Australia, we have registered midwives who are all accountable to the same high standard of care. As well as registered midwives, we also have eligible midwives who have satisfied an additional registration standard that entitles them to access a medicare provider number, and in the future, visiting rights. The next article deals with another aspect: that of choosing a midwife:

    How to Choose a Good Home Birth Midwife

    If you’re looking into home birth, probably the most important thing is finding a good midwife. Your midwife will be the one who cares for you, watches over you, and makes any decisions if something unexpected or difficult happens in your pregnancy. It is imperative to get a midwife who is well-trained and experienced and whom you trust and feel comfortable with.

    How do you know if you’ve found a good midwife?

    Feel free to ask anything else that makes you feel comfortable. In my experience, midwives are usually very cautious and ready to refer patients to the hospital or an OB at the first sign that something isn’t right. The should be very conscious of the limits of their training, so that if any situation crops up that they feel uncomfortable about handling, they are prepared to rule you out as a home birth candidate. This doesn’t happen too often, but it’s very important to know that if you are one of the “riskier” cases, your midwife will tell you so and refer you. Any midwife who says that she never transfers or refers women because “all women can do this!” should be avoided!

    Go with your instincts, too. If you feel comfortable with the midwife and she’s answered your questions sufficiently, then choose her. If not, keep looking …

    Choosing The Best Midwife and Why is choosing a care provider one of the most important pregnancy decisions you will make? are also helpful posts. Ultimately, registered health practitioners are responsible for practicing their profession safely. But as a consumer of a service, it is up to you to make sure that the person you have engaged for your care, is legally and professionally able to care for you (ie, registered). Don’t be afraid to check the AHPRA register of practitioners if you would like to check the registration status of your health practitioner.

    Doctors admit C-section error in tragic baby’s botched birth

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    TWO consultants have admitted to the parents of a baby deprived of oxygen at birth they should have performed a caesarean section earlier.

    Baby Senan Michael Christopher Dodd was born at Mount Carmel Hospital, Dublin, on March 28, 2008.

    There was a delay in performing the emergency birth procedure and the baby boy suffered severe brain damage due to oxygen deprivation …

    He died … on March 30, 2008.

    Two consultants obstetricians … acknowledged … the caesarean section should have been performed earlier.

    Dr Rafferty said he contributed to the delay in delivering the baby and expressed his “profound apologies” to the baby’s parents …

    [The] Midwife … told the court she called Dr Rafferty to review Roberta … due to lack of progress of labour, following an hour of active pushing.

    The doctor said he gave the parents the option of a caesarean section or of an epidural with syntocinon …

    Syntocinon and an epidural were administered.

    But the doctor failed to look back at the trace of the foetal heartbeat, which indicated a slow heart rate at 2.45pm and another slow rate after pushing began.

    … He told the inquest he should have, “been more direct and said a C-section was the way to go”.

    He agreed with counsel for the family, Bruce Antoniotti, that he did not tell the Dodds there was foetal distress because he failed to perceive it, as he failed to look back far enough on the trace.

    The baby’s heart rate was monitored intermittently …

    This is the standard of care for women in normal labour with a healthy pregnancy and baby.

    Dr Valerie Donnelly, who took over from Dr Rafferty, reviewed Mrs Dodd around 6.20pm after a prolonged period of slow foetal heart rate.

    Dr Donnelly proceeded as planned and recommenced the syntocinon although it had been turned off by the midwife, who was preparing for a C-section.

    “I regret I did not deliver the baby by C-section at that point. I believe my delay in making the decision to deliver him by caesarean section has contributed to his death,” …

    Medical Malpractice Case Nets $58 Million Verdict

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    Three years after the same case resulted in a hung jury, a second Waterbury jury returned a $58 million verdict against a local gynecologist …

    Trial lawyers … convinced the jury that the doctor had breached the standard of care by not starting a caesarian section delivery in time.

    … the mother was in her 39th week of pregnancy. According to the defense, the standard of care was to not deliver a baby before 40 weeks of gestation …

    … the case was the highest medical malpractice verdict in Connecticut history.

    … “It was a complete runaway verdict, unsupported by the evidence. It’s not only uncollectable; it’s unsupportable.”

    … The couple used in vitro fertilization to have their first and only child … When the mother visited the doctor for her checkup … her level of amniotic fluid was at half the normal level. “Our expert said that is an indication there is something wrong with the baby, and it has to be delivered that day, by caesarian section,” … Delivery, however, was delayed.

    … “Our expert said that with that kind of drop in the fluid, you have to deliver this baby.”

    Two days later the mother went into labor. By the time they got her down to the operating room, the baby appeared to be stuck in breach birth …

    For the next three or four minutes, they struggled to get the baby out. When he was born, his only sign of life was a heartbeat. … They resuscitated him, but he developed cerebral palsy,” …

    The child needs extensive home care …

    Why women shouldn’t fear home birth

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    My second son was born at our house, in the middle of our living room, just under three hours after my labor began in the darkness of dawn. I would like to speak to the most commonly cited reasons not to have a home birth to try to illustrate why we chose and advocate home birth for women eligible for and interested in this experience.

    1) Birth needs a hospital

    For all of human history, save the last 200 years of the organized medical establishment, birth was managed by women, for women in privacy and comfort, giving them a safe, dark, quiet place to labor, providing fluids and rest over the days that labor usually takes (that’s right, ladies: days of on-and-off labor is not unusual), and attending to the needs of mother and baby throughout the exciting, powerful, and earth-shattering emotions and sensations …

    2) Interventions may be necessary

    The administration of uterus-contracting drugs like Pitocin, … [epidural], extraction of the fetus by vacuuming it out of your body, … episiotomy …:

    … The first intervention most often given, that of Pitocin, brings on contractions more powerful and spaced more closely together than nature intended … it’s no wonder Pitocin very often leads to epidurals.

    One intervention often snowballs into another, and this is part of what has led to the astounding rate of unnecessary C-sections in this country.

    3) What about the pain? Birth is intense; squeezing a baby out of your body is a challenge, no matter what your “”pain tolerance.”" However, our culture medicates routinely for a variety of “”normal”" emotional experiences (encouraging medication for people in the early stages of grief comes to mind), and medicating for the emotions of birth is no exception.

    The vocalizing and emotional experience that is commonly referred to as “”complaining,”" “”screaming,”" or “”suffering”" is a normal part of labor. Birth is not neat and fast and quiet: it’s gritty and primal. But it’s nothing to fear unless you also think we ought to fear women crying when they are sad or laughing when they are happy.

    There are numerous effective pain-management techniques to use in labor … showers and baths, massage … and the greatest power of all: the power of my mind to force out the notion that pain with purpose – labor — is something to fear.

    4) What if something goes wrong?

    Midwives are qualified to manage a variety of medical complications, and any good midwife knows when transport to a hospital is necessary …

    … Our culture has instilled in us a fear of the natural experience of birth and a fear of our bodies. In countries where women are supported in their desire and ability for a natural birth … babies and mothers have the lowest mortality rates.

    Natural birth is not for hippies; it’s for anyone who wants to work hard at breaking down what they have been told is true about birth, pain, and the human body and spirit.

    Home birth is right for people who want to take natural birth to the next level …

    Insurance Must Cover Midwife Services

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    Vermont Gov. Peter Shumlin signed a bill last week to require health insurers to cover midwifery services and home births. Insurance companies … will be required to cover prenatal care by midwives and home births in Vermont. Medicaid and the Vermont Health Access Plan already cover midwifery services and home births.

    The Midwife Bill is intended to improve access to wide-ranging health services for women, reduce health care costs, and strengthen the quality of care that mothers receive during pregnancy and childbirth, according to a statement on the state website.

    … “Access to midwifery care and home birth should not be limited only to those who can afford those services out of pocket,” … “This law will ensure that all expectant mothers get the coverage and care they want and deserve.”

    … childbirth outside of hospitals is becoming more popular. “Homebirth is only expected to grow …

    … Vermont Medical Society president said … “We’re concerned it somehow creates the impression that homebirths are the safe alternative to hospital birth. It creates a false sense of security.” … more newborn babies died after home births than after hospital births. It said newborn mortality tripled in home births compared to hospital births. It also found that mothers giving birth at home had less risk of “lacerations, hemorrhage, and infections.”

    … “The medical lobby continues to have a monopoly over the maternity care in the United States and the Wax study is deeply flawed, as well very politically motivated to give mothers the idea that wanting a good birth experience is selfish and harmful to the baby, when it is actually the opposite.”

    In only 27 states may CPMs legally deliver babies, and in 23 states it is illegal for a CPM to deliver babies. Only in New Mexico, New York, New Jersey, and now Vermont are home births covered by insurance.

    It’s time to end the discrimination against midwifery care and homebirth. If we say we provide woman-centered care, and women want care from midwives and to birth at home, then we must provide these services to women. There is a great demand for women to have choice and control over their care, just as people generally wish to have choice and control over their lives.

    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.

    Midwives Deliver Change

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    Midwives are urging all political parties to support the development of birth centres in Ontario …

    “Birth centres provide a safe, supportive environment where women can access prenatal, labour, birth and post-partum care,” said Katrina Kilroy, RM, president of the AOM. “We believe they can improve maternal-newborn care while cutting health care costs.”

    Birth centres are well established in the US, UK, Australia and Quebec. Ontario midwives currently attend births in both home and hospital, but there is increasing demand from women and families for another out-of-hospital birth option. Birth centres help divert healthy women and newborns from hospital, which in turn lowers costly intervention rates such as c-sections. They provide for community-based care in a family-oriented environment.

    … There are over 500 Registered Midwives in Ontario, serving communities in 85 clinics across the province. Midwives have privileges at most Ontario hospitals. They have been provincially funded and regulated since 1994.

    A midwife is a registered health care professional who provides primary care to women with low-risk pregnancies. Midwives provide care throughout pregnancy, labour and birth and provide care to both mother and baby during the first six weeks following the birth. The Association of Ontario Midwives is the professional organization representing midwives and the profession of midwifery in Ontario …