Childbirth intervention rates vary by up to 20%

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RATES OF Caesarean and episiotomy can vary by up to 20 per cent in Irish hospitals …

… not only is there inconsistent data keeping in hospitals but there is “a real lack of standardisation across the maternity services, with policies and practices varying from unit to unit”.

On the data gathered on the numbers of births where labour comes on spontaneously, South Tipperary General Hospital scores highest with 68.4 per cent of all labours not induced. Mount Carmel, the State’s only private maternity hospital scored the lowest with just 44.6 per cent of labours occurring without induction.

While the midwifery-led units (MLUs) in Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital in Drogheda and in Cavan General Hospital both record a spontaneous labour rate of 100 per cent … these hospitals only admit women who have gone into labour spontaneously.

On rates of spontaneous vaginal birth, where ventouse, forceps or a surgical procedure such as Caesarean section is not used … mothers at Sligo General Hospital require the least intervention, with 68.7 per cent of all births being spontaneous, while mothers at South Tipperary Hospital receive the most intervention, with 52.3 per cent of all births assisted.

With a difference of more than 20 per cent in the rates of intervention … hospital policy might dictate that interventions be used so that labour progresses at a particular rate, but “the body doesn’t always comply”.

“When hospitals are under time pressure and bed pressure, they need to keep women moving through. There is a little bit of a conveyor belt system,” …

Regarding Caesarean births, the highest numbers were performed in Mount Carmel, at 38.7 per cent of all births, and Kilkenny General, at 35.6 per cent of all births. Meanwhile, at Sligo General, just 18.9 per cent of all babies were delivered by Caesarean.

… women can be up to twice as likely to undergo a Caesarean section depending on the hospital in which they give birth …

… Wexford General records the least number of episiotomies with just over 8 per cent of mums requiring it. The rate at the National Maternity Hospital, however, is more than three times that at 27.1 per cent.

… “These nationwide statistics highlight considerable variations in interventions practices, in particular, induction, Caesarean birth and episiotomy rates, where some maternity units have almost double the rates of others.”

… she hopes the guide gives those parents recommended a particular course of action by a hospital “the confidence and empowerment to ask for the full range of options”.

We have the same situation here with public and private hospitals: generally speaking, lower rates of intervention exist in public hospitals. The lowest rates of intervention occur in births with private midwives, and the highest rates of intervention occur in births with private obstetricians (on average). Some of this will be related to choice: a woman opting for a caesarean may have no choice but to go the private hospital/ private ob path, however we know that a very small percentage of women actually request caesarean. The vast majority of women – especially those expecting their first baby – will expect a natural birth. I would say to those women: choose a care provider and a birth place where the odds are in your favour of achieving a natural birth. There is no point in going to a hospital with a 45% caesarean rate and an 85% epidural rate if you want a normal, natural, drug-free birth. The same way we don’t do our grocery shopping at Myer.

Childbirth: More Labor Interventions, Same Outcomes

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Hospitals vary considerably in the frequency with which they induce labor and perform Caesarean sections. But a new study finds that these differences do not seem to affect how newborns fare in these facilities.

Dr. J. Christopher Glantz, a professor of obstetrics at the University of Rochester, reviewed records of almost 30,000 births … Some hospitals relied heavily on induced labor and Caesarean sections, while others performed the procedures much less often.

Dr. Glantz measured neonatal outcomes in three ways: whether a child was moved to an intensive care hospital, whether a child needed immediate assisted ventilation and whether a child received a low Apgar score.

He found no difference in outcomes for babies born in the hospitals with the highest rates of these procedures and those with the lowest. The result suggests that routine reliance on the procedures does little to improve outcomes …

The recipe for safe, empowering, minimal-intervention birthing is:
A woman who is positively motivated to have a natural birth
Who is well-prepared for pregnancy, labour, birth and parenthood
Who is supported by one midwife and one obstetrician right the way through her pregnancy, birth and postnatal experience
Care providers who collaborate, communicate, respect and trust one another, who work for the best interests of the woman and her baby

Probe into mass Caesarean birth

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Inquiries were ordered … into allegations that gynaecologists … had conducted several Caesarean operations without waiting for the actual delivery date, so that the doctors could proceed on leave.

… patients [alleged] that 21 Caesarean operations were conducted in a span of two days, on Wednesday and Thursday, so that four gynaecologists could proceed on leave from Friday to Sunday.

… The Director of Health Services … has initiated a probe into the issue …

Pioneering Collaborative Private Maternity Care: Continuity, woman-centered, personalised, safe.

Our brand new model of care – launched for the first time in Australia – has recently welcomed its third baby. So far, three families have benefited from a collaborative model of private maternity care that enables women to have care with a private midwife (with Medicare funding) and also develop a trusting and nurturing relationship with a Specialist Obstetrician who is available for the pregnancy, labour and birth. Our service has so far supported an empowered birth after caesarean, a waterbirth and a natural birth. All within a hospital setting, with all the support available that is occasionally needed.

We’ve received some really positive feedback:

“The collaborative model seemed unique to me. To have a private midwife and our own birth experience but in a hospital with an obstetrician who was known to us as back-up in case of unexpected complications, allowed us to feel totally comfortable and confident for our first baby.”
“I felt entirely supported and encouraged.”
“A highly personalised level of care was offered which makes you feel listened to and allows time for lots of questions.”
“I liked the fact that we got time to develop a relationship and feel comfortable together, allowing us a better birth experience. Postnatally, it was nice to have the same person continuing my care. It was highly personalised.”

Our model sees women booking with me for their care. Women who are interested in having collaborative maternity care meet with the obstetrician early in their pregnancy and again between 32 and 36 weeks. Women see the obstetrician more often if additional visits with him are needed. Otherwise, I am in frequent communication with him and we work together to provide safe, evidence-based, woman-centered care to our pregnant women. This allows women to build a sense of connection, trust and continuity.

We support natural birth, active birth, physiological birth positions, physiological third stage, water birth, VBAC, twin births, breech births … and so on. Women are really well prepared for natural birth with an emphasis on informed decision making and woman-centered care. Childbirth education is included, as well as access to a lending library of books and DVDs.

Birth care is provided initially at home and then we move to hospital where I provide full midwifery care. The birth is attended by myself and the Obstetrician if needed / desired. It’s an intimate, calm, peaceful experience and facilitates a gentle and safe birth.

After we have welcomed the baby and birthed the placenta, women generally stay in hospital for 4 – 24 hours before returning home. Of course, if there are any issues women are welcome to stay longer, but generally I find that women feel more comfortable in their own homes, in their own beds. I visit at home every day for a week and continue care for 6 weeks. Since women book into hospital as a private patient, they are almost assured a private room with an en-suite.

I’m really excited about this model of care because it meets the needs of women so perfectly:

  • Women having their first babies, maybe feeling unsure of what to expect
  • Women who previously experienced dis-continuous care from care providers who were unknown to them
  • Women who are planning a natural birth but perhaps with a more challenging pregnancy
  • Women who want a home birth / birth centre birth but with a known obstetrician available if needed
  • Women who really desire a sense of control over their birthing experience
  • This is a new way of working for both midwives and obstetricians and is a really supportive and nurturing way to practice. There is a huge potential for professional growth and learning. The most positive element, however, is the radiant smiles on the faces of the women who have birthed with us and the babies who have received a safe and gentle start to life.

    No Link Found Between Overall Wellbeing Of Newborns And More Interventions At Delivery

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    In low-risk pregnant women, high induction and first-cesarean delivery rates do not lead to improved outcomes for newborns …

    The finding that rates of intervention at delivery – whether high, low, or in the middle – had no bearing on the health of new babies brings into question the skyrocketing number of both inductions and cesarean deliveries …

    ” … interventions entail some risk for the mother, and there is no evidence in this study that they benefit the baby,” … ” … if you are getting the same outcome with high and low rates of intervention, I say ‘Do no harm’ and go with fewer interventions.”

    … larger studies are needed to better understand the relationship between intervention and outcome. In the meantime … it’s hard to justify high rates of interventions – especially elective – in low-risk pregnant women without any known benefits to newborns, given that these interventions pose maternal risks …

    Baby death shows need for collaborative care

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    The death of a baby during delivery demonstrates the need for collaborative arrangements between doctors and midwives …

    A coronor ruled this week that a baby girl who died of asphyxia … had not been “adequately monitored” during labour and could have potentially been saved if the midwife had referred the case to an obstetrician earlier on.

    … coroner John Hutton, made 21 recommendations, many of which involved models of collaborative care to ensure women and their babies are better protected from inadequate care.

    President of the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RANZCOG), Dr Rupert Sherwood said the inquest highlighted why the college has always insisted on collaborative arrangements between doctors and midwives.

    … “This highlights two critical aspects of good collaborative care between midwives and doctors.

    “Namely the importance of following established protocols such as fetal heart monitoring when indicated, and timely referral to another member of the team with training and expertise to intervene in a safe and timely manner’ …

    “Do it yourself” births prompt alarm

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Others look for such information online.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Mother and unborn baby die after hospital staff ignore husband’s pleas

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    A pregnant woman died and her baby was stillborn at a hospital criticised by the NHS watchdog for poor standards of care …

    An investigation has now been launched into the deaths of Sareena Ali, 27, and her first child after her family accused staff of negligence.

    The Harrods worker was induced … after being overdue at 40 weeks. Husband Usman Javed said she was in “unbearable pain” just afterwards and his pleas for help were ignored …

    She had suffered a ruptured womb that triggered cardiac arrest and major organ failure. Doctors had to carry out an emergency Caesarean on the ante-natal ward alongside frightened mothers-to-be.

    Her baby was delivered lifeless and five days later Mrs Ali died. The hospital has accepted liability, admitting she received “unacceptable” standards of care. Two midwives have been suspended pending inquiries.

    … Solicitor Sarah Harman, representing Mr Javed, said: “This double tragedy is the worst case I have been involved with. In the 21st century we should not have mothers and babies dying on hospital wards.”

    Hospital chief executive Averil Dongworth said Mrs Ali suffered “a very rare medical complication” but added: “The care provided in her early labour was of an unacceptable standard and liability will not be disputed.”

    External assessors are making a serious incident investigation.

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

    Baby dies after mum waits five hours for a room

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    THE Health Department is investigating whether the tragic death of a baby at a … hospital could have been averted.

    It is alleged the expectant mum … was forced to wait in an emergency department after her waters broke, only to be told five hours later when she finally got a room that her baby had died inside her …

    … She got to the emergency department … and doctors asked that she be put in a room and monitored, as is the practice with women who have gone into labour.

    However there were none available and she was told to wait in the emergency room while experiencing contractions.

    She remembers her baby was still kicking and seemingly fine.

    Five hours later when a room became available, an ultrasound was taken and it was discovered that the baby had died.

    Ms Otoreno had to be induced to give birth to her baby …

    A tragic outcome for this woman and baby. One-to-one midwifery care can avert situations such as these. It is unfortunate that there is such a shortage of midwives that it is not possible to staff labour rooms with one-to-one midwifery care, as is the gold standard of care, however women who choose a privately practicing midwife can be assured that they will have a midwife by their side.

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

    Maternity review

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    THE Swan Hill maternity ward has undergone a review to determine its future.

    The study … comes after a shortage of obstetric practitioners has left Swan Hill District Health’s maternity services in crisis.

    Several obstetric GPs have retired in the last few years, leaving the ward with only a handful of doctors with suitable training …

    “In a community like ours … it is essential that we have good obstetric services,” …

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

    Get men in the delivery room, say Bangladesh’s first midwives

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    One-in-500 women die in childbirth in Bangladesh – with cultural factors as much to blame as a lack of medical care.

    There’s hardly a man to be seen in the maternity ward of the Maternal and Child Health Training Institute in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh.

    Despite the lack of any law forbidding men to enter the delivery room, fathers are normally not present during the birth of their own child – an attitude that needs to change …

    “Men need to be involved in the labour process if we are to reduce maternal mortality,” says Mala Reberio, one of the 20 midwives being trained to international standards in Bangladesh, which is still heavily reliant on community skilled birth attendants, who lack the skill and the authority to perform more complicated deliveries. Currently, one in 500 women in Bangladesh dies during childbirth.

    “If [men] could see firsthand the complications of childbirth, they would be more likely to send their pregnant wives to proper medical facilities and less likely to insist on early childbirth after marriage,” … More than 75% of deliveries take place at home, and the average age of women having their first child is just 16 years …

    … Bangladesh is on target to … reducing maternal mortality … the maternal mortality ratio in Bangladesh has declined from 322 per 100,000 in 2001 to 194 in 2010 …

    The Bangladesh government aims to have 3,000 fully qualified midwives who can provide round-the-clock assistance in all 427 sub-districts by 2015 …

    The programme still faces a number of major obstacles, despite being well received by the general public. First, doctors who can earn large sums of money by delivering a baby through a caesarean-section may be unwilling to lose that income if midwives are available to do the surgery for free. Second, the potential fallout from introducing a new cadre of midwives or professionals into an already hierarchical sector could prove difficult.

    The government’s biggest challenge, though, remains getting women into the healthcare facilities and continuing to bring about behavioural changes in men and women …

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

    Birth of a great idea

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    LIKE most first-time mothers, Kyla Lake is eagerly awaiting the birth of her baby this month.

    Her midwife Teresa Walsh is just as excited because Kyla’s baby will be the first born in Ipswich under the new Medicare for midwives laws, part of the government’s health care reform package.

    A change in national laws on November 1 last year gave mothers the choice of a private midwife for their pregnancy and birth care in hospital and the ability to claim a Medicare rebate for the services.

    Ms Lake said having a midwife had helped quell any fears or concerns she had regarding her pregnancy and birth.

    “They give you tips and advice and talk to you regarding what will happen at hospital,” Ms Lake said. “It makes you feel more relaxed about the whole process.”

    The 24-year-old Walloon resident is due on March 20 and plans to give birth in Ipswich Hospital.

    … expectant mothers and midwives got to know each other during the pregnancy and birth, with the midwife available for advice and support for six weeks after the birth.

    … “My Midwives clients had 13 beautiful babies in February, which was more than we expected, so women really seem to like our service.

    … midwives worked in collaboration with obstetricians at the hospital and other health providers to make sure women got all the care and support they needed during pregnancy, birth and afterwards.

    Very exciting times for maternity in Australia! We are in the midst of rapid and very positive change.

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

    Obstetricians take big steps to avoid malpractice

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    Delivering babies can be a high-stakes undertaking for hospitals, with the threat of multi-million-dollar malpractice damages when serious mishaps occur. But a team of Manhattan obstetricians says it has beaten the odds—dramatically reducing errors and slashing their department’s medical malpractice payouts by more than 99%.

    “Any hospital could do it—it’s not about money, it’s about changing the culture to make it safer to deliver babies,” …

    The new measures reduced errors and helped ward off unwarranted suits by clearly documenting everything doctors did right in cases where a bad outcome was not their fault … these safety initiatives reduced so-called “sentinel events”—such as avoidable deaths and serious injuries—to zero in 2008-09, down from five in 2000.

    Consumer advocates are hailing the report as a breakthrough in patient safety and a better way to curb malpractice costs than tort reform. “People don’t get sued if they don’t get hurt,” …

    … the safety changes resulted in annual medical malpractice payouts dropping from an average of a $28 million from 2003 to 2006 to $2.6 million a year from 2007 to 2009. With no sentinel events reported in 2008 and 2009, those totals are expected to drop still further.

    Among the easier changes was doing away with the labor and delivery unit’s dry-erase whiteboard, which staff used to communicate patients’ progress …

    Instead, the team came up with a new electronic application to do the same job better, a record that can be accessed through any Internet browser. No paper charting is allowed, both for improved communication and with an eye to leaving a clear legal record in case of a poor medical outcome.

    Some of the staffing changes cost money. The unit hired a full-time patient safety nurse to educate staff on new protocols the doctors wanted and to conduct emergency drills, such as what to do when a mother started to hemorrhage …

    Reasoning that doctors tend to make mistakes when they are deprived of sleep, the department hired three physician assistants and a “laborist,” which is a new term for an obstetrician who works for a hospital full-time, instead of just having admitting privileges there. At Weill Cornell, the laborist works nights and weekends, reducing the time other obstetricians need to be “on call” in their off hours.

    Though many aspects of the plan were costly, the authors concluded that the savings in medical malpractice payments “dwarf the incremental cost of the patient safety program.”

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

    Midwives gaining in popularity

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    When Christy Gasstrom gave birth to her son five years ago, the first-time mom from Ilion received care from an obstetrician.

    But when a Utica doctor told her during her second pregnancy that she no longer was a candidate for natural birth because of her previous Caesarean section, she decided to go a different way.

    “I didn’t like that answer so I did some research and ended up moving over to the midwives at Bassett (Healthcare),” she said.

    A few months later, Gasstrom successfully delivered her daughter Logan …

    Midwives … are gaining popularity as more women embrace natural childbirth, local practitioners said.

    Officials at Mohawk Valley Women’s Health Associates in New Hartford and Bassett Healthcare in Cooperstown said the majority of their maternity patients now work with midwives at some stage of their pregnancy. And statewide, more new midwifery licenses were issued in 2010 than in any year since 2006, bringing the total number of licensed practitioners to 879.

    A state law that took effect in October also gave midwives more freedom to practice without direct doctor supervision …

    Gasstrom, who had a midwife … at her delivery last year, said the experience was drastically different from the labor that led to her C-section. The midwife spent more time with her and was “more involved” than her first doctor had been …

    … Joann Roberts, one of four certified nurse midwives who work with Mohawk Valley Women’s Health Associates, said midwives bring a different perspective to childbirth than most obstetricians and have been shown to reduce Caesarean rates. Rome Memorial Hospital, where she performs deliveries, for example, had an 8 percent Caesarean rate in 2010 compared to the national average rate of 26.5 percent reported in 2007.

    “We always expect that our mother will be having a normal birth right from the beginning, unless an emergency comes up,” Roberts said, adding that patient education and patience with the labor process are key in her practice.

    Many midwives considered it a victory last summer when then-Gov. David Paterson signed the Midwifery Modernization Act, which allowed them to begin practicing without written agreements from doctors. But Roberts, who works with two physicians, said the professions complement each other and that she expects most midwives to continue working in partnership with them.

    … Dwynn Golden, one of the certified nurse midwives at Bassett Healthcare’s new birthing center in Cooperstown, said collaborative arrangements also give patients the widest choice of available options without changing providers.

    New patients at Bassett meet with a midwife during their initial visit and are given resources explaining the differences in training and experience between midwives and doctors. They then choose to work primarily with a midwife, alternate visits between a midwife and a doctor, or see a doctor exclusively.

    “With the popularity of natural childbirth, midwives are viewed as the ideal provider of prenatal care and attending the birth,” … (But) for some women who prefer inductions to be scheduled and desire an epidural throughout labor, they may not view the role of the midwife as essential to their experience.”

    Golden said facilities such as Bassett’s birthing center also offer some mothers more peace of mind because they have access to tools for facilitating natural birth, such as birthing balls and private Jacuzzi tubs, but know there is emergency medical equipment nearby should something go wrong.

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

    Induced Labor Linked to Raised Risks for First-Time Moms

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    I’d like for my readers to appreciate that there is a place for inductions for some women in some pregnancies. And in those pregnancies, an induction might be the best course of action for the mother or the baby – eg pre-eclempsia, gestational diabetes that is not well-controlled, a post-term pregnancy and many other reasons. Certainly, an induction because it’s Tuesday and it fits into the diary is not a good idea. There should be a clear clinical need for all inductions – they are interventions and there should be a valid reason to intervene in any pregnancy.

    If your midwife or obstetrician has advised that an induction will be the safest course of action, then this advice needs to be balanced against the information below (and any other information you might learn). If you are unsure, please talk to your midwife or obstetrician and ask them why they have recommended an induction. If you are still unsure, you may wish to seek a second opinion from another midwife or obstetrician.

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    The increasingly commonplace decision by pregnant women and their doctors to induce labor for convenience rather than for medical necessity entails some health risks to both mother and child …

    The new report, which highlights the negative impact of what is known as “elective induction” for first-time mothers, indicates that going that route increases the chances of a Cesarean delivery, while also boosting the mother’s risk for greater loss of blood and a longer post-delivery hospital stay.

    “The benefits of a procedure should always outweigh the risks,” … “If there aren’t any medical benefits to inducing labor, it is hard to justify doing it electively when we know it increases the risks for the mother and the baby.”

    … about one-third of those who elected to have labor induced had to undergo a Cesarean section compared with just one-fifth of those who were not induced.

    … In addition, babies born after induced labor appeared to face a higher risk for needing oxygen following delivery and special care in the neonatal intensive care unit.

    The study authors noted that women who had previously given birth might not suffer the same negative consequences … your body knows the drill and can do it again,” …

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

    Study Raises Questions About Childbirth Drug

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    Want to know more about home birth, hospital birth or Medicare-funded private midwifery care? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.

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    A study … is raising questions about a drug commonly used in childbirth.

    Pitocin is a synthetic form of oxytocin, which a mother’s body produces to start labor and cause contractions.

    A study … found a strong link between high amounts of the drug during labor and severe postpartum hemorrhage for the mother, which can be a terrifying and dangerous complication.

    … “… women who had prolonged infusions of pitocin [were] actually at increased risk of bleeding after delivery,” …

    … when women receive a lot of pitocin during labor, they can become desensitized, causing it to fail to work when it counts most, immediately after a baby is born.

    The drug is supposed to help clamp down the uterus and stop the bleeding.

    “We do feel it is a strong finding,” …

    Severe hemorrhage happens to just 1 percent of mothers, but it is the No. 1 cause of maternal death in childbirth worldwide.

    Pitocin is given to 60 to 70 percent of laboring mothers …

    “Anytime they can use less oxytocin, it’s beneficial,” …

    … while pitocin is necessary at times, there are ways mothers-to-be can reduce their chances of needing the drug during labor.

    # Avoid elective inductions when there is no medical reason
    # Labor at home until the labor pattern is well-established
    # Move around and stay upright during labor
    # Hold off on epidural until dilated to at least 4 centimeters
    # Consider a certified nurse midwife instead of an obstetrician if the pregnancy has no complications.

    Midwives … reported using pitocin in only 5 to 8 percent of births, instead of the 40 to 70 percent rates cited by other doctors and nurses in 6News’ research.

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

    Delivery Even a Bit Early May Mean Developmental Delays

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

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    Bucking the notion that being born a few weeks early has no discernible impact on babies, a new study indicates that “late preterm” infants face more developmental delays than their full-term peers and those delays may affect their school performance.

    … late preterm babies were 52 percent more likely than term infants to suffer severe delays and 43 percent more likely to experience milder limitations. In motor skills, the preterm toddlers faced 56 percent increased odds of severe delays and a 58 percent increased risk of milder ones.

    … 5 percent to 40 percent of U.S. births are now early elective deliveries, meaning that births are induced preterm without a valid medical reason …

    Noting that many of these at-risk infants receive little or no specialized developmental follow-up, Woythaler’s data included babies with at least 34 weeks’ gestation from wide economic and racial backgrounds who received complete assessments near the age of 2.

    The brain of a baby at 34 weeks’ gestation weighs 35 percent less than it would at term …

    Social factors and gender had the greatest impact on the children’s mental scores … with language spoken at home playing a key role … In contrast, gestational age was the most important contributor to physical delays.

    … Researchers have found such infants are at higher risk for respiratory problems, worse academic performance and school suspension down the road.

    “There’s a reason why normal gestation is 40 weeks,” …

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Mothers endorse birthing program

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

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    FOR Gemma Newman, having the same midwife care for her throughout her pregnancy made all the difference when it came time to give birth.

    The mother-of-two is one of 250 women who have used the Aboriginal Medical Service’s Murundhu dharaa birth program since it began operating 18 months ago.

    The midwife-led program incorporates antenatal, birth and postnatal care.

    … During her pregnancy, she was cared for by midwife Tracey Foster, who visited her at her home and at work.

    Mrs Foster was present when Mrs Newman went into labour, and stayed for Mahli’s delivery at Orange Base Hospital.

    … having the same midwife the whole way through her pregnancy had improved her experience this time round.

    … “I’ve found it a lot better this time, especially with the after care, if I’ve had any problems with breastfeeding and things like that I’ve been able to call her at any time,” …

    … The Orange Aboriginal Medical Service opened its new birthing centre on Palmer Street last Monday …

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Midwife encourages natural births

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

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    GOLD Coast Midwifery Practice … is all for natural births.

    When it comes to having a baby … a vaginal birth was the best-designed system.

    ”A vaginal birth has many inherent safety mechanisms that protect both mother and baby,” …

    However, elective cesareans are becoming more common on the Gold Coast …

    ”We live in a very technocratic society where people like to have as much control as possible,”

    … ”It … raises the question of a lack of continuity of care in the health system.

    ”Care is fragmented and many women aren’t able to form a bond with a care giver. Therefore the process of having a baby can be frightening and they opt for the easy option of having an elective cesarean.” …

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Electronic Fetal Heart Rate Monitoring Greatly Reduces Infant Mortality

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

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    … There have been a handful of small studies … that looked at the effectiveness of fetal heart rate monitors, but none of them were large enough to be conclusive.

    Chauhan and his colleagues … used a sample of 1,945,789 singleton infant birth and death records … Multivariable log-binomial regression models were fitted to estimate risk ratio to evaluate the association between electronic fetal heart rate monitoring (EFM) and mortality …

    … 89% of singleton pregnancies had EFM. EFM was associated with significantly lower infant mortality (adjusted RR 0.75; 95% CI 0.69, 0.81); this was mainly driven by the lower risk of early neonatal mortality (adjusted RR 0.50; 95% CI 0.44, 0.57) associated with EFM. In low-risk pregnancies, EFM was associated with decreased risk for low (< 4) 5 min Apgar scores (RR 0.54; 95% CI 0.49, 0.51), whereas in high risk pregnancies EFM was also associated with decreased risk of neonatal seizures (adjusted RR 0.65; 95% CI 0.46, 0.94).

    The study demonstrates that the use of EFM decreased early neonatal mortality by 53%.

    The authors have not pointed to the increased intervention that may have been used to prevent these adverse outcomes. EFM in itself does not save lives; EFM is merely the prompt that alerts health practitioners to take further action. This action is usually in the form of intervention to hasten birth. I was surprised that in this study, 89% women had EFM. Most pregnancies are considered to be low-risk and therefore not in need of EFM. The alternative – intermittent auscultation – was not defined. In NSW, the policy is to intermittently listen in for the baby’s heart beat every 15 minutes after a contraction, and to listen for a full minute. Under this policy, women are able to be upright and mobile for their labours and births and this has a positive impact on the woman’s experience of birth.

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Women push for midwives under bulk bill reform

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

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    MIDWIVES cannot register fast enough to meet growing demand from women for services after historic changes that allowed them for the first time to bulk bill using Medicare …

    About 14 midwives have been registered … since the changes took place in November, a spokeswoman for the college, Hannah Dahlen, said.

    … women were increasingly demanding the services and her own practice was already booked out until September, she said.

    In order to qualify for Medicare, midwives needed to work with a medical practitioner such as an obstetrician, or a GP who provided obstetric care …

    … Mrs Newman had found Mahli’s birth easier than that of her daughter Isabella, which she attributed to the different style of care provided by her midwives.

    “The way they got me to birth was really different; they weren’t forcing me to push and it was much more relaxed,” …

    I have calculated that there are at least 20 eligible midwives in the country. Collaborative arrangements are a pre-requisite for women to claim Medicare benefits, so it follows that not all of those midwives will be able to provide medicare-funded care, however demand for private midwifery care is certainly increasing. Enquiries about my own private midwifery service have doubled and women are booking-in for their care at a fast pace. Private midwifery care is certainly a very popular choice and now that Medicare funding has made is so much cheaper, women, babies and families can benefit. I have negotiated several options for collaborative arrangements – including a model of care that provides for continuity of private midwifery care with a known back-up obstetrician. This model is proving to be very popular. The first baby will soon be born under this wonderful model of care … watch this space!

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Wales delivers on home birth rates

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

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    Wales is leading the way in a rise in home births

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    “The home birth was lovely as births go.

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

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

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

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

    Not everyone agrees, however.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    “Anxiety happens because people are frightened of hospitals.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Value of bed rest for pregnant women questioned

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

    The value of bed rest has been disputed for many years. When I did my midwifery degree in 2000, We were taught that there was very little value, if anything, in bed rest. It only serves to increase levels of depression and increase the woman’s socialisation into the medical model of care via fear. It’s not helpful! Gentle activity is safe; nothing too vigorous, and nothing too stressful.

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    Margaret Simon spent the last four months of her pregnancy lying in bed on a doctor’s orders, hoping to prevent a miscarriage and a preterm birth. As a result, Simon lost her job, struggled to care for her two older children and grew so unfit that she got winded taking showers.

    “Everything that made me who I am, being a wife, mother and employee, all got yanked out from under me,” said Simon, 34, who had been the family bread-winner and described bed rest as the “darkest, most conflicting” time of her life.

    As many as 95 percent of obstetricians report having prescribed bed rest or restricted activity to women with complications that may increase the risk for preterm labor, such as high blood pressure, carrying multiples and vaginal bleeding …

    Yet experts say there’s little evidence that immobility leads to better outcomes for those women. And although bed rest is often assumed to be a safe intervention, it can be a physical, emotional and financial nightmare for expectant mothers …

    The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists states that “bed rest, hydration and pelvic rest does not appear to improve the rate of preterm birth and should not be routinely recommended.” … pregnant women should not be systematically prescribed bed rest “due to the adverse effects that bed rest could have on women and their families, and the increased cost for the healthcare system.”

    Most doctors are aware of the scant evidence. Yet they perpetuate the old-fashioned practice, mostly because they have no better options … [and] it’s the way things have always been done. A fear of liability and medical malpractice lawsuits plays a role too.

    “There’s no evidence-based way to keep someone from delivering prematurely,” …

    “The risks of placing a woman on bed rest outweigh the current evidence it improves outcomes,” …

    Bed rest isn’t the peaceful vacation one might fantasize about. Women on “modified” bed rest may need to rest for an hour, three times a day. Others stay horizontal 24/7, rising only to use the bathroom. They can’t ride in a car, have sex, walk up stairs, lift a laundry basket, cook dinner or stand in the shower, let alone take care of children or work. Some women take it so seriously they crawl to the bathroom.

    Proponents say bed rest can buy extra time for a pregnancy; the closer a baby is born to term, the better. Lying down, they say, can reduce women’s stress, increase blood flow to the uterus, diminish uterine activity and decrease pressure on the cervix.

    And then, some say bed rest is just common sense, based on the perception that contractions mean a baby is on the way. Sarah Jacobs, of Brooklyn, N.Y., said that whenever she was up for too long, her contractions increased.

    “It was really clear to me that lying down kept the baby inside,” said Jacobs, who was on bed rest for six months during her third pregnancy.

    But experts say that most preterm births occur in women without risk factors and that contractions are a poor predictor of preterm birth, as they don’t always produce the changes in the cervix that lead a baby to be born.

    “While women might experience worse contractions with activity or standing, it is important to differentiate contractions from labor,” … “Having (contractions) doesn’t always mean you are in labor.”

    … The longer women are on bed rest, the more severe their symptoms and the longer it takes them to recover … after you lie around for a while, you begin to ache and your muscles begin to atrophy — starting as soon as 48 hours — so it’s easy to injure the muscles in the postpartum,” …

    In addition to losing their conditioning, women on bed rest may experience bone loss and have trouble sleeping. Meanwhile, they tend to lose weight, and low maternal weight can affect the fetus and is associated with preterm birth.

    “Doctors don’t realize the dangers,” …

    Perhaps the toughest part of bed rest is psychological. The abrupt and sometimes catastrophic disruption of their life, coupled with the stress that comes with a “high-risk” pregnancy, can leave women feeling isolated, helpless and unusually dependent. It often strains the marriage and is hard on other children in the family. Like astronauts in space, women on bed rest may feel estranged from their familiar routines and may experience sensory deprivation and depression …

    … Ultimately, Simon’s 9-pound, 14-ounce baby did not come prematurely; she had to be induced at 39 weeks. As awful as bed rest was, she would do it again “because he’s here,” she said. “And he’s healthy.”

    Don’t you love the language? She “had” to be induced at 39 weeks. What was the indication? Pregnancy? It was Monday? 39 weeks is not a reason to induce a baby!!

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Homing in on the Dutch birth debate

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    When expectant mothers go beyond their expected date of delivery…

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

    When expectant mothers go beyond their expected date of delivery… the world ends. Well, I think that’s what the author of this article wants us to believe. This is a seriously bad article that I had to share. Everything about it – the accuracy of the information, the language and the style – are cringe-worthy. If your baby hasn’t arrived “on time”, please don’t read this article. Skip to the next one.

    Link

    You have probably heard of a lady who has gone beyond their expected date of delivery (EDD). This is known as post term pregnancy. “Post-term pregnancy is defined as a pregnancy that extends to 42 weeks and beyond,” …

    Actually, no. Post-term pregnancy is one that continues past 42 weeks. A pregnancy is post-dates after 40 weeks, but it is not post-term until after 42 weeks. A baby can be post-mature at any time, but generally a post-mature baby is born after 42 weeks. Not always though – many post-42 week babies show no signs of post-maturity.

    Dr Mike Kagawa, an Obstetrician and Gynaecologist … explains that a number of reasons could be behind this. But first it is important to have this at the back of one’s mind. “When we tell expectant mums when the baby will come, it is an estimate,” he says.

    Thank goodness for this piece of truth.

    The commonest cause thus far is when the dates are wrong …

    Another cause of this variation is technology, more so the ultrasound. “The results depend on the individual, the machine used and the timing. When a scan is done too early or too late, it may not be accurate,” …

    The earliest scan, and preferably one from the first trimester, should be used if ultrasound is used for pregnancy dating. If the woman is sure of her last period date, has regular periods, has had at least three periods since ceasing breastfeeding and was not on the pill for at least 3 months prior to becoming pregnant, a dating ultrasound may not be necessary.

    But as fate would have it, some people genuinely go beyond their due date.

    Actually, as fate would have it, a normal pregnancy lasts somewhere between 37 and 42 weeks. It’s perfectly “normal” to go beyond 40 weeks.

    “There are two categories of these,” he explains, “The first group do not start labour until induced.” This he says, can not easily be explained but once induced, the labour proceeds normally.

    Ah, so those women would simply stay pregnant forever if they were not induced? I don;t know any woman who has been pregnant for ever. Do you? I know of plenty of care providers who have not been patient.

    In the second group are those that have medical problems … sometimes the baby may delay because they have congenital they are born with anomalies, health complications especially those involving the brain. An example, he says, is a condition medically termed anencephaly, where the brain lacks its outer covering (or skull). “The pregnancy can even be overdue by two months.”

    And we know this because we regularly have women gestating to 48 weeks! The medical conditions mentioned are very rare.

    In Dr Caughey’s article, other factors like the baby being male, genetics, previous post-term pregnancy and the fact that one is giving birth for the first time (primiparity) also lead to post-term pregnancy. “All that said, we do not want babies going beyond their due-date,” … as the baby grows, so does the placenta because it is the route by which the baby gets nutrients. At 40 weeks, this growth is no longer proportional. The baby keeps growing, but the placenta does not and yet the baby needs even more nutrients. Inadequacy of the placenta puts the baby at risk of starvation. For this reason, doctors give it up to 42 weeks, if the dates were accurate, then induce labour.

    Ok, so this paragraph is kind of ok. There are tests that women can have to determine the condition of the placenta and to ensure that the baby is ok for now. Unfortunately these tests are limited, as with all testing, and there is a margin of error. Also, they only tell us how the baby and placenta re right now, not necessarily how they will be next week or even next month. That said, some women will opt for testing and monitoring and if all’s well, they’ll continue without an induction.

    In cases of post-term pregnancy, the delivery is likely to be difficult. “The bones of the baby are harder and it is difficult to manoeuver through the birth canal,” Dr. Kagawa says. These babies may also not be as healthy or robust as those born on time and are kept in the neonatal health care unit for monitoring for some time.

    Ouch! The scare tactics. The other approach would be to suggest that until the baby is in a good position for birthing, labour will not start. This is a protective mechanism. If we go inducing the labour with the baby in a non-optimal position, the labour is more likely to be difficult and tor result in a caesarean. An alternate approach would be to encourage the baby to adopt an anterior position and then await spontaneous labour.

    The article does not mention the increased chance of having meconium in the waters of post-dates and post-term babies. This is more likely after 40 weeks than before 40 weeks. It is not a problem in itself, but it can become a problem if the baby should become distressed in labour and gasp. It’s recommended that women who have meconium staining have continuous monitoring to keep a closer eye on the baby and any distress that might be occurring. The use of telemetry will ensure that mobility and access to the bath and shower are not restricted.

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Home births: A womb of my own

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    After the first caesarean, a second one is much more likely

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

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    TRACY HART had intended to have her first child … naturally. But when Ariane failed to move into the normal birth position, Mrs Hart was told that a caesarean was the safest option.

    Second time around, Mrs Hart, 35, was eager to try again for a natural birth, but at 41 weeks and two days into her pregnancy, she still had not gone into labour. A caesarean was ordered – because doctors thought an induction might have been too hard on her scarred uterus – and four days ago son, Saxon was born …

    … Mrs Hart said, ”I was mortified and cried, because I had mentally prepared myself for a natural birth. A lot of women who don’t have any problems giving birth don’t realise some women just don’t have a choice.”

    Unfortunately Mrs Hart didn’t know that all women have a choice about how their baby enters the world. Some choices are safer than others; some are safer for the mother while others are safer for the baby; but whatever way you look at it, all women have a choice.

    First-time mothers with no obvious health problems, and subsequent births like Mrs Hart’s where the first was by caesarean, are overwhelmingly the biggest contributors to the NSW epidemic of caesarean births, state data shows for the first time.

    Twins, and babies in the breech or other difficult positions in the uterus, account for a much smaller proportion of the one in three babies now born by caesarean section …

    During that time, the overall caesarean rate increased from 19 to 30 per cent of all births. But subsequent caesareans increased much faster, at an average 5.3 per cent a year during the study period.

    Among first-time mothers, caesareans grew fastest – on average 6.8 per cent a year – among those who did not go into labour or whose labour was induced, suggesting a big rise in planned procedures. Among first births where the woman went into labour and later delivered surgically, the increase was only 3.5 per cent a year.

    … the new data provided the first comprehensive state-wide picture of factors behind the surge in caesareans, which NSW Health has pledged to bring back to 20 per cent of all births by 2050. It suggested that concentrating on promoting normal birth among first-time mothers would have the biggest impact on reducing the overall rate …

    I have always known that promoting normal birth – via private midwifery care – to all first time Mums, all women who have had a previous caesarean, and all women who have had a previously traumatic birth – would dramatically lower the cesarean rate.

    The research … showed it was highly unlikely the increase in caesareans could be legitimately attributed to complications such as the older age and the increase in overweight mothers … because most of the rise had occurred in women with apparently few medical risks …

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Do IVF Pregnancies Raise Death Risk for Mothers?

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    Maternal deaths resulting from in vitro fertilization (IVF) are relatively rare, but they do occur …

    … In the new report, Susan Bewley, an obstetrician at Kings College in London, and colleagues cite a study in the Netherlands that shows that the rate of pregnant women dying during IVF pregnancies is higher than during pregnancies in the general population. Specifically, there were 42 deaths per 100,000 IVF pregnancies, compared with six deaths seen among 100,000 pregnancies in the general population.

    Ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome can occur as a result of fertility drugs used to stimulate the development of eggs in a woman’s ovaries. If the ovaries are overstimulated they can become enlarged and symptoms such as abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting can occur. In severe cases fluid may accumulate around the lungs or heart.

    The authors call for tracking of IVF-associated risks including ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome to better understand risks associated with IVF. “More stringent attention to stimulation regimens, preconceptual care, and pregnancy management is needed so that maternal death and severe morbidity do not worsen further,” they write.

    … U.S. fertility doctors point out that the reasons women undergo IVF may account for the increased risk of death seen in the studies.

    … Underlying health issues in women who turn to IVF to get pregnant may affect their risk profile, he says. These women may have had previous uterine surgery or are predisposed to high blood pressure or diabetes. Women who undergo IVF are also usually older than their counterparts who conceive without such assistance. Advancing maternal age is associated with riskier pregnancies.

    “The population of people who need IVF may add special contributing factors to the risk of death during their pregnancy,” he says. Multiple pregnancies are more likely as a result of IVF, which also increases risks to moms and babies.

    The new findings may not apply to the U.S. due to differences in obstetrical care, he says.

    “We manage risks better [here], and do reductions more in multiple pregnancies,” Grifo says. The best way to protect the mother’s health and that of the baby regardless of how the pregnancy occurred is good prenatal care …

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Obese Women Have Longer Gestation Period

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

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    According to a recent study, overweight women have a higher chance of having a longer gestation period. The study also says that obese women are more likely to have induced labour and also a caesarean section.

    … one in three women were pregnant even after 10 days of due date as compared to their healthy counterparts.

    … more than one third of obese women had to undergo an induced labour as compared to one fourth of women who were healthy …

    There is a great value in preconception care. For women who are overweight or obese, or even a healthy weight but seeking improved health and well being prior to pregnancy, preconception care is essential. Midwives and obstetricians provide preconception care.

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Brain-damaged boy awarded £6.4million settlement

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    A little boy who suffered severe brain damage during his delivery at an NHS birth centre was today awarded £6.4 million in settlement of his medical negligence claim.

    … Mr Justice Tugendhat expressed his “admiration and sympathy” to the boy’s parents, Janet Evans and Earnie Kramer, of Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire, over the “catastrophe that Theo has suffered”.

    He said: “It is, I’m afraid, not unique to read about events as awful as these, but one sitting as a judge can only be in admiration of the way in which Theo’s parents have looked after him.”

    The payment to Theo will be made by Barnet and Chase Farm Hospitals NHS Trust on behalf of the Edgware Birth Centre in north-west London.

    In a statement issued after the hearing, the family’s solicitors said the trust “has admitted the birth centre was negligent and was responsible for the appalling injuries suffered by little Theo”.

    … Theo’s mother was aged 38 when she became pregnant. His parents wanted him to be delivered in “the most natural way whilst at the same time minimising any risk to their much wanted baby”.

    … “Janet and Earnie were told the midwives at the birth centre were better trained and more experienced than many midwives working in hospitals.

    “They were also reassured the birth centre would be safer for their baby and in the event their baby needed to be delivered in hospital this would be arranged as fast if not faster than for a woman already in hospital.

    “Sadly this was not the case. Janet was left in the care of a student midwife. Theo’s heart rate was not properly monitored and the student midwife failed to realise that Theo was in severe distress and needed to be delivered.

    “Theo was gravely ill when he was born because he had been deprived of oxygen and there were further delays in arranging for him to be transferred to Barnet General Hospital.”

    Theo, an only child, cannot sit up without support, will never be able to walk and has severe learning difficulties.

    … “The Government is pushing forward with greater focus on the use of birth centres but needs to realise that higher standards and safer environments cost money and proper training, and support is needed if tragedies like this are to be avoided.”

    … “This is a particularly tragic case where Earnie and Janet feel rightfully angry that they were misled into choosing an NHS birth centre to deliver Theo when a safer option in his case would have been a hospital maternity unit.”

    In a statement, the trust offered its “sincere apologies” to Theo and his family for the injuries he suffered.

    Often, it’s not so much the place of birth that influences the outcome of the birth, but more the knowledge, skill, judgment and experience of the care provider.

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Law Gives Nurse Midwives More Independence

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    When New York City’s St. Vincent’s Hospital closed its doors for good last year, the certified nurse midwives who held practice agreements with the hospital had nowhere to turn. Now, thanks to a landmark piece of legislation that was signed into law in June, every licensed CNM in New York state can practice independent of a physician.

    … “Midwives are the acknowledged experts in normal birth — and this legislation ensures that New York’s women have the right to choose the birth options and healthcare providers they desire — including the care of highly educated and licensed midwives.”

    … midwives handle low-risk births but have formal or informal relationships with physicians in case complications arise … midwives typically have admitting privileges and the support of the hospital’s attending physician …

    Passage of the bill was heavily opposed by the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, which says it has concerns regarding safety and the competition it creates with physicians.

    What a fantastic outcome! Everyone was very concerned when St. Vincent’s Hospital closed its doors as it was the only hospital that provided written practice agreements with midwives – a requirement of a private midwife’s practice. However, the passage of this Bill paves the way for many women to access safe midwifery care.

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Induced labor may double the odds of C-section

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    First-time mothers who have their labor induced may face a greater risk of needing a cesarean section than those who go into labor naturally …

    … those who had their labor induced were twice as likely to ultimately need a C-section.

    … 44 percent had their labor induced — and the researchers estimate that failed induction accounted for 20 percent of the C-sections performed.

    The findings … firm up the link seen in past studies between labor induction and an increased risk of C-section. By definition, labor induction is performed before a woman’s body is ready for spontaneous labor, and in some cases there will be problems with labor progression that necessitate a C-section.

    The connection is important because while cesarean section is a generally safe procedure, it requires a longer recovery time than vaginal birth, and does present certain risks, such as blood clots, infection at the incision site or in the lining of the uterus, and breathing problems in the baby.

    Moreover, the rates of both labor induction and C-section have been on an upward trend in the U.S. since the 1990s. Labor inductions have risen from just under 10 percent of births in 1990 to 22 percent in 2006; and in 2007, C-sections were done in almost one-third of all births.

    … There are circumstances in which labor induction may be advisable. There is good evidence, for example, that inducing labor benefits mom and baby when pregnancy goes beyond 41 weeks …

    … when a mother has pregnancy-related high blood pressure or diabetes, or when the mother’s “water breaks” but labor does not spontaneously begin.

    I’d like to add that none of these are absolute reasons for inducing labour. High blood pressure that is stable and has no other complicating factors, does not necessarily require an induction. The research supports induction sometime after 41 weeks and before 42 weeks, not not strictly at 41 weeks. Furthermore, ruptured membranes does not necessarily require induction although the risk of infection does increase the longer the waters are broken.

    In general, elective labor induction refers to those done with no clear medical reason. It may be done for convenience, for example, or in cases where late pregnancy is causing significant physical discomfort or when a woman wants to ensure that her own doctor delivers the baby.

    Of the labor inductions performed in this study, 40 percent were elective …

    … the bottom line for pregnant women is that they should understand the reasons for and potential risks of all forms of delivery. “It’s really important to have a frank discussion with your doctor about all of your options for delivery,” she said.

    And, it would seem it is also important for care providers to understand the reasons and potential risks of induction. Many articles blame women for the outcome, however in reality women often do what their trusted care provider suggests.

    … women contemplating an elective labor induction should be aware of the relatively higher risk of C-section.

    Shouldn’t all women be aware of the higher risk of c/s with a planned induction? This would help them to determine whether they wish to proceed down the induction route, or explore other alternatives such as expectant management and monitoring.

    In an interview, she also pointed out that when first-time moms have a C- section, they often have repeat cesareans with any future pregnancies. So limiting the need for C-section in first-time pregnancies is particularly important.

    … the rate of labor induction in this study — at 44 percent — was striking.

    Even among the 4,600 women in the study considered “low risk” for needing a labor induction — because they were not post-term, were free of diabetes, high blood pressure and obesity, and the fetus was not overly large — 29 percent had their labor induced …

    Among these low-risk women, one-quarter of those who had a labor induction ended up needing a C-section, versus 14 percent of those who had a natural labor.

    … the current findings … underscore a widespread need … to try to cut rates of “inappropriate” labor induction. “Labor induction performed for no medical reason is an area for us to target,” …

    … according to ACOG guidelines, elective inductions and elective C-sections should not be scheduled before the 39th week of pregnancy, in order to reduce the odds of complications associated with relatively earlier birth.

    However … this guideline is “not followed rigorously.”

    A study published last month, for example, found that as the U.S. national rate of labor induction rose between 1992 and 2003, so did the proportion of births occurring at the earlier end of full-term …

    In 2003, the study found 30 percent of all full-term singleton births occurred during the 37th or 38th week, versus 19 percent in 1992. The researchers concluded that labor inductions performed before the 39th week were a “likely cause” of that trend.

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    As early elective births increase, so do health risks for mother and baby

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

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    A dramatic increase in the number of U.S. women and physicians choosing an early childbirth comes with new health risks for mothers and newborns …

    The average time a fetus spends in the womb has fallen seven days in the United States since 1992 …

    Researchers see an “evolutionarily dramatic event” in the trend, and perinatal health experts see dangers. Shortening gestation could affect lung development and some fine-tuning of brain functions …

    … Babies born too early often sleep longer than normal and have trouble learning how to breast-feed, causing dehydration and jaundice

    “For every day and every week before 39 weeks, it’s an increasing risk to the baby,” …

    … women are significantly more likely to experience C-sections at for-profit hospitals across the state. … the number of women in the state who die each year from causes directly related to childbirth had more than doubled since 1996.

    The rise in deaths during childbirth indicates that obstetric health has deteriorated in many important ways …

    … A normal pregnancy lasts 40 weeks, although researchers believe it probably is safe to induce delivery at a full 39 weeks. Women often naturally give birth earlier than this, and in some cases medical problems call for an early delivery. The problem comes when babies are forced out of the womb.

    Of all births from 1990 to 2006, the number of babies born at 36 weeks increased by about 30 percent, and babies born at 37 and 38 weeks rose more than 40 percent, according to national statistics. There was a corresponding drop in the number of babies born in later weeks. Now, more babies are born at 39 weeks than at full term.

    The data examined is considered fresh by academic standards and covers such a long period of time — 16 years — that experts say the trend is unmistakable

    … Some early births are scheduled for the convenience of the mother or doctor …

    … One mother, Michelle Van Norman, gave birth to her second child … 11 days early in 2006, with no need for urgency … Van Norman, a 31-year old mom living in Las Vegas, said her doctor didn’t seem worried about the date.

    “There were no medical reasons for the delivery being early,” Van Norman said. “He told me the week he could do it and asked me to choose which day was best for us.”

    None of those days was best for the baby. After his birth by C-section, one of Christian’s lungs collapsed. He spent three weeks in intensive care and 10 days on a ventilator with six tubes going into his chest.

    “The whole experience was horrific,” Van Norman said. “It didn’t end with the birth, it continued for the first year of his life, and we still don’t know if the oxygen deprivation has had any affect on him.” When Van Norman’s surgeon cut the cord, Christian seemed robust. The doctor declined to comment about the case.

    “The doctor came in the day after and asked where the baby was,” Van Norman said. “When I told him, he asked me if I was joking. “… I swore from that day on I would never put another baby through that kind of torture for any reason.”

    In California, the state Department of Public Health, March of Dimes and California Maternal Quality Care Collaborative have released what its authors call “the Toolkit.” The authors note that deliveries at 37 and 38 weeks account for about 17.5 percent of total births in the United States

    Babies born early through induction or C-section without a medical reason are nearly twice as likely to spend time in the neonatal intensive care unit … They also are more likely to contract infections and need breathing machines …

    “We are finding out that the last weeks of pregnancy really do count” …

    “At 35 weeks, the brain is only two-thirds of what it will weigh at 40 weeks.” Many organizations are responding with programs designed to eliminate early elective deliveries …

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Women choosing midwives

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    When Lisa Unger was pregnant … she saw a gynecologist for medical care. Then she made the switch.

    … “I decided I wanted a midwife, I was pregnant, it was not an illness, I didn’t need a doctor. I was going with a midwife who could empower and coach me through the natural function of my body. I wanted to do it in the hospital, I wasn’t comfortable with a home birth … ”

    … “The term ‘midwife’ means ‘being with women’. We support them, empower them. We tell them how wonderful they’re doing. ”

    The midwife and mom-to-be establish a bond, since midwives are able to spend more time connecting with their patients over time …

    Visit my website to learn more about my services.

    Childbirth deaths from spinal anesthesia rising

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

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    The number of U.S. women who die from anesthesia complications during childbirth has fallen sharply in recent decades. But deaths specifically related to so-called regional anesthesia, which includes epidurals and spinal blocks, have crept upward since the mid-1990s …

    … such deaths remain rare. But … the results point to an area where anesthesia can be made safer for women.

    … Regional anesthesia is considered quite safe. But in rare cases, patients can have a severe allergic reaction to the anesthetic, or the drug can cause breathing or heart problems.

    … researchers found that between 1979 and 2002, childbirth deaths related to any anesthesia complication dropped by 59 percent among U.S. women.

    There were three such deaths for every million live births between 1979 and 1990, compared with just over one death per million births between 1991 and 2002 …

    However, while deaths related to general anesthesia kept falling in the 1990s, those related to regional anesthesia rose slightly, from 2.5 deaths for every million C-sections between 1991 and 1996 to 3.8 per million between 1997 and 2002.

    “I think the main thing is to get good prenatal care, and keep any medical conditions you have under control during pregnancy,” …

    What about helping women to prepare and plan for a drug-free birth? This seems like the most logical step. In Australia, almost 50% women have an epidural in labour. If this figure was around 5% (for labour, not caesareans), this would make an enormous difference.

    … Most of the women who died – 48 of the 56 — had undergone a C-section. In the rest of the cases, the type of delivery was not reported.

    Deaths related to general anesthesia during C-section declined markedly over the decade. From 1991 to 1996, there were 17 such deaths per one million C-sections; that rate fell to 6.5 per million for the years 1997 to 2002.

    In contrast, deaths related to regional anesthesia during C-section inched up.

    The reasons for the increase are not known … the overall drop in anesthesia-related deaths since the 1970s is likely related to factors like safer drugs, better monitoring of women’s heart rates, blood pressure and oxygen while under anesthesia, and an improved understanding of how individuals can react to anesthesia.

    But … the medical profession may have become too narrowly focused on preventing deaths related to general anesthesia, which typically is more risky.

    Research in the 1970s and 80s … showed that pregnant women were 17 times more likely to die from general anesthesia than regional. And people reacted to that.

    “A good part of our energy was tunnel-visioned toward general anesthesia,” … “Maybe we’ve let the pendulum swing a bit in the other direction.”

    It is hard to study the potential reasons for the increase in deaths linked to regional anesthesia, precisely because they are so rare …

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 44

    Canada Faces Growing Loss of Maternity Wards

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

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    Jim Curran is the third generation of his family to be born at the Niagara Falls General Hospital in Ontario, Canada.

    … But any chances of a fifth generation being born there are in doubt.

    Two years ago, the Niagara Health System … announced a plan to centralize maternity care by closing two wards and expanding the one at the hospital in St. Catharine …

    … Losing the ward … will make it hard for women, particularly those who don’t have their own cars, to reach medical help.

    … The maternity ward closings in the Niagara Falls region are part of a looming maternity care crisis in Ontario and across Canada …

    … the number of practicing obstetricians and gynecologists is … s declining.

    … The Association of Ontario Midwives … believes that more midwifes are part of the solution. The group is pushing for more government investments in midwifery training to help breach the gap in maternity care providers …

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Obstetrical anesthesia: new data on the risks

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

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    Virtually all Los Angeles hospitals offer epidural anesthesia to patients in labor. It allows a remarkable degree of comfort from labor pains …; unfortunately, it is not without risk. In many cases, anesthesia is optional; however, it is a necessity for a cesarean delivery. A new study … reviewed 12 years of obstetrical anesthesia-related deaths … The authors reported 86 deaths that were associated with complications of anesthesia; these deaths represented 1.6% of total pregnancy-related deaths. Pregnancy-related mortality ratios for deaths related to anesthesia was 1.2 per million live births for 1991–2002, which was a decrease of 59% from 1979–1990. Deaths mostly occurred among younger women; however, the percentage of deaths among women aged 35–39 years of age increased significantly. The delivery method could not be determined in 14% of the cases; however, the remaining 86% were in women undergoing a cesarean delivery. Case-fatality rates for general anesthesia were 16.8 per million in 1991–1996 and 6.5 per million in 1997–2002; for regional (epidural or spinal) anesthesia, they were 2.5 per million in 1991–1996 and 3.8 per million in 1997–2002.

    Overall, the leading causes of anesthesia-related pregnancy deaths for 1991–2002 were: intubation, … failure or induction (starting general anesthesia) problems (23%); respiratory failure (20%), and high spinal or epidural block (16%) … The causes varied by the type of obstetric anesthesia administered. About two-thirds of deaths associated with general anesthesia were caused by intubation failure or induction problems; however, for women whose deaths were associated with regional anesthesia during cesarean delivery, (26%) were caused by high spinal or epidural block, followed by respiratory failure (19%), and drug reaction.

    The authors concluded:

    * Anesthetic-related maternal mortality decreased nearly 60% when data from 1979–1990 were compared with data from 1991–2002.
    * Although case-fatality rates for general anesthesia are decreasing, rates for regional anesthesia are rising.

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    ‘We know the reality of childbirth’

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    … “I really enjoyed it.” …

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    AMA boss denies bar on midwives

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

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    THE head of Australia’s peak doctors’ group has rejected claims obstetricians are obstructing midwives’ attempts to see their own patients, saying the first agreement permitting this has just been signed …

    Andrew Pesce, an obstetrician and president of the Australian Medical Association, said he signed the agreement with a Sydney midwife last week, and had all but sealed a deal covering a group of midwives.

    … Dr Pesce conceded some obstetricians were unhappy with the changes, but added the new system could work well with fewer specialists around the country who were willing to participate. Under the changes, introduced on November 1, eligible midwives were allowed to see patients privately under Medicare, provided specific conditions were met.

    I am proud to be that “Sydney midwife” who has an agreement with a private obstetrician to provide care to women. I believe we are the first private midwife / private obstetrician practitioners in Australia to have successfully negotiated a collaborative agreement. Our model ensures that women have care that is suited to their needs, covering everything from waterbirth to caesarean with no need for a transfer between models of care. Each woman has her care with her chosen midwife (complete with Medicare funding) and also has a known and trusted obstetrician available if her pregnancy or birth take a different path. Our model builds on Australia’s excellent record of safety in pregnancy and birth and provides continuity of care with the private midwife and obstetrician of the woman’s choice.

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Obstetricians are ready to quit

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

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    ALMOST a third of obstetricians are considering quitting private practice due to changes to the Medicare safety net, which slash the amount patients can claim for pregnancy services.

    … Most said they have had a drop in private bookings since the changes to the rebate and the majority said the fall had been between 10 and 40 per cent.

    … Federal Health Minister Nicola Roxon moved to cap Medicare safety net payments for women who use private obstetricians after the specialists were accused of raising fees to take advantage of the scheme …

    … 49 per cent of 740 patients said they would use the public health system.

    Obstetricians are losing business but what is really happening is an incentive for women to use primary care in pregnancy: a private midwife. Private midwives who have Medicare provider numbers are required to work collaboratively with obstetricians, hence assuring that there will always be a mechanism to provide for obstetric care for women who need these high-level services. The future of private maternity care sees women accessing midwifery care for the most part, and private obstetricians when needed, on referral from the midwife.

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    New birth unit delay

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

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    THE area health service has shelved the launch of its controversial, stand-alone, midwife birthing unit at Mona Vale Hospital …

    … It leaves the north of the peninsula without any form of maternity service for at least three more months.

    The proposed midwifery group practice was due to open by the end of the year, but this has now been put back to March.

    According to the health service, the delay would allow for the completion of a thorough risk assessment of the model of care.

    Mona Vale has been without a maternity ward since last July, when it was moved to Manly after the discovery of asbestos in the hospital.

    … it has proposed a midwife-managed birthing unit …

    … Northern Sydney Central Coast Health’s clinical director, women’s network, Dr Michael Nicholl, said the delay was to ensure a rigorous and proper assessment …

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Medicare … at last!

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

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

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

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

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

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Maternity doctors fear ‘business as usual’ at Canberra Hospital

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

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    Junior doctors fear it will be ”business as usual” at the Canberra Hospital maternity unit now the inquiry into bullying and harassment allegations has been completed …

    ACT Health announced on Friday afternoon that an investigation into the allegations had been completed but the results would not be made public because of the provisions of the Public Interest Disclosure Act.

    … a number of staff in the obstetrics and gynaecology unit were concerned that the problems which led to the inquiry could occur again.

    ”I think the junior doctors who put their hands up and said they felt bullied now feel hopeless,” Dr Foote said. ”A number of staff have contacted me and said there’s fear and dread of what’s going to happen … it’s business as usual.”

    The inquiry and a separate investigation into service delivery and clinical outcomes were called after it was revealed in February that nine doctors had quit in 13 months …

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Mothers ‘too scared to push for baby No2′ as demand for Caesareans increases

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

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    Expectant mothers are increasingly demanding Caesarean sections for second babies because their first births were so traumatic, say midwives.

    In some maternity units, the numbers wanting the procedure has doubled in the past year.

    On top of that, many women were so distressed first time around that they are putting off, or even abandoning, plans to have more babies.

    The experience is often unnecessarily stressful because maternity units can be overstretched.

    Women are often left alone and scared before and after labour as midwives simply do not have the time to offer them the advice and reassurance they need.

    This is where private midwifery care is so beneficial for women: the private midwife does not leave the woman’s side, acting as a doula / support person and midwife all at once.

    The number of expectant mothers asking for a C-section at Liverpool Women’s Hospital, one of the largest female hospitals in Europe, has increased by 40 per cent in a year.

    Other maternity units … report similar trends.

    Birth trauma clinics, which support women after difficult labours, say they have seen a doubling in patients in the past 12 months. Cathy Warwick, of the Royal College of Midwives, said: ‘If a midwife is very busy, clearly she won’t have time between dealing with women in labour to give others emotional support and reassurance.’

    Doctors and midwives increasingly offer C-sections if women are fearful of giving birth …

    Midwives also say that increasing numbers of women are suffering from tocophobia, or a fear of childbirth.

    Simon Mehigan, a consultant midwife at Liverpool Women’s Hospital, blamed a lack of information or explanation about what was happening in a first pregnancy …

    This is a really great point: it is so important for a woman’s first pregnancy and birth experience to be positive as this experience will shape her subsequent pregnancy and birth experiences. It can be easy to “go with the flow” and do what you are told is best for you / your baby, however this approach – almost a passive approach – will lead to a 31% chance of having a caesarean and a majority of women having their first babies with a “go with the flow” attitude will come away disappointed with their experience. It’s important not to have firm, fixed beliefs about how a pregnancy and birth will go, because no-one has a crystal ball to know exactly how things will be on the day. But it is really essential to be well informed and well supported by a private midwife who believes in birth and a woman’s ability to birth her baby naturally.

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Midwife staff cuts put women giving birth at risk

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

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    Women giving birth are not getting proper care because NHS maternity units are having to deal with staff cuts, recruitment problems and smaller budgets …
    Increasing workloads caused by record numbers of births, more complex pregnancies and too few staff are having a negative effect on patient care, according to over half (54%) of 3,690 midwives polled.
    Those results … underline serious concerns outlined today in a separate survey of heads of midwifery (HOMs). Among 83 HOMs in England questioned by the Royal College of Midwives (RCM), 30% said their budget had been cut and 33% said they had been asked in the last year to reduce their staffing levels. Two-thirds said they did not have enough personnel to cope with demand.

    Pressure is growing on maternity services. The number of births in England rose … 19% … But during the same period the total number of midwives grew from 23,075 to 26,451 – a rise of 14.6%.

    The growing number of mothers-to-be who are obese, older or teenagers – many of whom need extra support for high-risk pregnancies – is placing extra demands on services. Despite that, 47% of HOMs said they expected to have to lose some staff next year.

    The findings have prompted fresh concern about the quality and safety of maternity care, said the RCM general secretary, Cathy Warwick …

    Dr Tony Falconer, president of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG), said: “As well as a need for more midwives, there is a need for more consultants to deal with the increase in the number of high-risk pregnancies.”

    Belinda Phipps, chief executive of parenting charity the NCT, said: “We are extremely concerned by the picture these figures paint about the future of maternity services.” …

    Another reason to choose private midwifery care!

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Most mothers-to-be don’t have dedicated midwife and are not sure of their birthing options

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

    This is a UK article but it is just as relevant here in Australia. Birthing options here consist of a visit to the GP:
    “I’m pregnant”

    “Great. Your due date is xxx.”

    Then the conversation generally moves to, “Do you have private health insurance?”

    If yes: the woman has an automatic referral to a private obstetrician for birth in a private or public hospital.

    If no private health insurance, the woman is referred to the nearest public hospital where options of care will be discussed with the woman at the booking appointment, but her chosen option will need to be approved at the next visit with an obstetrician. If the obstetrician deems the woman to be too high risk for her chosen model of care, she is – without choice – slotted into the obstetric clinic.

    Women with and without private health insurance have the option of private midwifery care, for either a homebirth or a hospital birth. Even without visiting rights (which ought to be in place by early 2011 in NSW), women can have a private midwife attend all of their pregnancy and postnatal care and also birth with the woman in hospital. A hospital midwife would also be assigned to the woman – and medical care can be accessed quickly and safely at any point in the pregnancy and birth if needed. This model delivers excellent continuity of care to the woman and maximises safety and satisfaction with the pregnancy and birthing experience.

    Anyway, now to the article:

    Link

    Most mothers-to-be do not meet the midwives who will care for them during their labour before the birth, a study revealed today.

    The poll of more than 5,300 new mothers also found only 18 per cent had one dedicated midwife caring for them during labour and 25 per cent saw four different carers.

    It also found one in three pregnant women were left alone and worried at some point during or just after the birth.

    Only 18 per cent of mothers to be were cared for by one dedicated midwife during their baby’s birth

    … 80 per cent of women were not aware of the four options of where to give birth …

    The choice of where to give birth should include at home, in a free-standing midwifery unit, in a midwifery unit connected to a hospital or in a hospital unit led by consultants.

    … many services are … seriously failing women in terms of giving them continuous support in labour and giving them a named midwife they can contact at any time …

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Study Examines Complication Rates For Pregnancies After Age 44

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

    Link

    Women who become pregnant at age 45 or older have an elevated risk of several complications to their own health and that of their infants …

    The older women were more likely to have health conditions during their pregnancies, with 17% experiencing gestational diabetes … Nine percent of the older group had high blood pressure while pregnant, compared with less than 3% of younger women. Older women had caesarean-section births at more than twice the overall rate and experienced placenta previa — a condition in which the placenta blocks the birth canal — at six times the overall rate.

    Women who delivered at age 45 or older also had higher rates of early deliveries, more instances of fever and severe bleeding, longer hospital stays, and more trips to the intensive care unit when compared with younger mothers. In terms of the infants’ health, 4% of newborns born to older women had metabolic problems, such as low blood sugar, compared with less than 2% of those born to younger women …

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Unnecessary C-Sections on the Rise

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

    Australia’s caesarean rate was 31.1% in 2008.

    Link

    Five years ago, Jill Arnold got some unwanted news at her obstetrician’s office. At 37 weeks pregnant, Arnold was told her baby was too big for her body to deliver naturally. Flipping open a calendar, the obstetrician asked when Arnold would like to schedule a cesarean section.

    Fact: You cannot know that a baby is “too big” until you give labour a go.

    Unconvinced she needed the surgery — the doctor “couldn’t provide any statistics or data” her baby was too large — Arnold delivered her 10-pound, 3-ounce (4.6 kilogram) baby the old-fashioned way. Since then, the now 36-year old … delivered another baby weighing 11 pounds, and now pens a blog called The Unnecesarean.

    Women like Arnold, however, are becoming increasingly rare. Between 1996 and 2007, the number of C-sections performed in U.S. hospitals rose by more than 50 percent to an all-time high: Almost one in three pregnant women …

    “The most concerning problem is the high rate in first-time mothers,” …

    … The shift is toward a more streamlined labor and delivery, and profoundly affects mothers-to-be.

    … this shift is not likely to reverse any time soon.

    In 2009, 26-year old Ann Carter … labored for 14 hours. With her cervix dilated to only 6 centimeters … her doctor told her it was time for a C-section.

    “I was devastated and scared,” Carter said, “I knew it was a possibility but I was hoping it wouldn’t happen.”

    During the surgery, the doctor discovered the umbilical cord had wrapped around the baby’s neck, which explained why Carter’s labor had stalled. The C-section saved the baby boy’s life.

    Um, actually, it is very common for the cord to be around the baby’s neck, and it rarely causes concerns.

    “Most times the decision to perform a C-section is based on the physician’s judgment,” Zhang said, “but there are great variations in decision-making among physicians.”

    … there are “few clear-cut indications” of when to do one.

    … For example, the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) lists “failure to progress” during labor, as an indication that cesarean delivery is needed … When things slow down, there is an element of judgment involved where a physician determines whether to continue to wait, induce or perform a C-section … it can take hours to determine whether or not labor is progressing.

    In Zhang’s study, however, he found that many patients weren’t given a sufficiently long time period to allow their labor to progress. In other words, doctors were calling it quits on waiting and opting for a C-section too soon — often before the patient’s cervix was dilated to 6 centimeters.

    This was especially true in cases of induced labor … Almost half of the C-sections in these women occurred before they were 6 centimeters dilated …

    Still, it is not clear whether inducing labor raises the risk of C-section, or whether other factors are involved that contribute to why women were induced in the first place …

    … Another factor contributing to the record-high cesarean rates is a drastic decline in vaginal births after cesarean … 70 percent of women in his study who had previously undergone a cesarean delivery had C-sections with their subsequent pregnancies, without attempting vaginal delivery.

    One reason for this is a fear of lawsuits. If a physician doesn’t perform a C-section, and something goes wrong with a patient who previously had a C-section, the law often does not protect the physician …

    … the number of malpractice claims involving obstetric and gynecologic surgery are the second highest of all medical specialties. In 2009, the claims totaled over $133 million.

    Fears of legal action also explain why at least 30 percent of all U.S. hospitals have official bans prohibiting VBACs …

    The risks associated with a vaginal birth following a C-section have been somewhat exaggerated, however, Zhang said.

    “Women and physicians may be concerned about uterine rupture, but the risk is less than 1 percent,” …

    To help reduce rising cesarean rates, the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists announced less restrictive guidelines in July, stating that vaginal birth “has fewer complications than a repeat cesarean….restrictive VBAC policies should not be used to force women to undergo a repeat cesarean delivery against her will.” …

    … some medical experts have suggested the rapid rise of C-sections in the last decade is also due in small part to mothers-to-be requesting them, not doctors. Still, data on “patient choice cesareans” is lacking, as statistics used as support of their frequency are often based on ambiguous procedural codes used on hospital discharge records.

    In any case, women who opt for a C-section may not be getting adequate information about risks, and may fear they have no other option …

    … To curb the rise, many advocate giving women more autonomy over their labor and delivery, and combining the strengths of modern medicine with the principles and practices of midwifery.

    La Follette’s California office is an example of this more comprehensive approach: After participating in a larger practice for 12 years, she now works with two experienced midwives and another physician. Her practice has a successful VBAC rate of 75 percent.

    “We take into account the expectations and ideas of the mom and balance that with medical guidance,” La Follette said.

    As more women consider practices with midwives and home births — which can be dangerous if complications arise — much of the medical establishment has been digging in its heels. In 2008, the American Medical Association’s House of Delegates proposed a resolution to declare hospitals the only safe place for labor, and only midwives who work under the supervision of physicians as safe.

    The Midwives Alliance of North America declared the resolution “seriously out-of-step with the ethical concept of patient autonomy in healthcare [that] distracts from other critical issues in maternity care.”

    If there is any chance of lowering the rates of C-sections, professional organizations will need to review all the available evidence, Zhang said.

    But any change won’t be easy. On the one hand, doctors need to include expectant moms in their own care; on the other, it sometimes seems that doctors who are worried about potential legal consequences can’t focus on a patient’s best interests.

    “We’re fighting a cultural issue,” Scott said, that extends beyond C-sections.

    She said, “We need to change the entire way we view birth and we have to be able to trust our caregivers. The alternative would be terrifying.”

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Maternity unit: million spent to close it down

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

    Link

    Much ado about the establishment of a new midwifery-led unit in Sydney. We already have a few midwifery-led units – at Belmont, Wyong and Ryde. All units are midwifery-led and if obstetric care is needed, this is easily accessed at collaborating hospitals. Generally the women are very satisfied with this model of care and Australian women are demanding models of maternity care that are safe, respectful and that support the natural processes or pregnancy and birth. A controversial decision was taken to convert the standard obstetric service at Mona Vale Hospital into a new midwifery led service, catering for women with low-risk pregnancies and labours. Should any complications develop in pregnancy or labour, the women are transferred to Manly Hospital. The negative tone of this article will more than likely be followed by reports in coming months of safe and satisfying births.

    THE cost of renovating Mona Vale Hospital’s maternity ward is now approaching $1 million and all residents will have to show for it is a downgraded, stand-alone, midwife-led birthing unit.

    Last July the discovery of asbestos forced the maternity ward to be relocated to Manly Hospital with a promise from the State Government that it would return after remediation works were completed.

    The area health service, however, reneged and instead announced it would only open a midwife birthing unit by the end of the year.

    … Mr Stokes said it was hard to fathom how so much money could be spent downgrading a service.

    … Eunice Raymond, from the Save Mona Vale Hospital group, described the growing costs as outrageous.

    “They’re spending all this money but we are still not getting a maternity ward,” she said.

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

    Instruments Can Assist Birth, But With Risks To Mother, Child

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

    Link

    Forceps might be a better instrument than a vacuum cup for assisting a successful birth, but new mothers might experience more trauma and complications after a forceps delivery …

    If the choice of instrument is the vacuum device – also known as a ventouse – metal cups are more successful than soft cups in delivering a baby …

    This procedure comes with its own risks, however: Newborns are more liable to have scalp lacerations with the metal cup than the soft cup vacuum …

    “In general, these results show tradeoffs between the different instruments, with both advantages and disadvantages in most comparisons,” … “What is important is to be aware of the specific advantages and disadvantages of each instrument.”

    Forceps and vacuum-assisted births are relatively rare in the United States … less than one percent of births involved forceps, and less than 4 percent involved vacuum assistance.

    The decline in forceps use might be due in part to a lack of training … “… [forceps] [are] substantially more effective at executing delivery,” …

    In forceps-assisted births, the Cochrane reviewers found, women were more apt to suffer vaginal tears and trauma and experience some kind of incontinence after the birth than those who had vacuum-assisted births. They were also more likely to need general anesthesia, and to undergo a Caesarean section.

    “This may be because forceps were more often used following a failed vacuum birth,” O’Mahony said, “whereas the vacuum was less often used following failed forceps.”

    Although vacuum cups appeared to be less risky for the mother’s health, they come with their own set of concerns, the researchers said.

    “The risk of scalp injury with the metal vacuum cup is a particular cause for concern,” …

    … some expectant mothers might not want to consider an instrument-assisted birth, but … they should know that these instruments could help them avoid a Caesarean section, which carries its own risks. Her approach, she said, is to discuss all the options with a woman before birth, “so we can negotiate between the risks to get everyone to be safe and have a healthy mom and healthy baby.”

    My experience has been that forceps are more likely than a vacuum to result in a vaginal birth. Often times, if the vacuum is unsuccessful, the woman is advised to have a caesarean. In this instance, forceps might have been a better option. Forceps can be used after an unsuccessful attempt at a vacuum birth, however this does increase the risk of trauma to mother and baby.

    Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448