Vaginal birth OK after multiple C-sections

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… Women who attempt vaginal childbirth after having several babies by cesarean section may not have a greater risk of complications than women who’ve had only one prior C-section …

… vaginal delivery is now considered a safe option for many women who have had a past C-section. Because C-sections also carry risks and downsides — such as blood loss or infection from the procedure, and a longer hospital stay and recovery time — many women may prefer a try at labor.

… the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ACOG) does not currently recommend vaginal delivery for women who have had three or more C-sections, as their risk of uterine rupture has generally been thought to be higher.

In the new study … researchers found that women with at least three prior C-sections showed no increased risk of uterine rupture during vaginal delivery.

In fact, none of the 89 women who opted to try vaginal childbirth had the complication …

… the expected rate of uterine rupture among women with one prior C-section would be less than 1 percent …

… The … women who chose to … labor also had no instances of bladder or bowel injury, or lacerations of the uterine artery … compared with just over 2 percent of the women who had a repeat C-section …

When it came to successful [VBAC] the chances were similar regardless of the number of prior C-sections.

[Ampngst women who had one prior caesarean, the] success rate [was] about 75 percent. That rate was 80 percent among women with a history of three or more C-sections …

Research has been around for several years now about the safety of VBAMC. Despite this, women still have a battle on their hands to achieve a VBAMC in the hospital system. While many hospitals support VBAC after one caesarean, successful VBAMC rates are very low. Hopefully this new research will add to the growing body of research that supports VBAMC as a safe option. I believe that VBAMC is a safer option than elective repeat caesarean. While the first caesarean is generally safe, the risks increase after two or more caesareans. The best way to achieve a VBAC or VBAMC in the hospital system is with a private midwife.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Do We Need To Revisit VBAC Guidelines For Women With Three Or More Prior Caesareans?

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… women with three or more prior caesareans who attempt vaginal birth have similar rates of success and risk for maternal morbidity as those with one prior caesarean, and similar overall morbidity … as those delivered by elective repeat caesarean.

Planned vaginal birth after caesarean (VBAC) refers to any woman who has experienced a prior caesarean birth who intends to try for a vaginal birth rather than to deliver by elective repeat caesarean. Although relatively low complication rates, including uterine rupture, have been demonstrated among women with two prior low-transverse caesareans who attempt vaginal birth, there are very limited data available on outcomes among women with more than two prior caesareans …

… researchers sought to estimate the rate of success and risk of maternal morbidity in women with three or more prior caesareans who attempt VBAC … A total of 25,005 women who had a least one prior caesarean delivery were included.

… women with three or more prior caesarean deliveries did not experience a difference in morbidity based on whether they attempted VBAC or elected for a repeat caesarean. The 89 women with three or more prior caesareans who attempted VBAC were as likely to be successful as women with one or two prior caesareans, 79.8% compared to 75.5% and 74.6% respectively. In addition, none of them experienced significant maternal morbidity such as uterine rupture, uterine artery laceration, and bladder or bowel injury.

… precluding VBAC for all women with three or more prior caesareans may not be evidence based. Although there is a measurable maternal morbidity associated with delivery for a woman with a history of three or more prior caesareans, it does not differ significantly by mode of delivery. Risks associated with multiple caesareans are several, including surgical morbidity and abnormal placentation in future pregnancies.

… perhaps it is time to revisit the current recommendations for VBAC attempts for women with more than one prior caesarean”.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Girl, 13, starved of oxygen at birth to receive millions

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Alice … was starved of oxygen during the final hour of her mother’s labour after doctors failed to warn her mother that there were risks associated with her second birth.

Diagnosed with spastic quadraplegic cerebral palsy, she has severely delayed mental development as well as learning difficulties and is now reliant on 24 hour care.

Her mother Carolyn had a caesarean section with her first child but doctors … did not tell her that there was a chance the womb would rupture during a normal delivery.

Lawyers for the Joyce family … claimed Alice would have been born healthy if delivered by caesarean …

… Her father … said: “Although it sounds like a large sum of money it is needed to fund Alice’s around the clock care and ensure she gets as much out of life as her disabilities allow.

… A court ruling today is expected to award Alice a lump sum payment of £2,250,000 plus annual payments until she is 16 of £95,000 pounds and £185,000 after that for the rest of her life.

The case was funded through legal aid, without which the family would not have been able to afford legal costs to prove negligence or the experts needed to prove her complex needs.

… Chief nurse and director of patient care standards Sarah Watson-Fisher said: “We would like to express our sincere apologies to Alice and her family for the errors in the care given at the time of her birth …

“We take matters like this very seriously and are committed to learning from our mistakes. We hope that the settlement will be of great assistance to Alice and we offer her and her family our best wishes for the future.”

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Surge in caesarean deliveries levels off

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THE rate of caesarean deliveries in Australia has levelled off for the first time in 10 years, after growing alarm over the costs and risks associated with the procedure.

… Australia’s caesarean rate in 2007 was 30.9 per cent — an increase of only 0.1 percentage point from the previous year.

That marks a dramatic slowdown on the strong growth seen in previous years …

… The report found a much higher rate of caesarean births among first-time mothers, at 32 per cent, than among mothers who had already had at least one child.

… more than 80 per cent of women who have given birth by caesarean section had a further caesarean delivery …

… possible explanations for the levelling off in caesareans included changing community attitudes and a greater awareness among women and doctors of the risks.

… “… women are becoming more informed about their choices, more aware and more educated, and women are exercising that right to make a choice” …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Health Plans Work to Reduce the Health Risks and Costs From Elective C-Sections Before Full Term

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A combination of quality-of-care and cost issues has prompted some health plans to take steps to reduce the number of scheduled, medically unnecessary premature Caesarean section deliveries, mainly through a focus on education of both women and physicians.

… a growing percentage of women is having C-sections, many of which take place before the 39th week of gestation … between 1990 and 2005 there was a 20% increase in babies born before the 37th week of gestation and a 29% increase in births occurring at 37 to 39 weeks of gestation. Many studies show heightened risks to both babies and mothers when the babies are delivered before 39 weeks.

Although there are certainly medically necessary reasons for some of these C-sections, newborns delivered prematurely are at risk for more medical complications than those born at full term. Many of these infants are admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit, which can be much more costly for health plans than a C-section or vaginal birth without NICU admission.

There were more than 1.3 million C-sections in 2006 in the U.S., up from less than 800,000 in 1996 … plans have asked what they can do about this growing rate … “This is not the important question, but it’s the one everyone asks,” she maintains. Rather, she says, the focus should be on what these high C-section rates represent, which is a quality issue mainly with babies and the impact of neonatal costs. “The real quality issue has more to do with the infant than the mom,” …

“This is both a quality-of-care and a cost issue,” … “A baby should not be born electively before 39 weeks unless there is a clinical indication” to do so … while NICU costs “are not the No. 1 issue … they are in the top couple of issues,” she explains. Average costs for a vaginal delivery are between $5,000 and $6,000, while costs for a C-section delivery are in the $8,000 to $9,000 range. But for births resulting in a NICU stay, those costs jump to the $20,000 to $30,000 range …

… “While maternal and fetal complications during pregnancy may result in the need for a C-section, we’re concerned that some early C-section deliveries may be occurring for non-medically indicated reasons,”

… “the rates of adverse respiratory outcomes, mechanical ventilation, newborn sepsis, hypoglycemia, admission to the neonatal ICU, and hospitalization for 5 days or more were increased by a factor of 1.8 to 4.2 for births at 37 weeks and 1.3 to 2.1 for births at 38 weeks.”

… late preterm babies — … between 34 and 36 weeks gestation — are six times more likely than full-term babies to die within their first week of life and three times more likely to die within their first year. Groat says that babies born within the 37- and 38-week time frame “have twice the likelihood of going to the NICU” than babies born at 39 weeks.

… If women have already had a C-section, they can safely have a … VBAC later…

… Many plans are taking steps to help reduce the amount of scheduled premature C-sections.

… 48% of babies admitted to the NICU were born to mothers who had scheduled deliveries, many of which were before 39 weeks gestation. After the plan shared its data with the hospitals and physicians in those areas, there was a 46% decrease in NICU admissions within the first three months … “We’re taking some of the best practices and sharing them with hospitals,” she explains. … “the last few weeks of pregnancy are important to the baby,” …

… The Regence Group has a maternity management program, Special Beginnings, designed to promote a healthy pregnancy and delivery. “… we work to educate expectant mothers about the potential incremental risks to mother and infant” when the baby is delivered by C-section electively before the 39th week of gestation … “Through this program, we educate expectant mothers on the benefits of full-term, vaginal delivery to help encourage a healthy pregnancy and delivery. We also educate them about when it may be medically indicated to not have a vaginal birth.” … It also offers members a 24-hour health information line that includes mortality and morbidity information affecting both mothers and babies with elective delivery before 39 weeks … “This helps educate the mother if her doctor suggests early delivery,” …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Mom won’t be forced to have C-section

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Jeff Szabo was by his wife’s side when she gave birth to their son Gabriel seven years ago, and he was right there holding Joy’s hand when their younger sons Michael and Daniel were born, too.
Jeff Szabo was there when Joy gave birth to Gabriel, Michael and Daniel, but will probably miss No. 4.

… when this baby is born, her husband will most likely be more than 300 miles away.

The reason: Their local hospital … won’t deliver the Szabos’ baby vaginally … so a week or so before her … due date, Joy will drive 350 miles to be near a hospital in Phoenix that will.

Their local hospital says they’ll only deliver the Szabos’ baby … via Caesarean section. Joy had her second son … by C-section. Page Hospital says it won’t do a vaginal birth after a woman has had a C-section

… “I’m so upset about this,” Jeff says. “I’ve been there in the delivery room for all the other boys and I won’t be there for this baby, and I won’t be there for Joy.”

The Szabos and a growing number of other families are facing the choice of Mom having a surgery she doesn’t want or attempting a vaginal birth at a hospital that, in most cases, would be far away.

… The Szabos’ story began in 2004 when she was in labor with Michael. … Page Hospital feared the baby wasn’t getting enough oxygen, and so they performed an emergency Caesarean section.

… Two years later, Szabo had a successful … vaginal delivery … She assumed she could have a vaginal birth this time too, but, she says, a month ago her doctor told her Page Hospital had changed its policy and she’d have to have a C-section.

Studies have shown VBACs carry with them an increased risk of a uterine rupture compared with births in women who’ve never had a C-section, but the risk is less than 1 percent, according to the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecologists.

The results of a uterine rupture can be devastating: The baby could die or have permanent brain damage.

” … we think the risks of surgery are worse,” Joy Szabo says. C-section risks include breathing problems for the baby and infections and bleeding for the mother …

“And I don’t want to have to recover from surgery when I’ll have four children at home, at least not voluntarily,” says Joy.

… When the couple [spoke of] their desire for a vaginal birth, they … would not budge, even telling them she would get a court order if necessary to ensure Joy delivered via C-section.

“I was a bit flabbergasted, because that seemed rather extreme,” Joy says. “I’d already had a VBAC … and it went fine. And if something happened, I know they can do an emergency C-section …”

… Banner Health, which owns Page Hospital, says it decided to stop performing VBACs … when ACOG … established guidelines for hospitals that Page Hospital was not adequately staffed to satisfy.

The ACOG guidelines recommend “24/7 coverage of both physician and anesthesiologist,” and that “two physicians be immediately available during the entire period of labor,” …

… Since the ACOG guidelines came out … more and more hospitals have refused to do VBACs. Today, nearly half of hospitals won’t do VBACs, either because the hospital has banned them or because doctors won’t do them …

To get around the ban, Joy Szabo plans on moving to an apartment in Phoenix in the middle of November. They have no friends or family there …

… The key is to look around for a doctor or midwife who shares your philosophy by asking questions about their induction rate, or whether they perform episiotomies routinely … Also, choosing the right hospital or birthing center makes a big difference. “The institution you walk into profoundly affects you,” …

Some hospitals in NSW do not accept VBAC women. Some will offer elective repeat caesareans instead, so a few women in this State find that they need to travel to have a VBAC.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Safety Of Home Birth

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Midwives in Ontario, Canada, have been providing care for expectant mothers in both home and hospital settings. They have been integrated into the provincial health-care system since 1994.

A recent study … reveals that low-risk women giving birth with the assistance of midwives have positive outcomes regardless of where the delivery takes place … It concludes that home birth is as safe as hospital delivery.

… newborns and mothers were no more likely to suffer complications than their counterparts in a clinical setting.

… “As birth made its way into hospital without any clear evidence that it was a safer place to be, home birth has become more and more discouraged. I think for women who want to make that choice, it’s important to have good information about those aspects of care.”

… The researchers compared 6,692 home birth women with 6,692 hospital birth women. Both groups were at low risk for complications. Findings suggested that the risk of death was very low for mother and child in both the hospital and home settings. The mortality rate was one per 1,000 live births in both cases. No maternal deaths were reported in either group.

The study examined the occurrence of serious complications, such as death, need for immediate medical care after birth, neonatal resuscitation, admission to a pediatric intensive care unit and low birth weight. It was lower in the home birth group (2.3 percent) compared to the hospital group (2.8 percent). It was also the case for all interventions with 5.2 percent home birth compared to 8.1 percent hospital, including cesarean section.

… The criteria for home birth are set by the College of Midwives of Ontario. Ineligible women for home birth include:

• Twin pregnancy
• Breech or medically complicated pregnancies
• Women with more than one previous cesarean section
• Women with gestation less than 37 weeks
• Women with gestation more than 43 weeks at the onset of birth

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

The great Caesarean section debate

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PARENTING: WHAT IS IT with Irish women and obstetricians? Most of us feel so much safer putting our pregnancy in their care. That makes absolute sense for the minority of expectant mothers who have complications. But why do the rest of us not see midwives as the experts on normal birth? It is abnormal births that are the business of consultants, …

… “Sometimes the idea of ‘my obstetrician’ is flaunted like a Prada bag. … I have never seen it in any other country to that degree, except in America,” says Krysia Lynch, press officer for the Association of Improvements in Maternity Services (AIMS) – Ireland.

“They feel if they get an obstetrician, somehow it is going to be safer. What a lot of women don’t realise is that what you’re doing with an obstetrician is you are getting continuity of care, that is the only thing that is different; when you are going for antenatal visits you are seeing the same person.

However, when women are in labour, they are cared for by midwives they have not met before, so there’s not true continuity of care.

“But when you have your baby it is the same midwives that will deliver your baby as are delivering the public patient in the next room and I think a lot of woman feel very taken aback by this,” Lynch suggests. (Although I would have thought that at that point in labour, you should be glad that you don’t need the services of your consultant.)

There is plenty of evidence to suggest that the “medicalisation” of straightforward births increases the risk of complications, with one intervention leading to another, until an emergency Caesarean section is the best option. Some pregnant women, terrified of the pain and unpredictable nature of labour, see a planned Caesarean as the best choice from the start.

A planned caesarean can almost be guaranteed, whereas a planned vaginal birth is not a certainty. Women planning vaginal births are sometimes encouraged to also consider the possibility of a caesarean, whereas women planning caesareans are not encouraged to consider the possibility of a fast labour and natural birth. Women who plan caesareans generally want the certainty that a caesarean brings.

This ultimate intervention into the natural birth process has risen dramatically in the past 15 years.

Australia’s CS rate is most likely around 35% now. It was 31% in 2006 and CS rates increase every year. Our low VBAC rate suggests that most women who have a primary caesarean will have an elective repeat caesarean for their next birth. This is contrary to the best evidence around VBAC.

According to the World Health Organisation, Caesarean sections should account for no more than 15 per cent of all births. It found there were no additional health benefits associated with a higher rate.

… There is no doubt that a Caesarean section increases the risk to both mothers and babies, when compared with spontaneous vaginal birth, and it is also significantly more expensive for the health service.

… the reasons behind this increase are much more opaque …

… known risk factors, such as older maternal age at birth and the earlier gestational age of the child, only explained half of the increase in the rate among first-time mothers …

… “If we are saying the section rate is too high, we have to come up with logical reasons as to how we can decrease it.”

I have a few suggestions:
1. Increase the numbers of women who receive primary midwifery care. Encourage midwifery care for all low risk and healthy women.
2. Encourage home as the normal place for birth to occur for all healthy and low risk women.
3. Provide continuity of midwifery care for all high risk women (in conjunction with obstetric care).
4. Ensure that all women having their first babies, all VBAC women and all women who have previously been traumatised by their birth, have continuity of midwifery care.

… Our maternity services certainly have an excellent safety record … Ireland had the lowest rate in the world of women dying during or just after pregnancy – one out of 47,600 women, compared with one in 4,800 in the US …

… the factors at play in driving up the rate of Caesarean births seem to range from medical and health policy issues to cultural and social influences.

The huge variation in rates from hospital to hospital indicates the complexities of the situation …

… Caesarean rates range … from a low of 18 per cent … to 37 per cent …

… we have no national guidelines on Caesarean section … “If we did, and they were applied across the board, we would have possibly lower C-section rates.”

Secondly … “We have a high birth rate, too few midwives; we have quite inadequate circumstances for dealing in proper one-to-one care for women in labour.”

She sees a third major factor being the “inappropriate” use of routine foetal heartbeat monitoring, known as CTG. Research shows that continuous monitoring of the heartbeat leads to a substantial increase in the risk of a woman having a Caesarean section.

… “More C-sections will be performed for abnormal foetal heart rates, but they may not really be abnormal foetal heart rates.”

Fourthly, there is a perception that Caesarean section is a safe and trouble-free intervention – that is a view held not only by the public but also by the consultants, she argues. “Women are not informed of complications.”

… “sometimes come to classes with the notion that maybe they would go for an elective section … It has become sort of accepted that this would be an option. I think some women would be very glad if there was a reason an elective section had to be performed.”

She attributes much of that to fear: “They are not hearing that many good stories from their friends, their sisters and their cousins about birth – particularly birth in the current maternity services. It doesn’t really allow women to build up any degree of confidence.”

What Healy describes as “my precious baby syndrome” among older mothers is also a factor. “They have either waited a long time to have their first baby, or perhaps in some instances unfortunately it took a long time to conceive their first baby.

“People are acutely aware that they don’t have too many shots at this and they need to be taken better care of. In actual fact, Caesarean isn’t safer at all, but the general population thinks that it is.”

When she hears back from clients who have had an emergency Caesarean section, they typically talk about feeling very grateful that their baby was saved and that nothing terrible went wrong.

“That is great, except what I would often question is what went before it? Was there a cascade of intervention that is a well-known phenomenon in the medicalised birth?”

Research shows that continuity of care, typically provided in midwife-led units, and lack of time pressures, increases the chances of a normal birth.

Mothers are not caught in the following cycle: induction causing greater pain, leading to the need for epidurals, which slow down labour, that is speeded up with synthetic hormones, which result in faster and harder contractions, that may distress the baby and require a surgeon to come to the rescue.

… the way to cut the rate of Caesareans is to look at more low-tech solutions and to get more midwives in there.

“Conceiving your baby for most people is not a high-tech activity; birthing your baby also shouldn’t be,” she adds. “If we supported women, they would have a more enjoyable experience, which is a better start to motherhood.”

… the philosophy of any given maternity unit is also influential. “If you have a high section rate, you have a high instrumental delivery rate, you have a high intervention rate.”

The fear of litigation is there, he agrees, but not a significant factor …

… In Dublin’s three public maternity hospitals, the principal increase has been among women who have had previous Caesareans …

… “… Obstetric care doesn’t make sense, unless a woman has complications.”

She believes changes are imminent as policymakers focus on normal birth and the cost of intervention. Positive findings are coming through in research on the few midwifery-led schemes.

“In 10 years’ time I think we will be looking at a very different maternity system,” Donegan says. “But while consultants are seen to be the experts on maternity care, I think Mary Harney is going to have her work cut out for her.”

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Outcomes of planned home birth with a registered midwife versus planned hospital birth with midwife or physician

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More research to prove the safety of low risk home birth. It’s interesting to note that VBACs are included in this home birth study as low risk. For the record, there were 2 uterine ruptures, both in the hospital-doctor-attended births. The rate of rupture was therefore 0.0154%. Much lower than the oft-quoted 0.7%. The midwives must be doing something right!

Giving birth at home with a midwife present is as safe as a hospital delivery accompanied by a doctor, suggests a new Canadian study …

Actually, they got that bit wrong. Midwife-attended home birth was not found to be as safe as doctor-attended hospital birth: it was found to be the safest. The safest way for a low risk woman to birth is at home with a midwife, then in hospital with a midwife, and the most dangerous way to birth, according to the study, was with an obstetrician in hospital.

The study … analysed nearly 2,900 planned home births in British Columbia that were attended by regulated midwives, more than 4,700 planned hospital births attended by the same midwives and more than 5,300 hospital births attended by physicians.

The research found that women who had a planned home birth had a lower risk of having to undergo obstetric interventions such as electronic fetal monitoring, epidural, assisted vaginal delivery and caesarean section, and adverse outcomes such as hemorrhage and infection.

The babies born at home were also less likely to suffer birth trauma, require resuscitation at birth and less likely to have meconium aspiration, where they inhale a mixture of their feces and amniotic fluid.

The perinatal death rate per 1,000 births was also low across all three groups.

But it was lowest amongst the midwife-attended home births.

“The decision to plan a birth attended by a registered midwife at home versus in hospital was associated with very low and comparable rates of perinatal death,” the authors said. “Women who planned a home birth were at reduced risk of all obstetric interventions assessed and were at similar or reduced risk of adverse maternal outcomes compared with women who planned to give birth in hospital accompanied by a midwife or physician.”

The findings add to the ongoing debate about the safety of home births. According to the study, research from North America, the United Kingdom, Europe, Australia and New Zealand has not found a link between planned home births and an increased risk of complications …

This research adds to the growing body of research that is no longer suggesting – but proving – that low risk home birth is safe. I think we can mount a strong case that the Australian Government is now putting women at risk by failing to indemnify midwives for home births after 2010.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Birth wars rage in your delivery room

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YOU’RE in the dentist’s chair with a painful tooth, feeling fragile.

“That tooth has to come out,” says the dentist.

“I’ll give you an anaesthetic and extract it.”

You’re surprised – you had hoped the tooth would be all right – but you nod and say something like “Ungh-hnghm” through a mouthful of cotton wool and dentist fingers. After all, he’s the expert.

The dentist turns to prepare the needle, when a dental technician leans over and whispers in your ear: “You know you don’t have to do what he says.

“He doesn’t know what he’s talking about. What about root canal? Or homoeopathic remedies? And anyway, you don’t need an anaesthetic.

“There’s a dentist next door who does acupuncture and hypnosis for pain relief. It’s much safer. Oh, and did you know fluoride is toxic?”

The dentist snaps at her to stop: “Ignore her – she’s pushing her own agenda.”

Tense, stressed and utterly confused, you lie back, open your mouth and look up at two medicos glaring at one another.

Who is in charge here? What’s the real truth? And why didn’t anyone tell you there was some sort of power struggle going on?

Of course, this doesn’t happen in dental surgeries. Open hostility between clinicians would be madness, serving only to baffle patients and undermine the whole purpose of creating healthy smiles.

But this is exactly what happens in maternity care, every day, in birth centres, hospitals and homes. Hostility, suspicion, mistrust, abuse and vitriol abound in relationships between obstetricians and midwives, clinicians, academics and activists.

Many readers already will have decided that this article is biased because I chose to use a dentistry metaphor – they’ll say a diseased tooth is utterly incomparable to the natural process of childbirth.

Or … they might say it’s unfair to choose a dentist and a technician to represent the opposing forces, because it implies one is more expert than the other – or that it’s wrong to mention homoeopathy or acupuncture because they have unfair implications of hippiedom.

Welcome to the birth wars. Everything that is published, posted or broadcast about the topic of pregnancy, birth and parenthood is contentious.

Some midwives and obstetricians are moderate and co-operative – but many are entirely opposed to the idea of working together, or sharing expertise …

There seems to be no middle ground. And that’s the problem, according to author Mary-Rose MacColl, a journalist … who spent years investigating maternity care. Her new book, “The Birth Wars” … is an exploration and denunciation of “the conflict putting Australian women and babies at risk”.

… MacColl uncovers a battleground that she believes Australians need to understand. It’s a fight between “organics” and “mechanics” for control and influence.

In MacColl’s parlance, the “organics” are mainly midwives who believe birth is a natural process that has become overly medicalised, with the consequence that many women are traumatised by cold, clinical births, unnecessary caesareans and excessive medication.

The “mechanics” include many obstetricians and hospital clinicians, who believe birth is a risky, delicate process that must be carefully monitored to ensure women and babies are safe.

Between the two sides, virtually nothing is agreed. Can a breech baby be delivered vaginally? Can a caesarean birth be followed by a vaginal birth? Should women be given synthetic hormones to help deliver placentas quickly after birth? Should home birth be encouraged, or even allowed?

… Beneath those practical questions are deeper, theoretical fights that rage with equal vehemence: what is an acceptable level of risk? What does “safety” mean? Is it essential that women have continuous care from a single, trusted practitioner?

Do we even have a right to expect that all births will result in live, healthy mothers and babies – or have we deluded ourselves about what to expect?

… The biggest problem … is not home births nor caesareans nor any of a hundred other contentious issues: the biggest problem is the destructive birth wars themselves.

“They need to talk to each other and they need to work out their differences, so that women get a coherent view about maternity care from the maternity care profession. I think that’s a reasonable thing for women to expect,” she says.
… if there is no consensus between practitioners, how are expectant parents supposed to make decisions?

… Lillienne’s story is told in The Birth Wars, but the short version is that her mother … was labouring in the midwife-run Birth Centre … After many … hours she was transferred to the hospital’s surgical Birth Suite. The baby’s heart rate dropped dramatically during labour, she was deprived of oxygen for some time and was eventually born by c-section.

Reviews found numerous problems: Debra’s high blood pressure was not interpreted as a warning sign at an early stage; confusion reigned over who was in charge; obstetricians were not welcome in the Birth Centre, where midwives were in charge.

… MacColl says there are many birth centres within hospitals, where doctors and midwives oversee completely separate domains ….

… the federal Government proposes to overhaul maternity by subsidising insurance costs for midwives, helping them to operate in private practice. Home births will not be covered.

… The proposal has sparked a furious debate, with home-birth advocates warning that women will have secret, underground home births without expert care.

… “While ever they’re fighting and it’s `organics versus mechanics’ we’ll have no change in the hospital system. We’ll keep establishing birth centres that draw lines in the linoleum and (say): `He’s on that side, I’m on this side and he better not cross the line.

… How crazy is it that you can be in one of the largest tertiary hospitals in Australia and have a situation where doctors are not allowed in? And, at the same time, how can you not recognise that a woman in labour is going to need a quiet, dark, calm environment like a birth centre, instead of a stark hospital room?”

MacColl has two goals. The first is to raise awareness that the birth wars exist, in the hope that parents can think carefully about their choices before the contractions begin …

I thought that was a fantastic article! I’m not sure that the solution is as simple as midwives and obstetricians sitting down and talking. For one thing, I don’t necessarily agree that obstetricians have an agenda that is too dissimilar to midwives’ agendas. I believe insurance is the key.

Currently, obstetricians have insurance and are far more likely than midwives, to be sued. Midwives essentially cannot be sued. For there to be a case, there needs to be solicitors and barristers on both sides. Private midwives are self-employed, and despite the view that women pay excessive amounts of money for their births, I can assure you we’re not wealthy. Essentially, midwives do not have money to fund lengthy court cases. But obstetricians do. And so do hospitals. Hospital-employed midwives are covered by vicarious liability. So if there’s going to be a court case, the woman or her baby are best suing the doctor or the hospital, rather than the private midwife.

No hospital or doctor wants to go through a court case. Even if they win, it’s emotionally and mentally taxing, it takes much time, and costs money. So there’s a strong incentive to avoid court cases and being sued. And the best way to do this is to practice defensively. Do a caesarean sooner rather than later. It’s easier to sue for a caesarean that was not performed in time – clearly, if something went “wrong”, a woman can argue that a caesarean should have been performed. Conversely, it’s very hard to prove that a caesarean was unnecessary. You can always find a reason why it was necessary.

So we have created – via our legal system – a situation where caesareans and any other interventions are encouraged. You cannot be sued for intervening. Only for failing to intervene.

So our caesarean rate is amongst the highest in the world. Over 31%.

We induce many women.

We continuously monitor many babies in labour.

We do not encourage waterbirth (how can you get a woman out in time if there’s an emergency??)

We encourage birth on the bed so that forceps or a vacuum can be easily applied if needed.

All births ought to take place in hospitals – or at worst, birth centres that are right next to the delivery suite and operating theatre. You just never know when they’re going to be needed.

Can you see what’s happening here? The fear of litigation prompts defensive practice, which leads to higher rates of intervention.

But I come back to my original statement: I don’t believe that mdiwives’ and obstetrician’s agendas are too dissimilar. Both want the best for women and their babies. I do not believe that obstetricians are out there to perform as many caesareans as possible, and to induce all other women and extract their babies with forceps. Nor do I beieve that every midwife wants to birth women in the water, with no monitoring of the baby, letting the labour go on for as long as it takes.

But insurance is the key. People have a need for safety. That includes midwives and obstetricians. Noone goes to work with the intention of traumatising a woman with surgery – particularly unnecessary surgery – but this needs to be balanced with the needs of the professional to practice their profession safely, however they define it.

If it were up to me, I would call for two things:

1. Greater transparency of pratitioner’s intervention rates, perhaps on a public register that is easily accessible, so that women are able to choose their health professionals with accurate information; and
2. Reform of our legal system, to a no-fault system such as the ACC Scheme in NZ.

Midiwves and obstetricians getting together and talking is a way away. It happens every day, but actually sorting out the differences will take time. There are many issues at the heart: competition, money, perceived superiority (from both sides!), the list goes on.

National guidelines on midwifery and obstetric care might help. Guidelines that state that within certain guidelines, women see a midwife. If they choose to see an obstetrician, they may fund this themself. And then, if a woman’s condition deviates from normality, as defined by guidelines, the midwife and woman consults with an obstetrician, or refers the woman’s care to an obstetrician. In this model, we see midwives caring for healthy pregnant and birthing women – doing what we do best, and obstetricians caring for women who need their services – doing what they do best. Such guidelines would optimise the care of pregnant women and eliminate the turf wars. These guidelines are in existence, and have been developed by the College of Midwives. Private midwives and employed midwives use them to guide the care they give to women.

The author of the article states, “obstetricians were not welcome in the Birth Centre, where midwives were in charge” – there is no issue with this. Midwives ought to be in charge of normal birth: it is our specialty. What is wrong is to fail to offer an obstetric consult to a woman when her condition deems it necessary. The GP provides most of the care to a family and refers members of the family to specialists when necessary: this is not perceived as a turf war. Why is midwifery and obstetrics any different?

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

More C-sections, more problems

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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After an emergency cesarean with her first baby, Ruby Wales was holding out for a vaginal birth with her second one … finding a physician to deliver her second child wasn’t easy. Her first obstetrician turned her down flat …

… the cesarean is now … the most common operation in the U.S. … performed in 31% of births, up from 4.5% in 1965.

… the intensive and expensive U.S. brand of medicine has failed to deliver better results and may, in fact, be doing more harm than good.

… As the No. 1 cause of hospital admissions, childbirth is a huge part of the nation’s $2.4-trillion annual healthcare expenditure, accounting in hospital charges alone for more than $79 billion.

Because the average uncomplicated cesarean runs about $4,500, nearly twice as much as a comparable vaginal birth, cesareans account for a disproportionate amount (45%) of delivery costs …

… The problem … is that the cesarean … exposes a woman to the risk of infection, blood clots and other serious problems. Cesareans also have been shown to increase premature births and the need for intensive care for newborns. Even without such complications, cesareans result in longer hospital stays.

Inducing childbirth … also is on the rise and is another source of growing concern. Experts say miscalculations often result in the delivery of infants who are too young to breathe on their own. Induction, studies show, also raises the risk of complications that lead to cesareans.

Despite all this intervention — and, many believe, because of it — childbirth in the U.S. doesn’t measure up. The U.S. lags behind other developed nations on key performance indicators including infant mortality, birth weight and neonatal intensive care admissions.

… The maternal death rate began to rise in 2002, and the typical American newborn is delivered at 39 weeks, down from 40 …

… “Cesarean birth ends up being a profit center in hospitals, so there’s not a lot of incentive to reduce them,”

… Among California hospitals, cesareans range from 16% to 62% of births.

Such variation means a lot of women are getting unnecessary cesareans …

… “If the old incision was a vertical, then a trial of labor is not a good idea,” … “But what happens now in the United States is the low, transverse, an incision in the bottom part of the uterus, from side to side. Those heal better. All the studies say, in those types of incisions, the risk is less than 1%, probably a half percent, that it will open during labor.”

… Saddleback supported Wales’ desire for a vaginal birth. Nine days after her due date and after 30 hours of labor, she gave birth — the way she wanted — to an 8-pound, 11-ounce boy.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

If you think the caeasrean rate is high in Australia ….

Visit my website to learn more about my services.

Check out this link to caesarean rates in Florida. Some hospitals are have up to 70% caesarean rates! All the more reason to have midwives as primary care providers for healthy pregnant women.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Repeat Elective Caesarean Before 39 Weeks Increases Neonatal Risk

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If a woman who has had a Caesarean delivery has another such elective procedure before 39 weeks of gestation, the risk of an adverse neonatal outcome increases by 50% or more …

A repeat elective Caesarean at 38 weeks was associated with an odds ratio of 1.5 for adverse outcomes, increasing to 2.1 for Caesarean delivery at 37 weeks …

Adverse respiratory outcomes, need for mechanical ventilation, newborn sepsis, hypoglycemia, admission to the neonatal ICU, and hospitalization for five days or longer all occurred more often in babies delivered by Caesarean before 39 weeks of gestation.

“These early deliveries are associated with a preventable increase in neonatal morbidity and admissions to the neonatal ICU, which carry a high economic cost,” the authors concluded. “These findings support recommendations to delay elective delivery until 39 weeks of gestation and should be helpful in counseling.”

… Approximately 40% of Caesarean deliveries are repeat procedures. As the number of procedures increases, so do the public health implications related to the timing of delivery …

… Compared with births at 39 weeks, births at 37 weeks had more than a two-fold increased risk of the primary outcome (OR 2.1, 95% CI 1.7 to 2.5). For births at 38 weeks, the hazard remained increased (OR 1.5, 95% CI 1.3 to 1.7) …

The authors noted that they “also observed a higher risk of neonatal complications with Caesarean delivery at 41 weeks or later although the overall proportion of mothers delivering this late was small (<5%)."

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

C-Section Births Cause Genetic Changes That May Increase Odds For Developing Diseases In Later Life

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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… babies born by Caesarean section experience changes to the DNA pool in their white blood cells, which could be connected to altered stress levels during this method of delivery …

It is thought that these genetic changes, which differ from normal vaginal deliveries, could explain why people delivered by C-section are more susceptible to immunological diseases such as diabetes and asthma in later life, when those genetic changes combine with environmental triggers.

… “Delivery by C-section has been associated with increased allergy, diabetes and leukaemia risks” … “Although the underlying cause is unknown, our theory is that altered birth conditions could cause a genetic imprint in the immune cells that could play a role later in life.

… As the diseases that tend to be more common in people delivered by C-section are connected with the immune system, we decided to focus our research on early DNA changes to the white blood cells.”

The authors point out that the reason why DNA-methylation is higher after C-section deliveries is still unclear and further research is needed. “Animal studies have shown that negative stress around birth affects methylation of the genes and therefore it is reasonable to believe that the differences in DNAmethylation that we found in human infants are linked to differences in birth stress. “We know that the stress of being born is fundamentally different after planned Csection compared to normal vaginal delivery. When babies are delivered by Csection, they are unprepared for the birth and can become more stressed after delivery than before. This is different to a normal vaginal delivery, where the stress gradually builds up before the actual birth, helping the baby to start breathing and quickly adapt to the new environment outside the womb.”

… “C-section delivery is rapidly increasing worldwide and is currently the most common surgical procedure among women of child-bearing age. Until recently, the long-term consequences of this mode of delivery had not been studied. However, reports that link C-section deliveries with increased risk for different diseases in later life are now emerging. Our results provide the first pieces of evidence that early ‘epigenetic’ programming of the immune system may have a role to play.” The authors feel that their discovery could make a significant contribution to the ongoing debate about the health issues around C-section deliveries.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Caesarean Rates so high even doctors are concerned

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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The number of … Florida babies born by cesarean section is rising so fast that even some obstetricians say surgical births are out of hand.

… 43 percent of Broward County births and 41 percent in Palm Beach County were done by C-section … Florida, at 39 percent, ranked second highest behind New Jersey.

… cesareans cause … more complications … than do natural births, and they pose increasing risks with every subsequent pregnancy …

“Absolutely, something has to change,” … “The C-section rate is three times higher [than 20 years ago], yet babies are not healthier. It’s not helping.

… C-section rates vary sharply. A few South Florida doctors deliver three-fourths of their babies by cesarean, and a few do almost none … About half the births at Holy Cross Hospital in Fort Lauderdale and Palms West Hospital in Loxahatchee were by C-section, yet others do two-thirds naturally.

There are medical malpractice fears. Obstetricians and hospitals … order C-sections for any irregularity before or during labor … Almost no doctors let women try natural birth after a prior C-section …

Doctors also may push mothers to C-sections if the labor drags on for 12 hours, if drugs fail to induce the baby or if the baby is big …

… Doctors contend they are under pressure to deliver surgically. If they don’t and something goes wrong, they are sued. As a result, almost no doctors do natural delivery for breech or multiple births.

“If there’s any untoward event, the first thing they ask is, ‘Why wasn’t there a C-section?’” … “If there’s any doubt, there’s no incentive to take a chance.”

… “The philosophy is, you will never be sorry you did a C-section, but the reverse is not always true.”

… Babies born by cesarean are more likely to go to intensive care … Surgical births … risk infections and anesthesia reactions. And mothers who have repeat C-sections are more prone to have abnormal placenta growth that causes bleeding and complications.

The first cesarean is now the key decision … “Patients have the conception that C-section is a simple surgery … “Every subsequent surgery for C-section has more risk. “About 95 percent of Florida women who have cesareans will deliver every other baby that way. Most doctors and hospitals refuse to perform … VBAC, saying the stress can cause uterine rupture, a complication in less than 1 percent of births.

… Nermarí Broderick said her doctor pushed her toward a cesarean even though she didn’t want it and had no medical risks. So she had two sons at a natural birth center.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Rights and Responsibilities: Where did they Go?

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Article

Feminism is a dirty word, especially if you are a pro-establishment columnist. Recently, the mass media have spurned the safety of homebirth. Doctors were outraged at the death of four babies, without revealing any case facts … Not one mainstream piece has explored why a number of women feel the need to give birth without any health professional, nor have they explored simple tested legal concepts of informed consent and right of refusal. It would seem far more sensible to herd all women into hospitals where they can be controlled. Women cannot be trusted, especially those who challenge the fierce medical domination of childbirth.

As an owner of a female body I have taken it for a test run seven times. I have chosen to use limited medical technologies … I took ultimate control of my body and became responsible for the life growing within me … I paid a price however. My decision to give birth at home with a registered midwife was not respected or funded. At the same time my taxes paid for a system controlled by medicine—a system with virtually no accountability, that allegedly enabled gross sexual assault under Dr Graeme Reeves. These assaults were extreme but lower level violence continues in maternity wards every day …

With this environment how could a woman previously damaged by the system feel safe? We have a maternity health system that leaves one in four women experiencing birth as a ‘battlefield’ and suffering debilitating post natal depression or even post-traumatic stress disorder, usually reserved for soldiers and victims of crime. Whilst women cry out for a mainstream midwifery option that puts their needs first, the medical establishment remains largely unaccountable.

Federal Health Minister, Nicola Roxon put her toe in the water, by announcing the Maternity Services Review last September. As expected the women who have been denied their rights and are funding others …

While acknowledging it is a preference for some women, the Review Team does not propose Commonwealth funding of homebirths as a mainstream option for maternity care at this time.

The Review also considers that moving prematurely to a mainstream private model of care incorporating homebirthing risks polarising the professions rather than allowing the expansion of collaborative approaches to improving choice and services for Australian women and their babies.

As a woman and lawyer, Nicola Roxon is well placed to oversee the design of a maternity system with the established principles of informed consent and right of refusal at the centre. Arguments of safety and wellbeing are thin guises of tightly held power and control by medical lobby groups …

I attended a roundtable meeting of key stakeholders as part of the Maternity Service Review last year. The topic discussed was ‘high-risk pregnancy’. … many women and babies are classified as ‘high-risk’ by an obstetric community that is largely dogged by fear and distrusts women and women’s bodies.

My conclusion was sadly confirmed at the roundtable meeting, when a senior obstetrician said without hesitation that he ‘would be loathed to think a woman would have the final say in her care.’ … As a consumer, passionate about the rights of women to make informed choices, I believe the paternalism that pervades obstetrics and the widespread midwifery practice of maintaining the status quo pose a major threat to reform.

This view is in direct contradiction to common law in Australia. Kim Forrester, a member of the Queensland Bar states, ‘all adults who are of sound mind and considered legally competent have an absolute right to consent, or refuse to consent, to medical intervention and/or treatment. This is the case regardless of the opinion of health professionals as to what is in the “best interests” of the patient or client.’

… A US appeal case heard in 1914 made a landmark decision still quoted today: Schloendorff v Society of New York Hospital, clearly articulates, ‘Every human being of adult years and sound mind has a right to determine what shall be done with his own body; and a surgeon who performs an operation without the patient’s consent, commits an assault.’

The culture of fear and control in obstetrics has enabled these legal principles to be ignored. Women are consistently misled about procedures performed on them. Ironically most women are grateful and believe that either their own or their baby’s life was saved, often after an unnecessary intervention.

Obstetric dominance pervades midwifery. Virtually all models operate with exclusion criteria that are not based on evidence. A woman with a previous caesarean section is unable to give birth in a bath in a birth centre with a midwife sometimes only seconds from operating theatres. Her safety can only be assured in a ‘labour ward’ sometimes only metres away from the birth centre. The capacity for a healthy woman to deliver her placenta without oxytocics is doubted and feared …

The birth reform process is likely to bring with it guiding principles. The Australian College of Midwives developed guidelines for establishing midwifery models. The recent second edition was mindful of the need to enshrine informed consent and right of refusal. They state:

Ethical principles underlying health care and health law emphasize the importance of respecting the autonomy of those receiving health care and the rights of individuals to choose among alternative approaches, weighing risks and benefits according to their needs and values. Midwives, like all health professionals, are responsible for being clear about their scope of practice and limitations, giving recommendations for care if appropriate and for informing women about risks, benefits and alternative approaches.

Should a situation arise in which the woman chooses care outside the recommendations in the Guidelines the midwife must engage with the woman and her family and with hospital staff through identified channels where applicable, in a thorough discussion of the request, looking for options

The Royal Australian New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RANZCOG) do not accept these guidelines … they have released their own guidelines …

It would seem that unless a woman conforms to obstetric dominance she is not informed. If this wasn’t so serious it would be funny.

For too long we have chanted that birth needs to come back to women. Now is the time to empower women with rights too often denied. How can we have a maternity system that largely treats women as incubators where emotional wellbeing is dissected from her uterine cavity; and yet come post-natal discharge the same woman walks out into the world to make major life decisions for her child for the next 16-18 years? As with maternity reform, empowering women will take time, but if the reform process respects the rights of midwives to practice a full scope of practice and that of women that determine how and by whom their bodies are handled (if at all) a true woman-centred approach is possible.

Neither the church nor the state has the right to control a woman’s body. Maternity reform must be based on the three R’s – rights, responsibilities and respect. Consumers have the right to a funded registered health professional in any setting, and the responsibility to demonstrate they have made informed decisions. They deserve these decisions be respected …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Even best hospitals not immune from birth trauma

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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The case of Eric Victor Cojocaru, a now-seven year-old boy born with severe brain damage and permanent physical disabilities, is a tragic reminder that there are risks associated with childbirth, even at a medical facility with the sterling reputation of BC Women’s Hospital.

Childbirth seems miraculous to most of us, but it is not mistake-proof. Untoward events happen and bad outcomes are the result.

Last month, Justice Joel Groves of the B.C. Supreme Court, awarded the boy and his mother, Monica Cojocaru, just over $4 million in damages after finding the hospital, three doctors and a nurse negligent. The hospital and health professionals have filed a notice to appeal.

In his decision, the judge said:

“Tragically, Ms. Cojocaru did not receive the care she should have. … While in a situation of being virtually unsupervised, although a high-risk patient, her uterus ruptured and hemorrhaged and her son … suffered acute asphyxial insult.”

The judge found that the obstetricians did not find out from her former doctor in Romania the orientation of a scar Cojocaru had from her previous caesarean section delivery. If they had got that information from the operative report, they would have realized that she had had a previous C-section with a vertical uterine incision, and she was unsuitable to risk a vaginal delivery.

… Birth trauma is defined as injury to newborns that may be anything from a minor bruise or laceration to a major brain or skeletal injury occurring during delivery.

… In an attempt to bring down the c-section rate in the last decade, doctors have determined that a previous C-section may not preclude the more “natural” vaginal delivery for subsequent births. So women who fit a low-risk profile may be offered a chance at labour in the hopes that they can experience childbirth without surgery and the potential risks that go along with it.

The national average for caesarean births is 25.6 per cent.

Classical (vertical) uterine incisions do carry a high risk of uterine rupture, and therefore women who have had a previous classical incision are advised to have an elective repeat caesarean for future births.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

VBAC safer for baby than elective repeat caesarean

For further information about VBAC and birth options, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

Article

[Elective repeat caesarean] doubles odds for intensive care compared to vaginal birth newborns, researchers say.

Babies delivered by elective, repeat cesarean section delivery are nearly twice as likely to be admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) than those born vaginally after the mother has previously had a c-section [VBAC], a new study finds.

These c-section babies are also more likely to have breathing problems requiring supplemental oxygen, the researchers say.

“In addition, the cost of the birth for both mother and infant was more expensive in the elective repeat c-section group compared to the vaginal birth after c-section (VBAC) group,” …

… Nationwide, the c-section delivery rate keeps rising. According to the study authors, by 2006, 31.1 percent of deliveries in the United States were done this way.

Australia’s caesarean rate was 31% in 2006, and our national VBAC rate was 16.5%. In NSW hospital VBAC rates can be as low as 2%.

Furthermore, women who have delivered once by c-section have a greater than 90 percent chance of undergoing another, the authors noted. But experts continue to debate whether these women should try labor and vaginal delivery, or automatically undergo another c-section, as there are risks are associated with each method.

… Kamath and her colleagues turned to records from the perinatal database at the University of Colorado Denver. Those records ran from late 2005 through mid-2008 and focused on babies born to 343 women who had planned a repeat, elective c-section and another 329 who planned to try vaginal birth after having previously had a baby via c-section.

The researchers looked at the differences between groups in newborn admissions to the neonatal ICU and the need for oxygen for breathing problems, as well as cost differences.

Kamath’s team further divided the women into four groups. Of the 343 repeat c-sections, 104 went into labor before the c-section and 239 did not. Of the 329 women who attempted vaginal delivery, 85 failed … and went on to have a c-section.

Kamath’s team found that 9.3 percent of the c-section babies were admitted to the NICU, but just 4.9 percent of the vaginally delivered babies were. And while 41.5 percent of the c-section babies required oxygen in the delivery room, 23.2 percent of the vaginally delivered babies did. After NICU admission, 5.8 percent of the c-section babies needed the oxygen compared to 2.4 percent of the vaginally delivered babies.

The median hospital stay was three days for babies who were delivered vaginally and four days for the other three groups …

“The failed VBAC babies required the most resuscitation and had the most expensive total birth experience,” Kamath concluded. But, overall, the VBAC group did better than the c-section group …

Women who opt for a repeat c-section should first understand these risks and differences before they make their decision, Kamath said.

The study results suggest another important take-home point … “The decision to have your first c-section is very important,” he said. “There should be a clear medical indication [because] your first may dictate subsequent [delivery methods].”

Women also need to know that vaginal delivery is possible for many women who have already undergone a c-section, Fleischman said. Some hospitals do not allow vaginal delivery after a prior c-section, however, so he suggested that any woman who is planning on one find out early on what her hospital’s policy is.

If you are planning a hospital VBAC, employ the services of a private midwife to advocate for you and provide support and advice. Australia’s hospital VBAC success rate is very low, however homebirth (private) midwives have a high VBAC success rate – some as high as 90%. By taking a private midwife with you to hospital, you can benefit from the high success rate while also being in your chosen birth environment.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Hospital VBAC?

Article

Ruby Wales holds her newborn, Carson. Her first doctor worried more about the risks of vaginal delivery than of cesarean, so she found a different one.

After an emergency cesarean with her first baby, Ruby Wales was holding out for a vaginal birth with her second one.

With a toddler underfoot, the 33-year-old Mission Viejo woman wanted a faster recovery. But finding a physician to deliver her second child wasn’t easy. Her first obstetrician turned her down flat. “She said, ‘No — no way,’ ” Wales recalled.

Once reserved for cases in which the life of the baby or mother was in danger, the cesarean is now routine. The most common operation in the U.S., it is performed in 31% of births, up from 4.5% in 1965.

Same stats as we have in Australia ….

With that surge has come an explosion in medical bills, an increase in complications — and a reconsideration of the cesarean as a sometimes unnecessary risk.

It is a big reason childbirth often is held up in healthcare reform debates as an example of how the intensive and expensive U.S. brand of medicine has failed to deliver better results and may, in fact, be doing more harm than good.

“We’re going in the wrong direction,” said Dr. Roger A. Rosenblatt … “in which more intervention, such as cesareans, is linked with declining outcomes, such as neonatal intensive care admissions …”

… Because spending on the average uncomplicated cesarean for all patients runs about $4,500, nearly twice as much as a comparable vaginal birth, cesareans account for a disproportionate amount (45%) of delivery costs …

… The cesarean rate in the U.S. is higher than in most other developed nations. And in spite of a standing government goal of reducing such deliveries, the U.S. has set a new record every year for more than a decade.

We have the same situation in Australia: every year, the CS rate only goes up.

The problem, experts say, is that the cesarean … exposes a woman to the risk of infection, blood clots and other serious problems. Cesareans also have been shown to increase premature births and the need for intensive care for newborns …

Inducing childbirth — bringing on or hastening labor with the drug oxytocin — also is on the rise and is another source of growing concern. Experts say miscalculations often result in the delivery of infants who are too young to breathe on their own. Induction, studies show, also raises the risk of complications that lead to cesareans.

Induction may also fail. The majority of failed inductions end in caesarean.

Despite all this intervention — and, many believe, because of it — childbirth in the U.S. doesn’t measure up. The U.S. lags behind other developed nations on key performance indicators including infant mortality and birth weight.

And in at least two areas, the U.S. has lost ground after decades of improvement: The maternal death rate began to rise in 2002, and the typical American newborn is delivered at 39 weeks, down from the full 40 …

… “Cesarean birth ends up being a profit center in hospitals, so there’s not a lot of incentive to reduce them,” said Dr. Elliot Main, chief of obstetrics for Sutter Health, a Northern California hospital chain.

But there is a lot that hospitals can do to reduce them … Among California hospitals, cesareans range from 16% to 62% of births.

NSW caesarean rates vary from 15% to 46%. The average is 29%, two to three times that recommended by the World Health Organisation.

Such variation means a lot of women are getting unnecessary cesareans, Main said. “There’s no justification for that kind of variation.”

Physicians … have been blamed for failing to make women fully aware of the consequences of cesareans, and for promoting them for convenience.

But change is underway. The Institute for Healthcare Improvement’s Strategic Partners program trains hospitals to implement a set of guidelines, such as the careful use of oxytocin, and a ban on elective deliveries before 39 weeks. In four years, 60 hospitals have signed on.

… 48% of newborns admitted to neonatal intensive care units were from scheduled deliveries, many of them before 39 weeks.

… After being notified of the correlation, the physicians changed their practices and reduced neonatal ICU admissions by 46% in three months.

The rise in avoidable first-birth cesareans has had a multiplier effect. Most U.S. physicians discourage vaginal deliveries after a cesarean because of some widely publicized cases several years ago in which the uterus split disastrously along the prior incision.

That’s why Ruby Wales’ first obstetrician refused.

“She said it was because there is a 1% chance of a uterine rupture,” Wales said. “And I thought that was weird because there’s more chance of things going wrong with a cesarean section.”

VBAC rates in Australia are very low. Some hospitals flat out refuse to “do” VBACs. Others openly discourage them.

But some obstetricians believe that new evidence supports allowing some women the option of trying for a vaginal birth.

… Saddleback supported Wales’ desire for a vaginal birth. Nine days after her due date and after 30 hours of labor, she gave birth — the way she wanted — to an 8-pound, 11-ounce boy.

“I was so glad nothing happened at the last minute to have an emergency C-section because I’d gone through all this work,” said Wales, resting in her hospital bed with baby Carson in her arms. “I’m so relieved that I don’t have to deal with a [cesarean] recovery because I have a 2 1/2-year-old at home who is very active.”

It can be very hard to achieve a VBAC in hospital. It’s far easier to have a VBAC at home. Hospital policies typically work against natural labour, and interventions such as continuous fetal monitoring and vaginal examinations every 2 or 4 hours will most likely see you labouring on your back in bed. This doesn’t allow you to work with your body to see you through a natural labour.

Visit my website to learn more about my services.

An Obstetrician’s views of caesarean

Article

I’m not sure where this doctor got his information from. Aaahh well (deep breath ….)

Women are often urged to opt for a “natural” birth – such as having a baby at home – wherever possible.

But in this week’s Scrubbing Up health column, Philip Steer, emeritus professor of obstetrics and gynaecology at Imperial College, London, says rejecting Caesareans is like rejecting technological advances in transport or energy generation.

… Most of us “really, really want” to be healthy and yet many of us eat hamburgers …

For the several million years that we were hunter-gatherers, a mixed diet and lots of walking was unavoidable and this is what our physiology and metabolism is adjusted to.

… This sets up a tension between how we are programmed to behave and the logic of what we know is good for us.

There is a widespread misapprehension that human beings behave logically, but many of society’s ills illustrate that most of us are driven instead by our primitive instincts and emotions.

Discussions about choices in childbirth demonstrate a similar dislocation between emotional drivers and logical behaviour.

Until as recently as the 1930s, maternal mortality around the globe was horrendous.

… In many parts of Africa, the current figure is one in 16, and the global toll is more than half a million deaths per year.

Advances in the technology of surgery, anaesthesia, blood transfusion and antibiotics have so dramatically improved outcomes in developed countries that mortality is now one in 10,000 or fewer.

You would think that these technological advances would be greeted with universal acclaim, but many women see childbirth as an essential “rite of passage” and exhort others of their gender to eschew technological assistance …

Advocates of home birth have, within the last month, claimed that “the vast majority of women have low-risk pregnancies”.

… Delivery by Caesarean section now accounts for almost a third of all births in many developed countries, and is remarkably safe – certainly as safe as many of the cosmetic operations that do not excite similar criticism.

And yet many still argue against allowing women the autonomy to choose their mode of birth, either on spurious economic grounds or by suggesting that “birth is natural so we mustn’t become dependent on technology”.

Without the technology of agriculture, transport, housing and energy generation, how many of the world’s population would survive?

Probably our survival depends on recognising our primitive instinct-driven behaviour and learning how to substitute rational lifestyles instead.

Thank goodness it’s only one person’s opinion. Funny how the doctor polarised his ctance so much – home birth versus caesarean. Most women are somewhere in between those two.

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Death twice as likely by caesarean

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

Article

BABIES born by elective caesarean are almost 2½ times more likely to die within their first month than babies born vaginally, researchers have found, adding weight to the argument that caesareans should only be carried out in emergencies.

The study, which involved more than 8 million births in the US over four years, is the first of its kind to focus on full-term babies born to women with no medical reason for choosing a caesarean over a vaginal delivery, an increasingly common phenomenon in Australia.

One in three babies are born by Caesarean in Australia: most of these caesareans are elective. The most common reason for performing an elective caesarean is for a previous caesarean. This is despite evidence that suggests that a vaginal birth after a caesarean (VBAC) is safer for women and babies.

… babies … born before the onset of labour are often unresponsive and unable to breathe without help.

They are frequently admitted to neonatal intensive care units because their lungs cannot eliminate secretions and they lack catecholamines, a vital chemical secreted during labour that keeps them alert and eager to feed.

“We are designed to give birth vaginally. When will people wake up and realise this?” the secretary of the NSW Midwives Association, Hannah Dahlen, said yesterday. “When a baby is born vaginally, fluid is squeezed out of the lungs as it is pushed through the birth canal. The baby can then inhale with clean lungs … A baby born by caesarean quite often comes out gurgling because its lungs are full of fluid, requires suction and is non-responsive because it lacks the hormonal surge delivered during labour.”

… babies born vaginally with high levels of catecholamines were usually alert and quick to seek out their mother’s breast …

The study … only included women who had not had a previous caesarean; were giving birth to a single baby which was head down in the cervix; were between 37 and 41 weeks gestation and had none of the 16 common risk factors, such as diabetes or hypertension, associated with birth complications, in a bid to ensure that only low-risk births were evaluated.

It found the mortality rate for babies born vaginally was less than one in 1000 births while the rate for elective caesareans was 1.73 per 1000 …

Midwifery care reduces the caesarean rate and increases the VBAC rate.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

It’s official: Doctors perform caesareans to avoid being sued

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

“States classified as having a medical liability crisis or crisis brewing by ACOG [the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists] have significantly higher rates of cesarean delivery, and this may reflect a pattern of defensive medicine in response to the liability climate,” said Elizabeth A. Platz, MD, from the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston.

Total cesarean and primary cesarean rates are currently as high as 30% of total births in the United States, up from 4.5% in 1965.

Very similar to Australia’s CS rates.

In 2003, 76% of all American obstetricians reported at least 1 litigation event, with a median award of $2.3 million for medical negligence in childbirth. A common accusation is failure to perform cesarean in a timely manner, and concern has been voiced that obstetricians as a result are turning to cesarean delivery at any sign of complication.

According to the findings that Dr. Platz presented here at the ACOG 57th Annual Clinical Meeting, that fear is well founded.

In discussing the increase in total and primary cesarean delivery rates, Dr. Platz began by noting that it remains poorly understood. As a possible explanation, she cited maternal characteristics (including increasing maternal age, obesity, the number of multiple gestations, and declining rates of feedback) and physician practice patterns.

Dr. Platz said that her results also reflect results from the ACOG’s
1985 survey, which examined changes in obstetrical and gynecological practice behavior that were thought to affect the rate of cesarean delivery. These changes included an increased number of referrals, consultations, tests, and diagnostic procedures.

It has been suggested that medical-legal pressures are a factor in the rise in cesarean deliveries. A number of studies have borne this out.
Localio and colleagues (JAMA. 1993;269:366-673) found a positive association between medical malpractice claims risk and the rate of cesarean delivery. Murthy and colleagues (Obstet Gynecol.
2007;110:1264-1269) found an association between professional liability premiums and rate of cesarean delivery — for every $10,000 increase in insurance premium there was a 15% increase in the rate of cesarean sdelivery.

Dr. Platz’s study was designed to establish whether state-specific cesarean delivery rates differed by medical liability climate. This cross-sectional observational study reviewed cesarean delivery rates and malpractice activity measures.

The states were classified by an ACOG formula, and demographic and population data were obtained from the US census and the National Center for Health Statistics. Malpractice activity variables were obtained from the National Practitioner Databank. The study used ACOG classifications for malpractice.

The Kolmogorov–Smirnov test was used to measure normal distribution, and bivariable associations were analyzed with Pearson’s correlation coefficients. A multivariable linear regression model was performed using a stepwise regression (mixed effects and interactions model) to include all variables and variants, Dr. Platz explained.

She noted that variables associated with higher cesarean delivery rates included ACOG’s Red-Alert states, payout reports, obesity, the percentage of African American women, smoking, and poverty. Red-Alert states have a cesarean delivery rate of 29.9% and are deemed to be in crisis. States with a rate of 28.1% are defined as having a crisis brewing, and those with a rate of 27.2% or less are not considered in crisis.

Commenting on the results to Medscape Ob/Gyn & Women’s Health was Kurt L. Barnhart, MD, MSCE, member of ACOG’s Committee on Scientific Program. Dr. Barnhart is director of women’s health research at the University of Pennsylvania in Bryn Mawr, and served as director, with Janice L. Bacon, MD, of the Papers on Clinical and Basic Investigation.

“First of all, I applaud the abstract, that it quantifies a perceived problem,” Dr. Barnhart said. “We all anticipated that defensive medicine might be a reaction to litigation, and this paper demonstrates that that is indeed the case,” Dr. Barnhart said.

“What one does about it is a little bit more difficult. But with objective evidence . . . that fear of liability is causing C-sections, we can address the problem by reducing liability, thereby reducing 0D C-sections,” Dr. Barnhart explained. “So instead of just telling physicians not to do C-sections, this identifies [the need] to remove the risk, and then they’ll do fewer C-sections.

“So don’t just blame the doctor for doing a C-section, recognize that there’s probably a reason that [he or she is] doing it. And that fear of litigation is the reason,” Dr. Barnhart concluded.

The study was funded by the Medical University of South Carolina. Dr.
Platz has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) 57th Annual Clinical Meeting: Papers on Current Clinical and Basic Investigation.

Our national caesarean rate was 31% in 2006. The VBAC rate was 16.5% nationally. So 83.5% of the women who have a CS will have another one for future children. I believe the solution is universal midwifery care for women, unnless there is a good reason to consult with a doctor. Under midwifery care, most women will have a vaginal birth, and most VBACs (80%) will be successful.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Crackdown on doctor rorts: IVF and Obstetrics

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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MEDICAL specialists will come under pressure to cut fees for some services – especially in obstetrics and IVF – under a plan in next Tuesday’s federal budget to crack down on rorting of the Medicare safety net.

Under the changes, patients charged excessive fees will have new limits put on how much they can claim back on the Medicare safety net. This could leave some people facing large out-of-pocket expenses for obstetrics, IVF… and some other services if they use high-fee specialists.

But the Government hopes its crackdown, rather than penalising patients, will instead put pressure on high-end specialists to moderate charges.

As an incentive to specialists to cut fees, the Government will increase the cap on its coverage of the services – in effect, raising the base level of its rebate.

… Since the advent of the safety net, fees have leapt by 290% for IVF and 40% for obstetrics – giving rise to claims that the system is being rorted.

… Areas targeted for cuts include artificial reproductive technology (IVF), obstetrics and varicose vein treatment, identified in a report into the scheme.

… The net will continue to cover 80 per cent of patients’ out-of-pocket costs once they reach the threshold – but only up to a new limit in “capped” areas.

… The review found that the safety net benefits were going excessively to some specialists.

For some obstetrics and IVF services, of every dollar spent on the safety net, “78 cents is going to providers and only 22 cents to reducing patients’ costs”, the review said. Providers knew patients were likely to qualify for the net and felt “fewer competitive constraints on their fees”.

Between 2003 and 2008, the average fee charged for planning and management of an artifical reproductive treatment cycle increased from $294 to $1148. The average obstetrics fee for planning and management of a pregnancy rose 40 per cent between September 2004 and 2008 – from $1238 to $1732.

Specialists’ incomes in these areas have soared. In 2008, the highest 10 per cent of IVF specialists were paid $4.5 million each through Medicare – including $2.2 million through the safety net.

In addition to providing incentives to moderate fees, the higher obstetrics medical benefits are also designed to give more incentives for obstetricians to practice in under-serviced areas …

It will be interesting to see the added effects if the changes proposed in the Maternity Services Review are implemented. Those changes will provide private midwives with the right to order tests, prescribe medications and bill through Medicare. In effect, women will have the choice of the public health system, a private obstetrician, or a private midwife. Private midwifery will no doubt be far cheaper for women than private obstetrics, and will confer greater benefits in terms of:
- lower rates of postnatal depression
- lower rates of birth trauma
- lower rates of intervention in pregnancy and labour, and lower rates of complications from said intervention
- higher rates of natural birth
- higher rates of breastfeeding
- higher rates of birth satisfaction from women
- less birth trauma for the baby
- lower rates of admission to special care nursery for the baby
- fewer antenatal (pregnancy) admissions to hospital
- more care provided in women’s homes than hospitals
- lower caeasarean, induction, epidural, episiotomy, forceps and vacuum rates
- higher rates of VBAC
- true continuity of care – even with private obstetrics, you are cared for by midwives you have not met before; with private midwifery, all your care is with the same midwife who you’ve chosen
- more choice and control in birth

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

No room at hospital for ‘high-risk’ pregnancies

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PREGNANT women were being turned away from Bowral
Hospital because the maternity ward doesn’t treat high-risk pregnancies, a mother of six has claimed.

The News understands there is only one permanent obstetrician currently on staff after two had left during the past six months.

Several women claim they were told they couldn’t deliver at Bowral because they were considered high-risk and not because of inadequate resources.

… the hospital no longer delivers babies for women who have had caesareans.

Mother of six Kellie Bennett said she was forced to have her first home birth in February after her obstetrician … left the hospital late last year.

… A GP told Mrs Bennett a few days later she couldn’t deliver her baby at Bowral because the hospital had a no-vaginal birth after caesarean policy.

She was told she would have to attend Campbelltown Hospital, but should be prepared to travel to Liverpool Hospital as Campbelltown had issues with their own numbers and may not be able to accommodate her.

Mrs Bennett’s fifth child was delivered via caesarean in July 2007 with no complications.

Worried about where she would deliver her most recent child, Mrs Bennett arranged to meet Bowral’s temporary obstetrician at the time … to discuss a plan of action … She was unsatisfied with the response.

That was the last time Mrs Bennett attended Bowral Hospital.

Bowral Hospital general manager Denis Thomas denied there was a policy of rejecting women with previous caesareans.

… He said Bowral was not equipped to deal with high-risk pregnancies and only catered for women with low risk and selected moderate risk pregnancies.

After obtaining her medical records before her home birth Mrs Bennett said she discovered abnormalities in her previous pregnancies.

She said her fourth child was delivered by caesarean because she was told it was in a difficult breech position but her records show the baby was in normal breech position for a natural birth.

…She added she was told she was at high-risk because of high blood pressure, but her records didn’t indicate that.

“I was upset at the time as I assumed they knew best,” she said. “Maybe women who are told they are at high-risk aren’t at high-risk at all.”

The Colo Vale resident wondered if women were being unnecessary induced and given caesarean births because of the lack of resources at the maternity ward.

…. The birth of her sixth child Matilda on February 27 went perfectly and she recommended home births to other expectant mothers.

… Mrs Bennett said more information on home births needed to be available to mothers if the hospital was unable to look after them.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Lessons from Labour

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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Dr Hannah Dahlen wrote a great article on Unleashed. She is the Associate Professor of Midwifery at the University of Western Sydney. She has been a midwife for more than 20 years. Hannah is also the Secretary of the Australian College of Midwives, NSW Branch. She has researched women’s birth experiences at home and in hospital and published extensively in this area.

I have had the pleasure of Hannah’s company several times and I am impressed by her skill, commitment and dedication.

The front page of the Daily Telegraph ran the sensational headline recently ‘Four dead in home birthing’. The article went on to say that at least four babies had died ‘during homebirths in the past nine months’ and a further four babies had suffered brain damage. This was presented as ‘fact’ although it remains unconfirmed to date.

The facts we have from the latest Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (published in 2008), indicate that 708 women had planned homebirths in Australia in 2006 (0.3%) and there were no deaths reported amongst these births. In this same year 2730 babies died – most of them in Australian hospitals. While we must remain committed to trying to reduce these deaths, the reality is this rate has remained unchanged for nearly 15 years, despite a doubling in the caesarean section rate.

What has been missed in this debate is the difference between a planned home birth for a woman with a low risk pregnancy attended by a competent midwife who is well networked into mainstream services (supported by evidence as safe), and a birth at home where there is no professional care or where the woman has risk factors in her pregnancy (supported by evidence as less safe).

To put some balance into this argument the following issues need to be considered.

Firstly, the intervention rates during childbirth have sky-rocketed over the past ten years in Australia, leaving many women traumatised and fearful. A first time mother in Australia now has a greater chance of having surgical intervention during her birth than of not having it. Miranda Devine’s mocking disregard for the emotional trauma that stems from this reality was evident in her article ‘A home birth is not a safe birth’.

Secondly, options of care for childbearing women remain limited with around three per cent of women able to access continuity of midwifery care.

Thirdly, around 130 maternity units have shut down in Australia over the past 10 years, many of these in rural and remote Australia, leaving women with little option but to travel great distances from family and community to give birth. The rising incidence of ‘roadside births,’ is the unintended consequence of such actions.

Fourthly, privately practicing midwives have not been able to obtain affordable insurance since 2000, leading many to stop practicing, with the remaining midwives practicing uninsured and without visiting rights to hospitals. Midwives cannot even order routine blood tests or ultrasounds and often find it difficult to obtain the results for the women they care for, causing delays in appropriate management.

Fifthly, there are very few financial rebates women can access for midwifery care, and they pay between $3000-5000 dollars for this service. Some women clearly cannot afford it.

The ramifications of these issues are: more traumatised women due to interventions during birth; fewer options of care – especially continuity of midwifery care; fewer experienced, networked midwives available to attend women privately; and no access for women to a hospital birth under a private midwife. The result has been increasing numbers of unattended births and more women with high-risk pregnancies seeking midwifery care at home.

The rise in the numbers of unattended births is ironically being seen in two countries – Australia and the USA – both with the highest intervention rates in birth and limited access to continuity of midwifery care.

The answer to all this is not to demonise women but to stop and consider our responsibility as a society to mothers and babies. It is time we made our maternity care system accountable and really listened to what women are telling us. Over 400 submissions from women to the government, as part of the National Maternity Review should not be dismissed as irrelevant, as Miranda Devine seemed determined to do. It is time to make birth safe, physically, emotionally, culturally and spiritually.

Never before in history have women been able to reap the benefits of safe and satisfying birth like we can now. We need to give women access to choice and continuity of care, where midwives and doctors are willing and able to work together respectfully. We need to begin to reconstruct our maternity system with women, their babies and families at the centre – not the health professionals and their inevitable turf wars.

In the United Kingdom they have made an effort to do just this, with a joint statement on home births produced by the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists and the Royal College of Midwives. In this joint statement they say, “The Royal College of Midwives (RCM) and the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG) support home birth for women with uncomplicated pregnancies. There is no reason why home birth should not be offered to women at low risk of complications and it may confer considerable benefits for them and their families. There is ample evidence showing that labouring at home increases a woman’s likelihood of a birth that is both satisfying and safe, with implications for her health and that of her baby.”

In Scotland they are now urging mothers to give birth at home. In the Netherlands where 30 per cent of babies are born at home, and the caesarean section rate is more than half ours (14 per cent versus 31 per cent), both private insurance companies and government health funds cover only midwives or general practitioners and home birth; or short stay hospital births (anything more women pay for), for low-risk pregnancies.

Financial support for care from an obstetrician is only available to women with high-risk pregnancies. For women with low-risk pregnancies in the Netherlands, outcomes of planned home births are as good or better than the outcomes of hospital births. The often misquoted Bastian study of homebirth in Australia between 1985 and 1990 showed, “while homebirth for low risk women can compare favourably with hospital birth, high risk home birth is inadvisable and experimental.”

The Bastian study provided what we call low-level evidence – the study design was retrospective (looking back at what had been done), it included births by non-registered and registered midwives and it used a number of methods to collect the data (eg searching newsletters for death notices). The one study you will never hear the medical profession quote is the USA home birth study. This was a prospective study (gathering data as it happens) looking at 5418 low risk women who planned a home birth with midwives in the USA and Canada in the year 2000. There was no difference between the numbers of babies dying at home or in hospital, but the intervention rates were significantly lower amongst homebirth women.

The largest study done to date in the world was published this month and showed that out of more than 500,000 births in the Netherlands there was no difference in outcomes for babies of planned homebirths and babies of planned hospital births. What all this research indicates is homebirth is safe for low risk women under the care of competent, networked midwives who work in collaboration with mainstream maternity services.

Recent media has revealed the hazard of ignoring this evidence.

Whatever your beliefs about home birth, the facts are this – never in history, and in no country on earth, has homebirth ever been eradicated. There are two potential responses to this fact. One, we put in place supportive, safe, collaborative systems of care that respect a woman’s right to choose her place of birth and care provider, like they have in the UK and the Netherlands, or two, we bury our heads in the sand and hope it will all go away.

This last choice is the one we have made to date in Australia and it is clearly not working. It’s time to take the proverbial ‘log’ out of our own eye and seriously consider where we have let women down in the maternity system we currently make available to them, before we try to pick the ‘spec’ out of our sister’s and criticise the choices some may make.

Perhaps then we will all see more clearly, and hopefully respond more wisely.

I think what really needs to be addressed is the hospital system that currently delivers the majority of maternity services. We can enable independent midwifery practice, open birth centres – even freestanding birth centres – but until we address the real issue – the medically-dominated and un-woman-centered care that is present in most hospitals, we will not move forward.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

A hospital is not a natural environment for a natural event

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This week a study – the largest of its kind – was published in … an International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology. It showed that giving birth at home was “as safe” as giving birth in a hospital.

Periodically, we get studies like these. They come, they make a bit of a splash and then they go again. What they’re saying however is so fundamental that we can’t ignore it. Because a woman’s experience of labour can shape her entire life, even the relationship she then forms with her child.

I’d go further than these studies and say that giving birth at home, these days, is safer than being in a hospital. A woman in labour needs to be confident and relaxed. Fear is the enemy of labour progressing because it causes the woman’s body to release adrenalin which inhibits oxytocin – the hormone needed to make the uterus contract.

A pregnant woman needs to build a relationship with her midwife so that she feels confident and the midwife can anticipate problems before they actually occur. Despite popular scare-mongering, a woman or her baby don’t just die without warning in labour. There are signs that something is amiss, and these signs can be missed in a busy hospital.

All of this is difficult to achieve in a hospital where you’re in a strange place, with people you may have only just met coming and going (“how are you getting on?”) and with the almost constant threat of induction (which ironically is when they administer artificial oxytocin – having inhibited the natural stuff – to speed things along) if your labour doesn’t conform to their timetables.

In The Father’s Home Birth Handbook (a quite brilliant book, as dads are often more fearful than women of homebirths), it asks which would you prefer? Having sex at home, all low lights and candles; or in a hospital with bright lights, and where everyone is monitoring your every move. A hospital is not a natural environment for a natural event.

Eight weeks ago I gave birth to my second child. She was born at home. I had no drugs. Easy for you, you may be thinking: you were obviously low risk, brave and had a high pain threshold. I was none of those things. I was 42, my previous labour had ended in an emergency C-section and I’d spent five years grappling The Fear. But, crucially, since I’d last given birth, I’d been a lay representative in a major maternity hospital (so I had also seen the wonderful things hospitals could do) and spent four and a half years as co-founder of a parenting board. I learned that the majority of problems with childbirth weren’t solved by hospitals, but introduced by them.

When I hear a woman say, “If it wasn’t for the hospital little Johnny would be dead” and trace the story back, nine times out of 10 you see little Johnny would never have got into distress if his mother hadn’t been in a hospital in the first place.

Home birthsaren’t for everyone. But then, neither are hospital births, which also carry risks. We’re in a unique position now in that we have more medical knowledge than ever before and most of us are near a hospital in case we need to transfer. Yet women are still told of all the risks of a home birth, and none of the benefits. The latter far outweigh the former.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Repeat C-sections Rise By Over That 40 Percent In One Decade, USA

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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The percentage of pregnant women undergoing a repeat Cesarean section … jumped from 65 percent to 90 percent between 1997 and 2006 … Nearly one-third of the 4.3 million childbirths in 2006 were delivered via C-section, compared with one-fifth in 1997.

… although C-sections account for 31 percent of all deliveries, they account for 45 percent of all costs associated with delivery.

C-sections account for 34 percent of all deliveries by women who are privately insured but only 25 percent of deliveries by women who are uninsured.

This is similar to the situation in Australia where we have escalating primary caesarean rates and diminishing VBAC rates. Hopefully the changes proposed in the Maternity Services Review will help midwives to become primary care providers to women – this will help to reduce the caesarean rate. If homebirth midwives are able to access insurance and hence register, this will also help lower the CS rates.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Birth in NSW Today

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

In the past ten years or so, a lot has changed Australia-wide when it comes to birth. Focusing solely on NSW, the latest (2006) report paints a grim picture of birth in this State.

Since 1996, the caesarean rate has increased a whopping 64%. The caesarean rate was a mere 16% in 1990, rising to 17.6% in 1996. It is now 29%.

In 1999, 22.5% women had a VBAC. By 2006, this figure was down to 12.7%, with some hospitals having VBAC rates of a mere 2%.

In 1996, 23.1% women had an epidural or a spinal. In 2006, this figure was 43.5%.

In 1996, 70.7% women had a normal vaginal birth. This figure fell to 60.4% in 2006. Some private hospitals have normal birth rates of 32%. It makes you wonder what is “normal” in those hospitals. That hospital in particular has a caesarean rate of 45.3%. Maybe we need to re-define normal birth. In contrast, another hospital has a normal birth rate (as in, a normal vaginal birth) of 93.4%. It makes you wonder what is possible, given the right information, support and care provider.

Publicly-funded women had the following outcomes in 2006:

Normal birth: 67.1%
Assisted vaginal birth: 8.2%
Caesarean: 24.3%

Privately-insured women had the following outcomes in 2006:

Normal birth: 48.9%, 37% lower than publicly-funded women
Assisted vaginal birth: 14.5%, 77% higher than publicly-funded women
Caesarean: 36.4%, 50% higher than publicly-funded women

In 1999, 0.6% babies were stillborn, and 0.3% babies died shortly after birth. In 2006, 0.6% babies were stillborn, and 0.3% babies died shortly after birth. Those figures remain unchanged, despite our ever-increasing rates of intervention. The perinatal death rate per 1,000 births remained stable between 2002 and 2006: 2002 recorded 8.7 deaths per 1,000 births; 2006 reported 8.8 deaths per 1,000 births. No babies died in home births in 2006. The most common cause of neonatal death was extreme prematurity. Between 1990 and 1996, the perinatal mortality rate decreased from 10.4 to 8.9 per 1,000.

Looking now at maternal mortality (indirect and direct causes), in 1990, this figure was 11.6 per 100,000. The figure came down to 9.0 per 100,000. Because these numbers are so small, when we look at the stats for individual years, we see that the rate fluctuates from 4.7 to 11.6 per 100,000. Maternal mortaility is generally analysed in trienniums to try to even out these differences. The average maternal mortality between 1990 and 2005 is 8.1 per 100,000.

Looking now to home birth statistics, we see the following results:

Transfer rates range from 43% to 22%, depending on the criteria for home birth. The transfer rate is 12% – 20% for privately-practicing midwives. You need to remember that this figure includes women who transfer in pregnancy – eg for high blood pressure, placenta praevia etc. Most transfers were not in labour. Many of the women who transferred achieved a vaginal birth in hospital.
Normal birth rates range from 82% 94%
Assisted vaginal birth rates range from 3% to 4%
Caesarean rates range from 5% to 14%
VBAC rates range from 65% to 85%
Episiotomy rates range from 2% to 4%
Stillbirth + Neonatal death rates range from nil to 2.3 per 1,000, and one study even found a death rate of 9 per 1,000.

Midwifery care has several advantages

Less likely to be hospitalised during pregnancy
Less likely to have an epidural
Less likely to have an episiotomy
Less likely to have an assisted vaginal birth
More likely to have a natural labour and birth
More likely to feel in control during labour and birth
Higher breastfeeding rates
More likely to report a high level of satisfaction with the care and the outcome
You will have autonomy
You will have choice and control over what happens to you and your baby
You will be a partner in your care

So …. where will you have your baby? Who will you choose to be your care provider? Be sure to employ a private midwife if you choose to have your baby in hospital.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Caesarean rates rise as mothers get older

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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MORE than one in five babies in NSW are born to mothers aged over 35, and almost one in three are delivered by caesarean section, latest figures reveal. NSW Health authorities say women are ignoring warnings about the increased risk of pregnancy complications and birth defects as women age.

This may be for good reason. Risk does not equate with eventuality. If it did, we’d all live in hospitals just in case. Another approach is to argue that since some complications are more likely in women over 35 or 40 or whatever age, let’s take the path of prevention, and put our energies into preventing what may go wrong and enjoying the healthful state of pregnancy. Doctors are always available if needed; let’s call on them when we need them, not because we might need them.

For the first time, fewer than half of all babies born in private hospitals had been delivered by normal vaginal birth.

This is a disgrace! In some private hospitals, around 1 in 3 first-time women will birth their baby without forceps, vacuum or caesarean. The article goes on to say:

Women with private health insurance had higher elective caesarean rates (25.4 per cent) than the overall rate of 17 per cent.
The Mater at North Sydney and Kareena Private Hospital in Sutherland Shire had rates of 32 per cent.

The data will fuel the debate between maternity experts who say childbirth has become overly “medicalised” and those who advocate the right of the mother to choose how, when and where to have a baby.

Is it any wonder women are turning to midwives for their care in an attempt to avoid becoming yet another caesarean statistic?

… Over 10 years, surgical births had risen by more than 60 per cent, from 17.6 per cent to 28.8 per cent of all births. Normal vaginal births had fallen from more than 70 per cent to 60.4 per cent in the same period.

And what is the Govt doing about this? Homebirth midwives have caesarean rates of well under 10% – many around 5%. It’s amazing how well nature works, when you let it.

Dr Nicholl said the increased level of medical intervention could not be explained by older mothers alone. He said many first-time mothers who have their labour induced do not progress well and go on to need forceps or vacuum delivery, or caesarean section.

At least there’s some acknowledgement of the way the medical model has messed up natural birth and its outcomes. The vast majority of first time mothers do not require induction. Women who start labour spontaneously usually labour very well, and if pain relief consists of use of water in labour and positioning, you’ll find epidurals and forceps / vacuum are not needed so often.

“There is a level of fear attached to childbirth, and women who have had a caesarean section are fearful of trying to have a vaginal birth the next time.”

I’d be fearful too if I knew that my VBAC was going to be managed with admission as soon as labour started, continuous monitoring, labouring in bed, an IV “just in case”, a recommendation of an epidural, vaginal examinations every 2-3 hours, and a caesarean if I didn’t dilate at the required rate. Not to mention the fear of friends and family and the scare-mongering of some of the medical profession. Again, private midwives achieve a VBAC success rate of 80%+. Why is that you need to have a private midwife in order to have a VBAC? NSW’s rate of VBAC was 12.7%, down from 17% in 2002. Some NSW hospitals have rates as low as 2 or 3%. This is in our private hospital system, where we are supposedly supported in our birthing choices. So long as we are choosing caesarean, induction, epidural. It seems natural birth doesn’t exist in the private health system.

To turn now to this article, we can see how it happens that women end up with “necessary” caesareans in the private health system:

FOR Anita Catilano, 43, the choice of a caesarean … was driven by health concerns and age … She said she did not feel that she had missed out by having assisted deliveries for Alexandra, 9, and Nicholas, 11 weeks. “I have a history of high blood pressure and the doctor said to me that I had more risk giving birth naturally. When the doctor explained some of the risks it outweighed the complications associated with a caesarean.”
She said her second pregnancy was a surprise at her age and she did not think twice about another caesarean. “It was a clear-cut decision and I felt very confident … It was based purely on a medical decision. It was safer for me and my baby.”

What a shame this woman, along with so many others, was mis-informed about her options. How can major surgery ever be seen to be a positive thing, in the absense of any obvious complications? Maybe I ought to get an electric wheelchair and start using it now, just in case I need one when I’m 80. Oh, and while I’m at it, a heart bypass would be a good thing too. You just never know when you’re going to have a heart attack, after all.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting.

Why Birth at Home?

Visit my website to learn more about my services.

Homebirth provides a familiar and safe environment for birthing. This helps to keep stress hormones low, and positive birth hormones high, and can therefore make the birth easier and less painful.

Women choose a homebirth because they believe in their body’s ability to birth, wish to involve their partner and other children more, or prefer to reduce the chance of intervention in their labour. And becuase let’s face it: pregnancy and birth are normal, healthy and natural experiences. We don’t go to hospital to experience other normal, healthy and natural bodily experiences such as food digestion, urination, menstruation, defecation …. we trust that our bodies work, and that these processes work too.

Women choose homebirth to:
Experience fewer complications in labour
Reduce the need for interventions
Use less pain medication
Lower their chances of a caesarean from about 35% to around 5%
Remain in comfortable and familiar surroundings
Have a baby who has fewer problems after the birth
Increase their success with breastfeeding
Avoid time limits being imposed on labour and birth
Experience antenatal and postnatal visits in their home
Improve bonding with their baby
Provide a gentle birth for their baby
Involve other siblings and family
Have choice and control
Reduce birth trauma
Receive care from the same midwife right the way through
Benefit from having more choices available
Benefit from sound education and birth preparation
Have a great birth!

Visit my website to learn more about my services.

Hospital Birth with your own Private Midwife!

Visit my website to learn more about my services.

Many women prefer to birth their babies in hospital, but they want to have the same midwife all the way through their pregnancy, birth and post-birth period. It’s about building trust, having a familiar face and being understood and supported.

There are a range of options. Some women see the hospital midwives or their own doctor for care, and see me for pregnancy, birth and postnatal support.

Other women have some or even all of their antenatal, labour and postnatal care with me, and we birth in hospital. You’ll find this service very flexible – no more waiting in hospital clinics for 30 – 60 mins: I can come to you when it suits you and we can take our time addressing the things that matter to you.

I support you in your decisions, whatever birth you’re planning. We explore what birth means to you and discuss your goals for pregnancy and birth, focussing on what’s important to you, what you need, and looking at ways of making the birth as positive and healthy as possible.

I know that no two women are the same, so services are tailored and individualised to your needs and budget.

The service ….

As a midwife, I can provide clinical care, birth support, information, advice and emotional support as you journey through your pregnancy and birth. I meet with you several times in your pregnancy so we can learn about each other, and so you can more feel comfortable with me. I help you formulate a birth plan and de-brief previous birth experiences. Your consultations may be instead of, or in addition to, your hospital or doctor appointments. Some women have all of their antenatal care with me.

When your labour starts, I come to your home and stay with you until you’re ready to go to hospital. I will stay with you in hospital, supporting you through your labour and advocating for you, until your baby is safely born. You leave the hospital when you feel ready and we continue your care at home, for up to 6 weeks.

I will facilitate communication with midwifery and medical caregivers to ensure that you have the information necessary to make informed decisions during labour and birth. Childbirth education is provided. After your baby is born, I can meet with you to discuss your birth and review your medical records, if requested.

What are the Advantages of Midwifery Birth Support?
Many women ask me how they can benefit from having a midwife provide birth support when they have family, friends, doulas or hospital staff to support them. Family and friends love and care for you, and this emotional attachment can prevent them from seeing situations objectively. Also, they may not be aware of the full range of options that are open to you. Some family and friends also feel reluctant to advocate for you.

Hospital staff are often busy caring for other women in labour: a hospital-employed midwife often cares for 2 labouring women at any given time, while also answering phones, performing administrative roles and so on. So if good birth support and advocacy are what you’re after, your best options are to employ a doula or a midwife. “What’s the difference?”, I hear you ask. Read on to find out ….

An independent / private midwife can provide all the services that a doula can provide. In addition, you benefit from:
- being professionally cared for by a registered health professional who is recognised by legislation
- being cared for by someone who is educated to university level
- being cared for by somoene who is educated in skills such as resuscitation
- higher chance of normal vaginal birth
- minimal intervention during birth
- professional advice and clinical care
- having some or all of your antenatal and postnatal care with your midwife
- lowest chance of caesarean
- lowest chance of episiotomy
- midwives can advise on VBAC options
- lower requirement for pain relief
- higher breastfeeding rates
- lower rates of pregnancy admissions to hospital
- access to midwife means you can change to home birth at any time and have that mifwife as your primary care provider
- midwives can monitor your baby in pregnancy and labour
- midwives can monitor your health in pregnancy and labour
- midwives can liaise with other health professionals if needed

Visit my website to learn more about my services.

Tips for a Successful VBAC

As published on the Essential Baby website

Author: Melissa Maimann www.essentialbirthconsulting.com.au

http://www.essentialbaby.com.au/parenting/pregnancy/tips-for-a-vbac-20090209-81a2.html

February 9, 2009

Are you planning or considering a vaginal birth after a caesarean (VBAC)? With the Australian caesar rate up to 31% more and more women are reconsidering a subsequent caesar. Read Essential Baby’s tips to help you put your plan into action.

Most women choose to have VBACs because they believe it to be safer for them and their baby. Many women want to attempt to have a different birthing experience for myriad reasons. Either decision will be hotly argued by differing camps, so it’s important you read up and make the best decision that you feel comfortable with.

For the majority of women, VBAC is a safe decision, for some women, an elective repeat caesarean section may be safer. This might be for reasons such as placenta praevia, previous classical incision, or a previous uterine rupture. Please discuss with your care provider and conduct your own independent research when deciding between elective repeat caesarean and having a VBAC.

The risk of VBAC is a uterine rupture, which affects between 0.2% and 0.7% women.  The risks associated with elective repeat caesarean section (ERCS) include:

• Hysterectomy
• Injury to bladder or bowel
• Reduced fertility
• Severe bleeding, perhaps requiring blood transfusion
• Increased risk of infection
• Increased pain after birth
• Blood clots in the lungs, legs, or elsewhere
• More difficulty establishing breast feeding
• Increased risk of breathing problems for your baby
• Possibility of separation of mother and baby, if baby is admitted to the nursery
• Delayed bonding

Australia-wide, the proportion of women having caesarean sections increased from 20% in 1997 to 31% in 2006. In 2006, the most common reason for a caesarean was a previous caesarean having been performed.  As more caesareans are performed, we are beginning to see more complications from this surgery.  In 2006, Australia-wide, only 16% of women had a VBAC.  ERCS occurred for 84% of women.

So, you might be thinking, “Wow, I’d really like to have a VBAC, but it seems an uncommon outcome. How can I increase the chances of my VBAC being successful?” Well, the good news is, there’s plenty you can do to have a successful VBAC

1. Choose your place of birth carefully.
Hospital birth, as you can see above, leads to an average VBAC rate of 16%.  Homebirth, on the contrary, has a VBAC success rate of at least 70% – 80%.  This is most likely due to the very low caesarean rates that primary midwifery care entails (home birth results in a caesarean rate of less than 5%).

2.  Choose your care provider carefully.
Obstetricians are specialists in providing care to women with complications in pregnancy and birth.  Midwives are specialists in normal birth, so midwifery care is far more likely to result in a successful VBAC.  If you choose an obstetrician, choose one who has a high VBAC success rate. 

3. Choose your birth support people.
If you decide to birth in hospital, consider hiring a private midwife or a doula to provide support and advocacy. A private midwife can provide support, advice and clinical care outside of hospital, whereas a doula can provide support only. Sometimes VBAC women need extra support – you have more hurdles to overcome and sometimes friends and family don’t often know how to support you well. Resist the urge to discuss your plan to VBAC with people who don’t support you. Just surround yourself with supportive people who believe in you. The right kind of support is most important!

4. Educate yourself!
Read widely, ask questions of your care provider, get second opinions from different care providers, take independent childbirth education classes and research on the net.  Learn about normal physiological birth. When we understand how labour and birth work, it’s easier to see why our bodies work with us and against us during labour. 

5. Value birth preparation
Birth preparation such as Calmbirth and Hyponobirthing can make the difference between natural birth and medicated birth for some women.  Affirmations and visualisations act like a rehearsal for your mind and body. Trusting your body and believing you can do it – the mindset – is critical.

6. Avoid interventions in labour
Typical interventions such as continuous monitoring and epidurals can really work against a successful VBAC.  Instead, get up off the bed, move, get in the bath, do whatever feels comfortable.  Plan to stay at home as long as possible, or even birth at home with a midwife.

Visit my website to learn more about my services.

Fetal Monitoring in VBAC Labour

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

As published on the Birthrites website http://www.birthrites.org/

Caesarean section rates have risen in the past twenty years to a rate of approximately 20% - 25% in the United States (McMahon, 1998, p.369). Repeat caesarean section is cited as the most common indication for caesarean section (McMahon, 1998, p.369). It is hoped that by promoting vaginal birth after caesarean section, we will halt the increase in the caesarean section rates (McMahon, 1998, p.369). A trial of labour should be encouraged after a previous caesarean section, provided that there are no absolute contraindications to vaginal birth, such as placenta praevia or cephalo-pelvic disproportion (Wing and Paul, 1999, p.836). Due to the greater risk of uterine rupture in women having vaginal births after previous caesarean sections (Menihan, 1999, p.40), it is necessary to monitor the labour to minimise maternal and fetal mortality and morbidity (McMahon, 1998, p.369). The midwife plays a vital role in monitoring the well being of woman and fetus during labour, hence the focus of this options paper will be intrapartum fetal monitoring for women who have had previous caesarean sections.

It is known that changes in the fetal heart rate may signal an impending or actual uterine rupture (Menihan, 1999, p.40), so the monitoring of fetal heart rate is vital to the success of vaginal birth after caesarean section. There is indecision regarding the most appropriate method of intrapartum fetal monitoring in women attempting a vaginal birth after caesarean section owing to a lack of research in the area. Therefore, I have reviewed the literature regarding fetal monitoring in high risk women (including vaginal birth after caesarean section), and fetal monitoring in general. Unfortunately, there is no consensus as yet; fetal monitoring in labour remains a controversial issue.

Fetal bradycardia may be the first sign of an impending uterine rupture (Menihan, 1999, p.40). Late decelerations, variable decelerations, or prolonged decelerations may also occur (Menihan, 1999, pp.40-46). Furthermore, there is loss of variability, and reactivity may be poor (Menihan, 1999, pp.40-46). It is important that intrapartum monitoring enables the detection of these decelerations. The goal of fetal monitoring in labour is to detect fetal hypoxia early, so that interventions may be instituted to prevent a neonatal death (Mahomed, Nyoni, Mulambo, and Jacobus, 1994, p.497; Vintzileos, Nochimson, Guzman, Knuppel, Lake, and Schifrin, 1995, p.149).

Until the 1960s when the electronic fetal heart rate monitor became commercially available, intermittent auscultation was the only method of monitoring the fetal heart rate (Seymour, 1995, p.47). Intermittent auscultation may be performed by the midwife, using a doppler sonic aid, or a pinard stethoscope (Seymour, 1995, p.47). Alternatively, the midwife may monitor the fetal heart rate continuously with an electronic fetal heart rate monitor, either externally, or internally with a fetal scalp electrode. Since these methods rely on the interpretation of changes in the fetal heart rate, it was thought that a more objective assessment of fetal well being may improve outcomes (McNamara and Dildy, 1999, p.671; Greene, 1999, p.641). Fetal well being may be ascertained by obtaining a fetal blood sample and analysing acidity (pH). This is a medical intervention, and will be evaluated as a method of fetal monitoring that complements intermittent auscultation. The remainder of this options paper will describe and evaluate each of the above-mentioned methods of assessing intrapartum fetal well-being.

Intermittent auscultation involves periodically auscultating the fetal heart rate. Gilles, Norman, Dawes, Gee, Rouse, and Newnham (1997, pp.143-148) reviewed methods for intermittent auscultation. They found no consensus regarding appropriate intervals for auscultating the fetal heart rate. In first stage labour, recommendations ranged from auscultation every two hours to every ten minutes, with most sources advocating auscultation every thirty minutes (Gilles et al., 1997, p.145). During second stage labour, guidelines for intermittent auscultation ranged from Ôat intervalsÕ, to every fifteen minutes, to after every contraction (Gilles et al., 1997, p.145). It was generally accepted that auscultation should be performed after every contraction. Intermittent auscultation, as discussed in this options paper, will imply auscultation every thirty minutes during first stage labour, and after every contraction during second stage labour.

The pinard stethoscope was invented during the 1800s for the purpose of auscultating the fetal heart rate (Seymour, 1995, p.47). It is placed firmly on the womanÕs abdomen, at right angles to it, with the midwifeÕs ear in close contact with the stethoscope (Bennett and Brown (eds.), 1999, p.224). The pinard stethoscope is portable and readily available, and is an excellent tool for monitoring the fetal heart rate as long as the midwife is confident in interpreting what is heard (Seymour, 1995, p.47). The only disadvantage of the pinard stethoscope is that only the listener may hear the heart beat (Seymour, 1995, p.47).

Mahomed et al. (1994, pp.497-500) conducted a randomised controlled trial on the effectiveness of different methods of intrapartum monitoring. They found that abnormalities in the fetal heart rate were more reliably detected by doppler sonic aid, compared with a pinard stethoscope. They also found that auscultation with the pinard stethoscope was uncomfortable for the woman as it sometimes required a change of position, and that the woman remain still during auscultation (Mahomed et al., 1994, pp.497-500). Lower apgar scores were more common in the groups monitored with the pinard stethoscope, and neonatal seizures occurred only in the groups monitored with the pinard stethoscope (Mahomed et al., 1994, pp.497-500).

During the late first stage and second stage of labour, contractions are the longest and strongest; theoretically, this period poses the greatest risk of uterine rupture (Arulkumaran, Gibb, Ingermasson, Kitchener, and Ratnam, 1989, cited in Chua and Arulkumaran, 1997, p.7). Anecdotal evidence suggests that auscultation of the fetal heart rate with a pinard stethoscope is often difficult to perform at this time, as the baby has descended into the pelvis. This makes intermittent auscultation difficult to perform, at a time when uterine rupture and possible fetal heart rate abnormalities are the most likely to present. For these reasons, women attempting vaginal birth after caesarean section are best not monitored with the pinard stethoscope as the main method of fetal monitoring.

The doppler sonic aid is the electronic equivalent of the pinard stethoscope, and has the advantage of enabling the woman to hear her baby’s heart beat (Seymour, 1995, p.47). It is possible to auscultate the fetal heart rate with the woman in any position, and there are waterproof probes available for use in the shower or bath (Steer, 1999, p.858). In their study, Mahomed et al. (1994, pp.497-500) found that detection of fetal heart rate abnormalities was better with the doppler sonic aid than with the pinard stethoscope, and that the perinatal outcome was no worse than that achieved by intermittent electronic fetal monitoring.

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (1989, cited in Cibils, 1996, p.1382) recommends that intermittent auscultation and continuous electronic fetal monitoring are equally acceptable methods of fetal monitoring, even in high risk labours. In a Birth Centre study of vaginal birth after caesarean section, Harrington, Miller, McClain, and Paul (1997, pp.304-307) used intermittent auscultation as the main form of fetal monitoring. It was performed during at least one contraction, every fifteen minutes. In both the study and control groups, the average apgar scores were 8.5 at one minute, and 9 at five minutes, and no five minute apgar scores were less than seven (Harrington et al., 1997, p.306). Neonatal outcomes were similar among both study and control groups (Harrington et al. 1997, p.306). These studies demonstrate the safety and acceptability of intermittent auscultation to monitor the fetal heart rate in women attempting a vaginal birth after caesarean section.

Generally, the literature supports intermittent auscultation as a safe method of fetal heart rate monitoring. Enkin, Kierse, Renfrew, and Neilson (1995) conclude that intermittent auscultation is just as effective in preventing intrapartum death as continuous electronic monitoring. Thacker, Stroup, and Peterson (1995, pp.613-620) studied the efficacy and safety of electronic fetal monitoring, and found that neurological consequences occurred in similar frequencies in babies monitored by intermittent auscultation and continuous electronic monitoring. Kripke (1999, p.2421) describes intermittent auscultation as a Òhigh touch, low-techÓ method of lowering the caesarean section rate for fetal distress. Gilles et al. (1997, p.147) suggest that intermittent auscultation may also play an important role in neonatal outcome, as the personal support provided by a midwife during intermittent auscultation of the fetal heart rate may contribute to reduced pain relief requirements and improved progress of labour. These are important aspects of the care of a woman attempting a vaginal birth after caesarean section.

To conclude the literature review of intermittent auscultation, use of the doppler sonic aid improves neonatal outcomes when compared with the pinard stethoscope. Literature comparing use intermittent auscultation and continuous fetal monitoring, even for high risk labours, concludes that intermittent auscultation is at least as effective in preventing neonatal morbidity and mortality. Current and accepted recommendations are for the fetal heart rate to be auscultated every thirty minutes (minimum) in the first stage of labour, and after every contraction in the second stage of labour.

The alternative to intermittent auscultation is to continuously monitor the fetal heart rate internally via a fetal scalp electrode, or externally via doppler ultrasound (Bennett and Brown, 1999, pp.418-419). A tocotransducer, strapped to the fundus of the uterus, is also used to monitor the frequency, intensity, and duration of uterine contractions (Bennett and Brown, 1999, pp. 418-419). This form of monitoring is known as cardiotocography (CTG), and the electronic fetal monitor produces a print-out of fetal heart rate in relation to uterine contractions. The fetal heart response to contractions (and fetal movements) is monitored to determine fetal well being in labour (Bennett and Brown, 1999, p.418). Continuous fetal monitoring was introduced with the hope of detecting early signs of fetal compromise, enabling early intervention to reduce neonatal mortality and morbidity (Boehm, 1999, p.623; Parer and King, 2000, p.982).

Continuous fetal monitoring was seen as an important development in the reduction in neonatal mortality and morbidity, however, proponents of CTG failed to acknowledge the contribution that improved antenatal and neonatal intensive care have made to neonatal well being (Dover and Gauge, 1995, p.18).

In fact, it has been suggested that CTG, as a screening tool, has been far from beneficial for most women. There is a lack of agreed interpretation of fetal heart rate traces (Anonymous, 1997, p.1385; Low, 1999, p.725), with the result of increased intervention in the form of caesarean section and forceps deliveries (Boehm, 1999, p.623). The adverse effects of false positive and false negative CTGs suggests that, as a screening tool for fetal distress in labour, the CTG fails miserably (Low, 1999, p.725).

A study conducted by Vintzileos, Nochimson, Antsaklis, Varvarigos, Guzman, and Knuppel (1995, pp.1021-1024) suggested that CTG was superior to intermittent auscultation in detecting fetal acidaemia at birth. This conclusion was correct, however, the authors failed to state the false positive rate of CTG in their study, as opposed to intermittent auscultation. Cibils, (1996, p.1383) states that over 40% of fetal heart rate patterns are abnormal on CTG, yet Vintzileos, Nochimson, Antsaklis et al. (1995, pp.1021-1024) found that only 8.0% of neonates had acidaemia at birth. Although CTGs were able to accurately detect changes in the fetal heart rate suggestive of acidaemia, there must have also been a substantial number of fetal heart traces suggestive of acidaemia that were in fact perfectly normal. A meta-analysis by Vintzileos, Nochimson, Guzman, et al. (1995, pp.149-155), found that one perinatal death may be prevented by the continuous fetal monitoring of one thousand women in labour (p.154). The authors accept that this would occur at the expense of a higher rate of surgical intervention.

A benefit of continuous CTG monitoring in labour is a reduction in neonatal seizures (Greene, 1999, p.647; Boehm, 1999, p.625) and one minute apgar scores of less than four (Thacker, Stroup, and Peterson, 1995, p.615). However, the authors of these articles conclude that the long term effect of this reduction must be balanced against the increase in caesarean and operative vaginal delivery rates (Thacker et al. 1995, p.619; Boehm, 1999, p.623; Greene, 1999, p.647).

Wing and Paul (1999, p.843) and Scott (1997, p.536) advocate continuous CTG monitoring for women planning a vaginal birth after caesarean section because abnormal fetal heart rate traces are the most common signs of uterine rupture. The incidence of uterine rupture among women planning a vaginal birth after caesarean section is quoted at being between 0.3% and 1.7% (Chua and Arulkumaran, 1997, p.6). Fetal heart rate abnormalities occur in 50%-70% of uterine ruptures (Scott, 1997, p.538), but they also occur in at least 40% of labours with an unscarred uterus (Cibils, 1996, p.1383). The literature failed to address how the midwife or doctor may distinguish fetal distress related to uterine rupture, requiring emergency caesarean section, from fetal heart rate abnormalities resulting from occurrences such as cord compression or head compression (Menihan, 1999, p.45). In fact, Menihan (1999, p.40) states that there is “no single, specific change in fetal heart rate (FHR) pattern predictive of uterine rupture prior to the onset of a profound bradycardia”. Furthermore, since abnormal CTG patterns alone cannot accurately distinguish well fetuses from distressed fetuses, I question the accuracy of this form of monitoring in women planning vaginal births after caesarean sections.

A review of the literature suggests that continuous fetal monitoring affords no overall benefit; the reduction in neonatal seizures and low one minute apgar scores occurs at the expense of increased operative deliveries. The options presented thus far are not sufficient enough to conclude that intermittent auscultation is the safest method of fetal monitoring in the woman attempting a vaginal birth after caesarean section. These women require closer monitoring than intermittent auscultation can provide, however, they may suffer unnecessary intervention from the use of continuous monitoring. A compromise is needed.

Fetal blood sampling to ascertain pH (acidity) was developed in the 1960s with the aim of clarifying uncertain CTG patterns (Greene, 1999, p.641). On the basis of CTG patterns alone, false-positive diagnoses of fetal distress are likely to be made (Greene, 1999, p.645). A meta-analysis demonstrated that without access to fetal blood sampling, women who were monitored continuously experienced a four-fold increase in caesarean section rates compared with intermittent auscultation, with no improvement in fetal outcome (Greene, 1999, p.647). When fetal blood sampling was used in conjunction with continuous monitoring or intermittent auscultation, this rise in caesarean section rates was less marked (Greene, 1999, p.647). It is essential that all forms of fetal monitoring be supplemented by fetal blood sampling where indicated, to reduce unnecessary intervention (Steer, 1999, p.859).

Fetal blood sampling has some disadvantages: it is time-consuming to perform (Steer, 1999, p.859), it is unreliable if performed in the presence of oedema or caput succedaneum, and it can only be performed intermittently (Greene, 1999, p.648). However, when it is indicated it may accurately determine fetal acid-base balance in fetuses suspected of compromise on intermittent auscultation of the heart rate. Therefore, it may either confirm the diagnosis of fetal distress, or reassure care givers of fetal well being. Although it is not part of the midwifery management of fetal monitoring, it is capable of complementing intermittent auscultation in women planning vaginal births after previous caesarean sections, thus increasing the safety of vaginal birth after caesarean section, without increasing intervention rates unnecessarily.

In conclusion, the midwifery management of fetal monitoring in women planning vaginal births after caesarean sections is controversial. Standard practice is to continuously monitor the labour using technology that is known to increase operative delivery rates with no proven benefit. On the basis of a literature review, this paper has presented the available options of fetal monitoring. The evidence suggests that even without access to fetal blood sampling, intermittent auscultation is superior to continuous monitoring in correctly identifying fetuses in need of immediate delivery. In the presence of an abnormal fetal heart rate detected by intermittent auscultation, fetal blood sampling may indicate those fetuses that require immediate delivery, or reassure the midwife of fetal well being. Ultimately, the woman needs to be informed of her options for care, and their relative risks and benefits, as she will be the one to experience and live with the consequences (positive or negative) of labour care. This options paper is only a guide, based on the conflicting literature available at this time. Since we cannot say with 100% certainty that one method of monitoring is superior over another, perhaps midwives could best care for women by providing accurate information that facilitates involvement and choice.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting.

Birth by surgery: The skyrocketing cesarean rate

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

Story By Mary Beth Pfeiffer • Photos By Lee Ferris • March 29, 2009

Two weeks before Kristi Ashley gave birth to a son in 2007, an ultrasound exam estimated the baby at a hefty 12 pounds, 10 ounces — too big, her doctor believed, for a safe vaginal delivery. After the child weighed in at 9 pounds, 4 ounces in the delivery room, Ashley came to believe that the planned cesarean section she had, with its attendant pain, long recovery and what she called “emotional damage,” may have been a rush to judgment.

It is well-known that ultrasounds are inaccurate for estimation of fetal size in the third trimester. Why is it still being used as a basis for clinical decisions??

“It’s very hard to go up against your physician, especially at the 12th hour,” said Ashley, 38, of Hopewell Junction. “I think doctors are very quick these days to get scared. They would rather opt for the surgical solution.”

Determined to avoid another surgical birth and aided by a supportive doctor, hospital and birthing coach, Ashley last month did something that has become increasingly rare for post-cesarean women today: She gave birth vaginally, to another son. … From 1999 to 2007, the proportion of New York babies born by cesarean section skyrocketed 42 percent. In 1999, just under 1 in 4 babies was born surgically. By 2007, the figure was 1 in 3 — or 34 percent of births — and there is nothing to suggest that the relentless uptick, evident locally as well, is showing any sign of slowing.

In Australia, the national CS rate is currently over 31%.

In Ulster and Dutchess counties, with cesarean rates in the top sixth of counties statewide, surgical birth rates increased from 1999 to 2007 by 64 percent and 36 percent respectively …

Don’t women question why their caesarean is deemed “necessary” with a wide window of suspicion? If the CS rate is 42%, that’s 280% higher than what is recommended by WHO.

At Vassar Brothers Medical Center in Poughkeepsie … 40 percent [of babies were born by caesarean]. In Ulster County, Kingston Hospital had a cesarean rate of 40 percent in 2007, the latest figure available, while Benedictine Hospital’s was 35 percent, nearly double what it was in 1999 …

The World Health Organization calls for a maximum cesarean section rate of 15 percent in any nation in the world. Anything above that “seems to result in more harm than good,” according to a 2006 research summary in the British medical journal Lancet.

Physicians, midwives, childbirth experts and researchers point to a confluence of factors behind the growing rate of cesarean section … Some say that more mothers are older, obese, more prone to multiple births and, in particular at Kingston and Vassar Brothers hospitals, less healthy, increasing risks of surgical measures. Others contend that overused interventions to induce and augment labor, manage pain and monitor for fetal distress have driven cesarean rates to unnecessary heights.

I disagree. The only important variable is the care provider’s support for birth as a natural process.

All agree that fewer women are opting for once-popular vaginal birth after cesarean, or VBAC, as Ashley did. But some believe doctors emphasize its risk – that the scarred uterus could tear – while minimizing the drawbacks of surgery. VBACs have declined precipitously at five local maternity hospitals … In 2007, just 3 percent of post-cesarean women birthed vaginally at Kingston Hospital, where the procedure is officially banned. The figure was 33 percent in 1999.

VBAC rates have also declined because they are not supported by care providers.

Amid the debate, there is widespread agreement that medical factors are only a part of the story. Cesareans have become so common and accepted that first-time mothers – frightened by societal depictions of overwrought laboring women — sometimes request them simply to avoid labor; doctors, hospitals and insurance companies acquiesce. Moreover, obstetricians, who pay $84,500 a year for malpractice insurance in Ulster and Dutchess and $137,600 in Orange, may see cesareans as a way to avoid lawsuits over injuries to infants from vaginal birth — as well to manage precious time. “I see colleagues around me who seem to operate out of fear,” said Dr. Ira Jaffe, a Rhinebeck obstetrician, [commented]. “They always have in the back of their mind, ‘How is it going to look in court?’ It’s the defensive medicine.” “It’s not in the best interest of women and babies to do this many C-sections,” he said.

….

For a community of activists who say the cesarean section rate is out of control, the question is whether women like Revak are getting both sides of the story – on one hand that cesarean sections no doubt save lives in high-risk circumstances and are generally safe, but that they contribute in other cases to prematurity, cause respiratory problems in babies and increase maternal bleeding and infection.

“Women are getting cheated by not being encouraged to believe both in their ability to birth and that birth can be a positive experience,” said Christie Craigie-Carter, Hudson Valley coordinator of the International Cesarean Awareness Network, or ICAN.

A Paulin bill, signed into law last year, requires the state to educate women on birthing procedures, such as the induction of labor and use of pain-numbing techniques like epidurals, that increase risk of cesarean section. Paulin, a three-time mother who had two midwife-attended babies at home, believes that cesareans are often performed for reasons of convenience, fear and liability. “We have a huge problem,” she said.

“There’s more fevers, wound infections associated with C-section,” acknowledged Dr. John McAndrew, chairman of obstetrics and gynecology at Kingston Hospital, where the cesarean rate hit 43 percent in 2006. “However, it’s safer for the baby.”

Physicians and researchers concerned with rising cesarean rates take issue with that assertion, which they say fails to weigh the risk that a baby will be damaged or die in vaginal delivery.

“In low-risk or no-risk mothers, studies have consistently shown higher morbidity (illness) in infants delivered by cesarean section,” said Dr. Lucky Jain, a pediatrics professor at Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta … “There is no evidence that cesarean is safer for the baby,” said Dr. Jed Turk, newly appointed obstetrics and gynecology chairman at Vassar Brothers Medical Center and a proponent of lower cesarean rates. “It is not a good trend.”

Vaginal birth undoubtedly has risks. One in 5,000 to 10,000 babies suffers permanent shoulder damage, and one in 1,000 suffers moderate to severe brain damage, according to a 2006 article in the professional journal Seminars in Perinatology. These injuries, as well as 6,000 stillbirths, could be avoided nationwide if the nation’s 3 million annual vaginal births were performed surgically at term — but that would mean additional costs and maternal and infant complications.

“C-section is major surgery, which involves a longer recovery time for the mother and can have other significant consequences,” said Barbara McTague, family health director for the state Health Department.

The cost of cesareans in a cash-starved health-care system is just one consequence. A cesarean birth cost the state Medicaid program $7,200 on average for hospital care in 2007 – 49 percent more than a vaginal delivery. The state’s cesarean price tag was $189 million.

Of greater concern may be the effect of cesareans on babies that are increasingly being delivered early. Thirty-six percent of elective cesareans were performed before 38 weeks, according to a study published in January in the New England Journal of Medicine, producing infants who had high rates of breathing problems, prolonged hospitalization and sepsis, a severe bacterial infection.

As significant, the study found that 10.2 percent of all cesarean-born babies were admitted to neonatal intensive care units, and 4.4 percent suffered from respiratory distress syndrome caused by fluids that are normally wrung from infant lungs during labor and vaginal delivery. … death rates of C-section babies before 28 days were nearly triple those of vaginal deliveries, according to a 2006 study by researchers at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control in Birth: Issues in Perinatal Care.

Studies have also found 20 percent higher incidence in both childhood-onset diabetes and asthma among cesarean babies, who have one-third to three-quarters the level of healthy bacteria in their intestines as vaginally born babies.

“When a baby comes out the normal way, they swallow vaginal mucus en route and get a nice dose of healthy bacteria to jump start their digestion,” said Dr. Joseph Malak, a Poughkeepsie pediatrician who called “surreal” the number of cesarean babies he sees on hospital rounds. “This doesn’t happen when babies come out through an abdominal incision.”

Malak believes that the rising cesarean rate may be linked to “a dramatic increase” in recent years in infants with colic, acid reflux, eczema and milk allergies – effects that, some say, obstetricians do not consider when weighing vaginal versus cesarean birth.

While cesarean delivery is safer than ever for the mother, it is not risk-free. According to a 2008 report in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 2.2 women died for every 100,000 cesarean births – 10 times higher than for vaginal births. “Cesarean delivery is associated with an increased risk of postpartum maternal death,” concluded a 2006 report in the same journal.

In New York, the rate of maternal mortality rose 70 percent from 1997 to 2007, when 40 women died as a consequence of pregnancy … three of the major causes of maternal death as embolism, hemorrhage and infection – all of which occur at higher rates in cesarean section.

Growing complications
Indeed, serious obstetrical complications increased by 27 percent from 1998-99 to 2004-05, according to a 2008 report in Obstetrics and Gynecology. These included renal failure, pulmonary blood clots, shock, blood transfusion and ventilation — upticks that parallel rising cesarean rates.

“It looks like there’s an association,” said the study’s author, Dr. Susan Meikle, an obstetrician and medical officer at the National Institutes of Child Health and Human Development …

“There is an awful lot of lying to women about cesarean,” said Dr. Marsden Wagner, former director of women’s and children’s health for the World Health Organization and author of several books on childbirth. “All of those thousands of women who are getting unnecessary cesareans in New York state are at double or more risk of dying and the babies are at risk of dying.”

The argument over cesarean’s benefits is perhaps most pointed when it comes to vaginal birth after cesarean; many doctors fear that the scarred uterus will tear, resulting in hemorrhage and loss of oxygen to the infant.

“There’s a real risk,” said Dr. Maureen Terranova, obstetrics chief at Northern Dutchess Hospital. “They have to be willing to accept that 1 percent risk of uterine rupture.”

“When it occurs, it can be catastrophic,” said Kingston Hospital’s McAndrew.

Melissa Ptacek, 47, of Garrison in Putnam County, said it took her years to recover from a uterine rupture from which her daughter – now a normal 11-year-old – had to be resuscitated. “I wouldn’t want anyone to go through what I had to go through,” she said.

In a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2004, 124 women suffered uterine rupture among 17,898 who attempted vaginal birth after cesarean — a rate of 0.7 percent. Seven babies suffered brain damage, including two who died. A 2000 research summary by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists put the risk of rupture in vaginal birth at 0.2 to 1.5 percent for most women with one prior cesarean.

Proponents of vaginal birth after cesarean say the risks of rupture must be balanced against the downsides of surgical birth. “The conversation about VBAC doesn’t touch on dozens of other concerning outcomes that favor vaginal birth,” said Sakala of Childbirth Connection, noting that cesareans make breastfeeding difficult, lead to adhesions and cause significant pain for up to six months. More than 7,000 repeat cesareans would be needed to save the life of one baby from a ruptured uterus, she said, citing a 2004 British Medical Journal study.

Other proponents argue that not all ruptures are catastrophic and some have actually been caused by labor-enhancing medications, called prostaglandins, whose dangers for post-cesarean women are now recognized.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting.

Birth Trauma

As published on the Essential Baby website http://www.essentialbaby.com.au/parenting/baby/birth-trauma-20081013-4zm2.html?page=-1

Visit my website to learn more about my services.

October 13, 2008

birth traumabirth trauma

 
Birth trauma can affect any woman who has given birth. Although it is experienced by many women, most women do not talk about it and many may not even know they have it. This silence does nothing to help women move past their trauma; it is my hope that this article will help you along the path to recovery.

What is Birth Trauma?
Birth trauma is a normal reaction to events in labour and birth that you perceive as being scary, out-of-control, helpless, or painful. Birth trauma can result from pregnancy, birth or even during the postnatal period. The woman’s response may be one of intense fear, helplessness or horror. Sometimes the events trigger memories of earlier trauma that remain unresolved. Symptoms might not emerge for many months after the birth, or even later, when you plan for the birth of your next baby. 

How will I know if I have Birth Trauma?
The symptoms of birth trauma are many and varied. A common theme is that the trauma interferes with your enjoyment of daily life. The trauma issues may surface at different times, and then completely disappear. Some women experience:

• Flashbacks of the event and sudden, vivid memories. You will usually feel distressed, anxious or panicky when you’re exposed to things that remind you of the event

• Avoidance of anything that reminds you of the event. Some women never talk about their births or avoid hospitals. In contrast, other women talk about their birth trauma all the time; this is their way of expressing their extreme hurt, anger and fear.

• You may also experience emotions such as anger, irritability, and hyper-vigilance (feeling jumpy or on-guard all the time)

• Nightmares of the birth

• Physiological responses when you are exposed to events resembling the traumatic event, such as panic attacks, sweating and palpitations

• Numbed emotions

What causes it?
Most of the causes of Birth Trauma can be avoided or lessened considerably by those looking after the woman, through simple measures such as understanding the woman’s needs and expectations and providing sensitive care in response. This is where continuity of care programs offered by midwives really benefit women! Explanations need to be provided before interventions are carried out, and your permission needs to be sought before any treatment, procedure or examination takes place in order for you to feel respected and safe. Women also have a role to play in clearly communicating their needs and expectations to their care providers. One way to do this is through a birth plan.

There is no standard cause of Birth Trauma. Some experiences than can result in birth trauma include:

• Traumatic birth – eg episiotomy, caesarean, forceps, a baby who was injured during birth
• Emergency situations, including caesarean section
• Lack of pain relief when pain relief has been requested
• Impersonal treatment
• Loss of control over the experience, or the perception that your wishes were not respected
• Being cared for by strangers
• Invasive procedures such as vaginal examinations, episiotomy, stitches
• Separation from your baby
• Feelings of loss of control - eg an induction that you did not want to have, a caesarean for a breech baby when you wanted a vaginal birth etc
• Invasive procedures without explanation or your permission
• Forceps delivery or suturing without adequate pain relief
• Post Partum Haemorrhage

Treatment Options for Birth Trauma
During your path to recovery, you will need a few helpers along the way. A trusted friend or relative can help enormously – someone who knows you well, understands what it’s like to be you, and who accepts you. They need to be empathic and non-judgmental. 

Some women see professionals to help them recover, such as psychologists and midwives. Psychologists are educated to provide therapy for people who have experienced trauma and they provide excellent services for as long as you need them. Independent midwives have usually studied counselling as part of their education, and they have the added bonus of knowing about pregnancy and birth. 

Family and friends can help too – for example, babysitting while you get some sleep or time out from your baby / toddler. Some women like to talk to other women who have experienced birth trauma as this helps them to see that they are not alone. Sharing experiences is very healing and allows you to gain perspective and validation about what has happened.

During these times, it’s easy to forget to take care of yourself. Remember to eat well and get some daily exercise. This will do wonders for encouraging a restful sleep and high energy levels during the day. Limit caffeine, sugar and salt, and tuck into veges, fruit and whole grains. Balance this with fish, chicken, eggs, nuts and seeds, and you have a recipe for health! 

Natural therapies can help a lot – therapies to try include yoga, massage, reflexology, aromatherapy, homoeopathy, naturopathy and yoga.

Journaling is a great exercise; some women also draw. This gives the added bonus of being able to use colour and “left brain” action to express yourself. When you’re journaling, you might want to record your birth story. Some women write it a few times. You might like to write your birth story from your perspective, then from the perspective of your baby, partner, midwife or doctor, and so on. When you’re writing about your experience, pay attention to any feelings that come up for you as you write. Notice how writing makes you feel in your body. As you write your story, you may begin to discover more clearly which events are particularly hard for you to deal with, or to clarify your emotions.

Read books or articles on birth trauma.

Some women also like to write a letter to their care providers (no need to post it), as this helps to express their emotions in a safe way. Other women explore the option of writing a formal complaint to the hospital or Health Care Complaints Commission.

Another option is to obtain a copy of your medical record. Simply contact the hospital medical records department or the Patient Representative. A fee may apply for this service.  Once you have a copy, it’s a good idea to go through your record with a professional such as a GP, midwife or obstetrician who can interpret all the “medical-speak” for you and help you to make sense of the notes. This exercise can go a long way to answering the “why?” for you.

In the end
There is a positive end for all women who have experienced birth trauma. The personal growth that this event affords you, the insight into your values and beliefs, and the journey of healing are all very positive outcomes that can help you move forward in all ways in your life. 

Advice for pregnant women
So, what can you do to avoid birth trauma? There are many things you can do!

• Be assertive about your needs.  Change your care provider if you need to; ask for help; research your options from a wide variety of sources
• Explore what sort of birth experience you would like and then set about finding a care provider who will support you in achieving this
• Write a birth plan so that your care providers know your preferences
• Consider home birth as this will allow you more control over the experience
• Get help early if you need it
• Consider what you will need in order to feel safe during your pregnancy, labour and birth

Visit my website to learn more about my services.

Home delivery too hot to touch

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

Link to article

Supporters of homebirth are asking why the topic is still seen as too hard to handle in this country, writes Thea O’Connor | March 28, 2009
Article from: The Australian

WHEN Natalie Hemingway gave birth to her son 10 months ago, doing so at home seemed an obvious choice. She had already given birth to her daughter at home three years earlier, and both of her sisters had been born at home.

“That’s what I saw when I was growing up, so birthing at home was normal to me,” says Hemingway, 27, who lives on Sydney’s lower north shore.

Homebirth in developed countries was the norm up until the past 50 years or so. In Australia today, homebirth can seem a radical choice, and the women who chose it anything from brave and alternative to misguided and loopy.

The recent federal government review of maternity services has done little to help bring the practice into the mainstream. It has inflamed an already heated debate over homebirths by stating it does not support Medicare funding of independent midwives attending homebirths …

Part of the problem is that both advocates and opponents of homebirths have research evidence to support their arguments.

According to Hannah Dahlen, associate professor of midwifery at the University of Western Sydney and spokeswoman for the Australian College of Midwives, the best available evidence comes from a large prospective study of 5000 women planning a homebirth in the US in 2000.

The results, published in the BMJ in 2005, showed that the rate of babies dying during labour or within 28 days of birth … was 1.7 deaths for every 1000 uncomplicated intended homebirths. The study (2005;330:1416-1419) said this was similar to risks in other studies of uncomplicated home and hospital births in North America.

Dahlen says it is also similar to the risk of first-time mothers having an uncomplicated birth in an Australian birth centre … or Australian hospital … (2007;34:3:194-201).

When the high-risk births … were included in the analysis of the US study, the rate was two deaths for every 1000 births.

- When women have home births with a midwife, and they are low-risk (term, singleton baby, head down, no blood pressure problems etc), home birth has been shown in many studies to be safe. Not only that, women who have home births experience a greater level of satisfaction with their experience, and mush lower rates of intervention compared with hospital birth.

The highly regarded Cochrane database … concludes that “there is no strong evidence to favour either home or hospital birth for selected, low-risk pregnant women”.

Andrew Pesce, president of the National Association of Specialist Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, believes we have enough evidence to worry. He points to Australian data that indicates babies have a two to three-fold increased risk of death with homebirths.

A study of 7000 planned homebirths in Australia between 1985 and 1990, published in the BMJ (1998;317:384-388) reported that deaths occurring during labour and not due to malformations or immaturity were higher than the national average. …

Dahlen counters that this study provides low-level evidence: the study design was retrospective, it included births by non-registered midwives, it used a number of methods to collect the data, including searching newsletters for death notices …

- While there is strong support for midwife (registered, qualified) assisted home birth for low risk women, there is very little evidence that birth at home without a qualified and registered midwife, for women who have risk factors, will yield a good outcome.

Pesce also refers to the 12th report of the Perinatal and Infant Mortality Committee of Western Australia. It documents a 2000-04 death rate for babies that is three times higher for homebirths. The report said the numbers were too small to be conclusive.

… In December 2007 the West Australian Department of Health stated “a preliminary review of medical records indicates that it is likely the setting of the birth did not affect the outcome in at least five of the six deaths”.

- We need clarity on this matter. Babies die in hospitals and they die at home too. The question needs to be thus: In low risk, healthy women, is the home birth death rate higher than a low risk, healthy opulation of women birthing in hospital. The answer, according to a large North American study, is no.

Distinguishing the outcomes of uncomplicated births from high-risk births helps to make sense of the conflicting data …

The study concluded that while homebirth for low-risk women could compare favourably with hospital birth, high-risk homebirth was “inadvisable and experimental”.

The Australian College of Midwives supports this conclusion.

Dahlen says women should still have the right to attempt high-risk births, provided they are well informed of the risks, as well as their chances of success.

- A woman’s right to autonomy must be respected. It would be great if high risk women were supported to achieve the birth they want within a hospital setting.

“Women wanting to give birth vaginally after a caesarean, for example, have a 70 to 85per cent chance of success,” she says.

Versus hospital VBAC rates which sit between 2% and 15%.

“I don’t know of any other area where the battle over women’s bodies is as intense as this. We have to make sure we don’t end up with situations like those in parts of the US, where midwives are put up on criminal charges and women are arrested and taken from their homes to hospital if they are intending any birth at home the medical establishment considers risky.”

Keirse, who has also worked in obstetrics in the Netherlands, characterises the debate as a demarcation dispute. “Holland went through that in the 1970s. When midwives were granted free access to hospitals in the early 1990s, that made a big difference and contributed to improving safety rates.”

Britain’s Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists and the Royal College of Midwives have managed to agree. Their 2007 joint statement, which supports homebirths for women with uncomplicated pregnancies, reads: “There is ample evidence showing that labouring at home increases a woman’s likelihood of a birth that is both satisfying and safe.” … In the Netherlands, 30 per cent of all births take place at home.

“The culture is conducive to homebirths in Holland,” says Keirse. “It’s an accepted government policy and the midwives who conduct homebirths are considered part of the medical profession. They have rights that allow them to continue caring for their clients if they need to transfer to hospital.

“In Australia, there can be large distances between home and hospital, independent midwives have no hospital rights and they are not incorporated into the healthcare system.

“This means that training of homebirth midwives isn’t regulated, which it should be.”

- The training of midwives is most certainly regulated. All registered, qualified midwives have a university degree or two or three. Some are educated to maters level.

One research finding that is not disputed is that homebirths result in fewer medical interventions … compared with the relatively low-risk hospital group, intended homebirths were associated with lower rates of electronic foetal monitoring (9.6 per cent v 84.3 per cent), episiotomy (2.1 per cent v 33 per cent), caesarean section (3.7 v 19.0 per cent) and vacuum extraction (0.6 v 5.5 per cent).

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting.

Birthing your Baby at Home

As published on the Essential Baby website

Visit my website to learn more about my services.

http://www.essentialbaby.com.au/parenting/pregnancy/birthing-your-baby-at-home-20081027-596s.html

Author: Melissa Maimann

  • October 27, 2008
Essential Baby member Alinta homebirthed baby Mason on 9 September, 2008Essential Baby member Azalia homebirthed baby Mason on 9 September, 2008. Photos: Fiona Colvin

 

Homebirth is increasingly being spoken about as an alternative to hospital birth. Some hospitals are now offering a homebirth program, and of course homebirth is available through independent midwives. Homebirth remains a less common choice for birth, with the majority of Australian women birthing in hospital. So why are some women deciding to birth at home?

For many, the belief in the safety of homebirth is an important factor. Women who choose homebirth do a lot of research into their decision. Isis, an Essential Baby member, states, “I began my parenting journey as a trusting, somewhat ignorant and yet positive 24-year-old. My resulting [birth in hospital] and recovery from it taught me a lot about myself and my birthing body. I learnt a lot about our maternity system, about research and evidence based practice. Interactions with hospital staff during that pregnancy and after my son’s birth angered me, witnessing the postnatal treatment/distress of a [new mother] only cemented the knowledge that I didn’t need, or want to be in the system, unless absolutely necessary for any subsequent children. So my third baby was a planned home birth even before conception.”

For some women, the decision to homebirth is made because of distance from the hospital and/or a history of fast labour, making homebirth a safer option: these women face the very real risk of birthing on the side of the road or in the car, unattended by a midwife. Heidi, an Essential Baby member recalls that in her first birth, she did not realise she was in active labour. The birth centre staff encouraged her to stay home. Eventually her “waters broke and I had an overwhelming urge to push. We drove in school hour traffic to the hospital and it was terrifying. I was so scared that I was going to give birth in traffic.  The pain during contractions while going round corners or over speed humps was unbearable.” When she got to the birth centre, she was full dilated.  

Cesca planned a birth centre birth with her first baby, but realised that in an emergency it would be a 15 min ambulance trip to hospital, whereas it was a 5 min trip to hospital from her home. 

For other women, the decision to have a homebirth is informed by the fact the fewer interventions are used at home, and therefore women having homebirths can avoid complications that often result from intervention that is commonly used in hospital – things like induction, epidural, breaking the waters and episiotomy. Suzy (an Essential Baby member) wanted to avoid having “midwives doing extensive internal exams causing extreme pain completely unnecessarily.”  KM saw The Business of Being Born, a documentary on home birth and maternity care in the U.S. “After seeing this, I knew that home birth was the best option for me due to it being safe and having less chance of interventions for birth (I had interventions for my first two births – induction and drugs through labour that I had more knowledge of the impacts of now 9 years after my last child).”

Essential Baby member and new Mum Reenie says, “The more I learned about intervention, the more concerned with hospital births I became as this state has an incredibly high rate of  Caesarean section. I found it bizarre that you weren’t allowed anything stronger than a Panadol while pregnant, but they wanted to put all sorts of drugs into you while in labour!”

For other women, the decision to involve children in the birth is important. Waterbirth is a common method used in homebirth, and this is not permitted in some public and private hospitals. This was a motivating factor for Suzy and KM.

What sort of care and services are available from homebirth midwives?

Isis states, “The care provided by my midwife was second to none. Having 1-2 hour appointments in my own home were such a treasure, compared to the rushed 5-10 minute face-to-faces that the hospital offered (and that doesn’t include the 20-80 minute wait times!). The relationship we built over the pregnancy was one that ensured total reciprocal trust and respect between us. The parameters set upon the birth were personalised to our requirements, not a faceless hospital policy. Labouring in my house meant no restrictions. After the birth – having my own lounge to sit on, privacy, security. My shower, my family, my home.”

New Mum Reenie states, “My midwives were completely focused on me. No running off down a corridor to some other woman.”

Typically, homebirth midwives book no more than four women each month. This allows the midwife time to get to know each woman during pregnancy – to find out what is important to her, her wishes for her pregnancy, labour, birth and postnatal period, and to build a firm relationship. Generally, each visit includes a physical check of the woman, antenatal education, health promotion, a discussion of what to expect in coming weeks and birth preparation. Midwives attend you at home when you are in labour, and then provide home visits (often daily) after your baby is born.

Heidi states, “Having a homebirth was the best decision I’ve ever made.  It was the most wonderful experience of my life. To experience birth like that – painless, blissful, profoundly beautiful.”

So then, what are the disadvantages?
For some women, the cost of homebirth with a private midwife is prohibitive. In Australia, homebirth costs anywhere between $2,500 and $5,000. Despite the cost, Heidi sees the benefit, “I wouldn’t have paid for a private midwife because they are very expensive where I live ($4k). I would now though, because I know how much better homebirth is.”

New Mum Reenie mentions, “I had to educate my fiancé so that he was comfortable with the idea. Like most, he viewed birth as potential disaster, rather than a normal process. He was reluctant at first, but after attending a ‘choices in childbirth’ talk and hearing all the facts, (as well as some hospital horror stories from people attending) he was all for it!”

Can I have a home birth?
Safety is an important factor. While homebirth is an excellent choice for some families, others may choose a birth centre or hospital birth. Women who choose a hospital birth may:
-    have a pre-existing medical condition
-    prefer the option of epidural pain relief
-    feel safer in hospital/birth centre
-    have a condition called placenta praevia, where the placenta covers the cervix.

Heidi points out that “there is the assumption in our society that (homebirth) is generally unsafe”, and therefore some professionals will encourage all women to birth in hospital, regardless of whether they are high or low risk. Gail (username Midwitch) was “told I couldn’t birth vaginally. When I did with no problems, I was told the next one would be too dangerous to birth vaginally. By my fourth homebirth I was also having very large, very late (14 days) babies, all increasing my risk. Luckily my midwife never doubted me or feared I couldn’t do it … I’ve now had seven babies, five at home. No complications, no problems.” 

There are some complications and pre-existing medical conditions for which a hospital birth would be a safer option. For further information about your individual situation, please speak with your midwife or doctor.

What happens if something goes wrong during my homebirth?

This question is commonly asked when the topic of homebirth comes up. Put simply, if something goes wrong, you transfer to hospital. There is a strong reliance on the midwife’s skills at ensuring that you are low risk at the start of your pregnancy, and that you remain low risk throughout your pregnancy, labour and birth. At any time the midwife has concerns, she will discuss them with you and will work together with you to devise a plan of action. This might involve getting a second opinion from another midwife, getting a consultation with an obstetrician or complementary therapist, or referring you to hospital.

KM had a post-partum haemorrhage which was managed by her midwives.

“Unfortunately my pulse and BP would not stablise afterwards and my midwife could not get a line in.” KM transferred to hospital and her midwife went with her, advocating for her at the hospital. Cesca also has a post-partum haemorrhage but “it was mild and the midwife could control it with drugs at home.”

Gail transferred in labour: “My third baby (second homebirth), I transferred in for foetal distress. He had the cord around his neck and two true knots in it. He birthed quickly in good condition so we went home two hours later.”

The other common reasons a women may transfer in labour are for a labour that is not progressing, or the woman’s decision to have an epidural.

What does the research say?
A Canadian study involving 5,418 women who had planned a midwife-attended homebirth found that 12.1% of those booked for homebirth transferred to hospital. 4.7% women had an epidural, 2.1% had an episiotomy, 1% had a forceps delivery, 0.6% had a vacuum extraction, and 3.7% had a caesarean section. In other words, 94.7% women had a normal vaginal birth! The study found that these rates were substantially lower compared with low risk US women having hospital births. The neonatal mortality rate was 1.7 deaths per 1000 planned home births, similar to risks in other studies of low risk home and hospital births in North America.  No mothers died. The authors concluded that planned, midwife-attended home birth for low risk women in North America was associated with lower rates of medical intervention and similar intrapartum and neonatal mortality to that of low risk hospital births in the United States. (BMJ  2005;330:1416)

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Homing in on their birthright

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

Link to article

BY MARK BARBELIUK
24/03/2009

ADVOCATES of home births are calling on the Federal Government to reject a recommendation in its maternity service review that could see an end to babies being born outside hospitals and birthing centres from July next year.

Members of the Sutherland Shire Natural Birth Group said the proposed changes effectively took away a woman’s right to choose how and where she gave birth.

The controversial section of the review involves indemnity of midwives.

The group said the proposed changes meant midwives could not obtain registration to practice without insurance …

While the St George Hospital home birth service is covered by Medicare, the women describe it as inadequate, restrictive and unacceptable. [I have had several enquiries and bookings from women who have been disqualified from this program. Women are not cleared for home birth until they pass their 36-week GBS swab, along with all other compulsory tests. When you book a home birth with an independent midwife, you have more control. You do not have this right when you access a publicly-funded home birth program. Nor do you have any control over transfer to hospital].

Sally Dillon said the government-funded service had a strict screening process …

Amber Johnstone said in the three years the St George Hospital service had run, about 50 babies had been delivered and the “success” rate was 50 percent, meaning half the women who opted for home births ended up delivering their babies in hospital. [That's an appalling transfer rate. While a transfer rate is a good thing to have - it shows you practice safely - it should not be over 20%].

At present, private home births are not covered by Medicare and those who opt to deliver at home pay $4000-$5000, which includes pre and antenatal care. A standard vaginal in-hospital delivery starts at $5800.

Brian Nicholson said home births … “It binds a family,” he said. “I felt I was able to provide so much support and wasn’t shoved to the side like I would have been in a hospital.

“A lot of the home birth experience is about being comfortable in your head,” Ms Johnstone said.

“It’s a far better experience.”

“Women who birth at home are less likely to have interventions including assisted deliveries and caesarean sections.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting.

Home deliveries

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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John Elder
March 22, 2009

JANET Fraser is in labour. Her plan is to drop the baby on the loungeroom floor, or wherever feels good at the time. Has she called the hospital to let them know what’s happening? “When you go on a skiing trip, do you call the hospital to say, ‘I’m coming down the mountain, can you set aside a spot for me in the emergency room?’ I don’t think so,” says Fraser, whose breathing sounds strained.

This is pretty much where we end the conversation that started with me calling Fraser and asking if it was true that her organisation, Joyous Birth, was advocating that women go it alone giving birth at home, with no midwife

“Free-birthing, plenty of women do it,” she says. In fact, Fraser is doing it right now. “I prefer to be an autonomous care-provider,” she says.

By the time she tells me the birth of her third child is “impending”, Fraser has already talked intensely about the likelihood that home births attended by midwives will be illegal from July next year, when the national registration scheme for health professionals kicks in …

She has also talked about how the Joyous Birth group, of which she is national convener, wasn’t encouraging women to free-birth as a means of flouting the law, but to run their pregnancies and birthing in the manner they desire.

“If that happens to be free-birth, then you go for it … We don’t advocate hospital-based birth or being beholden to all sorts of authority figures,” she says.

Janet Fraser’s son, 5, was planned as a home birth, but came into the world via an emergency caesarean after Fraser was transferred to hospital. Her daughter, 2, was born at home …

Fraser is 40. She hasn’t seen a doctor or any health professional since becoming pregnant this time. No ultrasound, no genetic testing, no internal examinations, no stethoscope. [Internal examinations do not form part of the routine care of pregnant women.] Does she have any feeling for how long the labour will go? “I could do this for days. My daughter’s birth was 50-something hours. You just do it — it’s just birth, a normal physiological process.”

At the time of publication, Ms Fraser’s labour was continuing to progress slowly.

[A very small proportion of Australian choose to birth at home].

The home-birth crowd has always been loud, but if they are more strident of late it’s possibly because they are feeling left behind in an evolving birth scene, where hospital midwives are increasingly required to train for emergency situations, including home-birth complications.

St George [Hospital] is one of a number of hospitals in NSW trialling home-birth programs where two midwives are required to attend a birth, and the home births need to be sanctioned according to a set of low-risk protocols [that do not see the majority of women as low risk, and therefore the woman cannot access that services. Women are not "cleared" for home birth until 36 weeks when they have a compulsory swab to determine if they have group B strep, which may or may not be present when they do into labour, perhaps some 4 - 5 weeks later]. Independent midwives generally work alone, with a more lenient policy on risk. For example, independent midwives will home-birth twins, breech presentations and … VBACs.

The status of midwives is the key to where birthing is headed. The Maternity Services Review has recommended an expanded role for them. One option on the table would see their services covered by a Medicare rebate for the first time. However, this would not be extended to independent midwives attending home births.

There is growing enthusiasm for the case that continuous care by a midwife through the prenatal, birth and post-natal stages tends to result in happier and healthier outcomes for a pregnant woman. And that if the midwife role was expanded … then a significant portion of … hospital resources could be freed up, and the nation’s health bill somewhat reduced. [Not to mention the outcomes for women and babies would be greatly improved].

Within this context, home birth might sit more comfortably in the public mind as a viable option.

Justine Caines, secretary of Homebirth Australia, [says]: … “It’s only the home-birth mothers who have experienced one-to-one midwifery who advocate for change … The vast majority aren’t passionate about their experience basically because … The system basically treats them as someone to shuffle through. The whole passion around home birth is about the experience of one-to-one midwifery care.”

Caines sees midwives as the great hope of the overburdened health system. “We fund private obstetrics to hundreds of millions of dollars through Medicare … fees for services that don’t relate to case load. Most of it is a waste of money,” she says.

“(Federal Health Minister) Nicola Roxon could offer a $5000 birth package that would cover continuous care for each pregnancy … as opposed to women engaging in private obstetric care spending $20,000 believing they have the best care money can buy.

“I have a midwife come to my home every day for the first seven to 10 days. The most expensive is $4000 for the entire package … and no health fund covers it. People could get better, cheaper care.”

Barbara Vernon, chief executive of the Australian College of Midwives, says this message gets lost in media sensationalism sparked by organisations such as Joyous Birth and a small number of midwives who don’t make risk minimisation their primary focus, whereas most midwives working privately — and there are only 50 registered with the college, possibly 100 throughout the country — are “very risk-averse”.

“Midwives have the skills and equipment for the safe care of a mother and baby in a home-birth situation, and they recognise quickly when something’s going wrong.

“What fails to compete with the sensationalism is … the evidence showing that a trust relationship between a woman and a midwife, established from early in the pregnancy, means that the woman in labour is feeling safe and less anxious. It’s a better experience.”

Vernon says the flow-on effects of continuous midwife care include shorter labours, a reduced need for drugs and pain relief, reduced admissions to neonatal intensive care, reduced vulnerability to post-natal depression and improved rates of breastfeeding to 12 months of age.

“Even if she has a caesarean, the woman is not traumatised by the process … “It’s the women who get run over by the system that feel most vulnerable after that experience. They can’t understand why all of that happened.”

… is a hospital-governed home-birth system the answer to mainstreaming home birth? Free-birther Janet Fraser says: “It would be a disaster if hospitals ran home birth. Hospitals are dangerous.”

Justine Caine says: “Not until obstetric care is kept in check. The problem with most of (the trial schemes) is that women and midwives are not able to make decisions. Hospital midwives are handmaidens of the doctors. Obstetricians call the shots and much of the exclusion criteria is not based on evidence.”

Veteran private midwife Robyn Thompson, who has spent 30 years assisting home births, says: “It wouldn’t be a disaster. I’m welcoming whatever it takes that makes it good for women.”

Thompson says the average transfer rate over those 30 years had been about 17 per cent … “You anticipate what’s happening…”
…..
Barbara Vernon says: “RANZCOG has a position statement where home births are not endorsed. But some women are going to always birth at home.” [And therefore the approach needs to be one of harm-minimisation, not making home brith illegal by denying midwives access to professional indemnity insurance, and therefore registration].

- I guess the real question is – who owns birth? Midwives? Obstetricians? Maybe it’s time for women to claim birth.
……
Home-birth advocates insist that doctors only have a role to play when a birth becomes problematic. They say doctor intervention has led to skyrocketing induction, epidural and caesarean rates, issues that were at the heart of the Maternity Services Review. [And this is true. Midwives do not intervene in these ways. We cannot perform caesareans, we do not authorise inductions and we cannot insert epidurals. These are in the medical domain.]

In April 2007, Melbourne lawyer Ann Catchlove was told by her obstetrician that she needed a caesarean with her first child because her pelvis was not big enough. “He said, ‘You can keep going if you want but we’ll still be here at 3am’,” she says … The doctor told Catchlove that her future babies would have to be delivered by caesarean. Research on the internet convinced her otherwise. “I found the original caesarean probably wasn’t necessary.”

She also found research that indicated vaginal birth after caesarean was a reasonable option. She started thinking about a birth centre “but none of them would accept me”.

Last November she gave birth to a son at home. “… once I’d made the decision, and met the midwives, I never had any doubts. There’s an idea of hippies burning incense in the background, which is wrong. They were very focused on safety … the birth itself was very smooth and relaxed, other than the pain. I felt very safe and in control.”

Obstetrician Pieter Mourik warns ominously that graveyards are full of “failed home births”. He has called Janet Fraser’s Joyous Birth group “a bunch of nutters” and Fraser herself “a fool”. When told Fraser was free-birthing at home, Mourik was quieter than usual, less on the soapbox.

Fraser had said she didn’t expect anything to happen for another couple of days; that nothing bad happened quickly in a labour and that there would be time to get to hospital if things went wrong.

Mourik paused. “She told me (during a debate) she’d had a caesarean. That’s how a uterus is most likely to rupture. If that happens, there won’t be time … Well, I wish her well.”

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting.

Evidence Increases For Risks In Cesarean Surgery As National Rate Continues To Rise, USA

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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As research continues to mount for the risks of cesarean surgery, the CDC released new, staggering statistics today reporting that 31.8% of women endure birth by cesarean in the United States (2007). [This is no different to the stats in Australia as of 2006. No doubt our caesarean rate is higher now]. This announcement comes after the release of significant findings from the New England Journal of Medicine reinforcing that birth by cesarean surgery before 39 weeks of pregnancy causes increased complications in newborns.

Despite the latest advances in medical technology, health care providers cannot determine a baby’s due date with 100% accuracy. [Babies can come anywhere between 37 and 42 weeks and still be considered term. So if a baby was not destined to come into this world until 42 weeks, and a caesarean was performed at say 38 weeks, that baby would be 4 weeks premature]. Therefore, cesarean surgeries scheduled before a woman’s estimated due date could result in a baby born as early as 36 weeks to a few days before the baby is actually due. During the last few weeks of pregnancy, a baby’s lungs mature and a protective layer of fat forms, both of which are vital developments for a healthy baby … Without time during labor to prepare the baby to breathe, lungs cells may not be ready. Thus, babies born by cesarean surgery, even when they are full-term, need to go to an intensive care unit more frequently than babies who were born vaginally to get help breathing.

Research … [suggests] that cesarean surgery performed prior to 39 weeks of pregnancy increases poor outcomes in babies. Of the babies in the NEJM study born before 39 weeks, more than 26% had complications, including the need to be on a ventilator, respiratory distress syndrome, low blood sugar and severe infection (sepsis).

“Overuse of cesarean surgery complicates the otherwise natural process of birth,” says Lamaze Institute Chair Debra Bingham, LCCE, MS, RN, DrPH, “Allowing the natural process to occur not only reduces risks for mothers in this and future pregnancies, but also reduces health risks for her baby.”

Spontaneous labor is almost always the best indication for a baby’s physical readiness for life outside of the womb. As one of the key steps to a healthy birth, Lamaze International recommends that women let labor begin on its own. … When a birth outcome is good, mother and baby can bond and start breastfeeding immediately after birth-both of which provide the best start for a baby’s growth and development.

Lamaze International President Pam Spry, PhD, CNM, FACNM, LCCE says, “Maternity care in the United States is at a crossroads. The most commonly used practices don’t align with the best evidence for a healthy birth.” …

Cesarean surgery … also carries risks for women, such as blood loss, clotting, infection and severe pain, and poses future risks, such as infertility and complications during future pregnancies such as stillbirth and placenta problems like percreta and accreta, which can lead to excessive bleeding, bladder injury, hysterectomy and maternal death …

Two of the most important decisions a woman can make are where she gives birth and who she chooses as her care provider.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting.

The Trouble With Repeat Cesareans

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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By Pamela Paul
Thursday, Feb. 19, 2009
To avoid another C-section, Barton has to drive 100 miles to deliver in Los Angeles.
For many pregnant women in America, it is easier today to walk into a hospital and request major abdominal surgery than it is to give birth as nature intended. (It’s often the same in Australia, unless you have a private midwife or doula with you) Jessica Barton knows this all too well … her first child ended up being delivered by cesarean section, she can’t find an obstetrician in her county who will let her even try to push this go-round. And she could locate only one doctor in nearby Ventura County who allows the option of vaginal birth after cesarean (VBAC). But what if he’s not on call the day she goes into labor? … in order to give birth the old-fashioned way, Barton is planning to go to UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles.

Much ado has been made recently of women who choose to have cesareans, but little attention has been paid to the vast number of moms who are forced to have them. More than 9 out of 10 births following a C-section are now surgical deliveries … the International Cesarean Awareness Network (ICAN) … found that 28% of [hospitals] don’t allow VBACs … ICAN’s latest findings note that another 21% of hospitals have what it calls “de facto bans,” i.e., the hospitals have no official policies against VBAC, but no obstetricians will perform them …

Why the VBAC-lash? … The risk of uterine rupture during VBAC is real–and can be fatal to both mom and baby–but rupture occurs in just 0.7% of cases … only 1 in 2,000 babies die or suffer brain damage as a result of oxygen deprivation.

After 1980 … more women began having VBACs. By 1996, they accounted for 28% of births among C-section veterans, and in 2000, the Federal Government issued [a] … report proposing a target VBAC rate of 37%. Yet as of 2006, only about 8% of births were VBACs, and the numbers continue to fall–even though 73% of women who go this route successfully deliver [vaginally].

So what happened? In 1999, after several high-profile cases in which women undergoing VBAC ruptured their uterus, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) changed its guidelines from stipulating that surgeons and anesthesiologists should be “readily available” during a VBAC to “immediately available.” …

Some doctors, however, argue that any facility ill equipped for VBACs shouldn’t do labor and delivery at all …

Part of the answer has to do with malpractice insurance. Following a few major lawsuits stemming from VBAC cases, many insurers started jacking up the price of malpractice coverage for ob-gyns who perform such births … 26% [of OBs] said they had given up on VBACs because insurance was unaffordable or unavailable; 33% said they had dropped VBACs out of fear of litigation …

Of course, the alternative to a VBAC isn’t risk-free either. With each repeat cesarean, a mother’s risk of heavy bleeding, infection and infertility, among other complications, goes up. Perhaps most alarming, repeat C-sections increase a woman’s chances of developing life-threatening placental abnormalities that can cause hemorrhaging during childbirth. The rate of placenta accreta–in which the placenta attaches abnormally to the uterine wall–has increased thirtyfold in the past 30 years …

… while many obstetricians say fewer patients are requesting VBACs, others counter that the medical profession has been too discouraging of them … 57% of C-section veterans who gave birth in 2005 were interested in a VBAC but were denied the option of having one.

… “the pendulum has swung too far the other way,” So how to reverse the trend? For one thing, patients and doctors need to be as aware of the risks of multiple cesareans as they are of those of VBACs. [Concern arises that perhaps doctors will forget how to do VBACs.]

- Well, fortunately, you “do” a VBAC the same way you “do” a natural birth. By supporting the natural processes that women’s bodies are designed to perform. In this country, VBAC rates are between 10% and 16%. In some private hospitals, the rates are as low as 1%. In homebirth, the rates of VBAC are at least 80%. And it is a numbers game, so put yourself where the numbers are stacked with you, not against you. Plan a home birth for your VBAC, or employ a private midwife for a hospital birth.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting.

Hospitals curb caesarean births

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The Sunday Times
February 15, 2009

Hospitals curb caesarean birthsSarah-Kate Templeton, Health Editor

NHS trusts have … barred women from routinely having elective caesareans because they cost too much. The procedure, which costs twice as much as a natural birth, will be rationed … so that it is only available to women with specific medical conditions.

Some top obstetricians condemn the decision, arguing that, while it will curb the fashion for choosing caesareans to reduce the pain of childbirth, it will also penalise those who opt for them on the grounds that they are safer for the mother.

Caesareans have been placed on the same lists for rationing by the NHS trusts in Greater Manchester as infertility treatment, cosmetic surgery and acupuncture.

The lists, called Effective Use of Resources Policies, state that planned caesarean sections should only routinely be offered to women in particular categories. They include women who have previously already had at least two caesareans.

About 23% of deliveries in Britain are by caesarean section, and, of these, more than half are emergency operations.

The CS rate quoted is 23%. If only our National CS rate could be that low! In 2006, Australia’s CS rate was 31%, up from 28% in 2005. Maybe it’s 35% now? I was interested to read that VBAC is not an indication for elective repeat CS, but VBA2C is. Sounds sensible! I’d like to see something similar here in Australia. It’s a shame that here, a woman has a greater right to a caesarean, than a homebirth. We all know which option is safer, cheaper and more satisfying for mothers and babies. It also begs the question – how many women would opt for an elective caesarean if they had access to continuity of midwifery care?

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting.

Midwives in the UK Help Women Who Have Previously had a Caesarean Section to Choose a Normal Birth for their Next Baby

For more information, contact Melissa Maimann at www.essentialbirthconsulting.com.au
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Midwives At Southampton, England, Helping Women Who Have Previously Had A Caesarean Section To Choose A Normal Birth For Their Next Baby17 Feb 2009

Nationally, the number of c-sections has dramatically increased over the last decade. This has led the NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement to develop a toolkit to help midwives reduce these numbers.

… there has been a 4 per cent reduction in the number of c-sections [since this toolkit was implemented.]

One of the initiatives is to introduce midwife-led care for women having vaginal birth following a previous caesarean.

The consultant midwife … who helped set up the project said, “We try not to medicalise the event, so from the beginning the mother will see a midwife, rather than a doctor. They will have a risk assessment to make sure they are suitable for midwife-led care and VBAC, and we fully explain the risks and benefits so they can make an informed choice.”

After a normal birth, recovery tends to be quicker and the mother is up and about sooner. This means there is less risk of deep vein thrombosis (DVT), and breast-feeding also tends to get off to a more successful start.

What a fantastic initiative! It would be great if it could be implemented as a routine here in Australia.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting.

NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement