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Home Births Up By 20 Percent: Is It Something You Should Consider?

By LEANNE ITALIE   07/ 5/11 03:41 PM ET   AP

Home Births

NEW YORK -- One mother chose home birth because it was cheaper than going to a hospital. Another gave birth at home because she has multiple sclerosis and feared unnecessary medical intervention. And some choose home births after cesarean sections with their first babies.

Whatever their motivation, all are among a striking trend: Home births increased 20 percent from 2004 to 2008, accounting for 28,357 of 4.2 million U.S. births, according to a study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released in May.

White women led the drive, with 1 in 98 having babies at home in 2008, compared to 1 in 357 black women and 1 in 500 Hispanic women.

Sherry Hopkins, a Las Vegas midwife, said the women whose home births she's attended include a pediatrician, an emergency room doctor and nurses. "We're definitely seeing well-educated and well-informed people who want to give birth at home," she said.

Robbie Davis-Floyd, a medical anthropologist at the University of Texas at Austin and researcher on global trends in childbirth, obstetrics and midwifery, said "at first, in the 1970s, it was largely a hippie, countercultural thing to give birth outside of the hospital. Over the years, as the formerly `lay' midwives have become far more sophisticated, so has their clientele."

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, which certifies OB-GYNs, warns that home births can be unsafe, especially if the mother has high-risk conditions, if a birth attendant is inadequately trained and if there's no nearby hospital in case of emergency. Some doctors also question whether a "feminist machoism" is at play in wanting to give birth at home.

But home birthers say they want to be free of drugs, fetal monitors, IVs and pressure to hurry their labor at the behest of doctors and hospitals. They prefer to labor in tubs of water or on hands and knees, walk around their living rooms or take comfort in their own beds, surrounded by loved ones as they listen to music or hypnosis recordings with the support of midwives and doulas. Some even go without midwives and rely on husbands or other non-professionals for support.

Julie Jacobs, 38, of Baltimore, who has multiple sclerosis, said she "chose midwives and hypnosis because I wanted to surround myself with people who would support me as a birthing mother, rather than view me as an MS patient who would be a liability in need of interventions at every turn."

Her first two children were born in a freestanding birth center operated by midwives. After the center closed, her third child was born at home in 2007. "If I had been in a hospital I probably would have had C-sections for all three," she said. "With the first, I would have been terrified to try a home birth. After the second one I was like, hey, I can't necessarily walk in a straight line, but I can do this."

Some home birthers cite concerns over cesarean sections. The U.S. rate of C-sections in hospitals hovers around 32 percent, soaring up to 60 percent in some areas. In some cases, there's a "too posh to push" mentality of scheduled inductions for convenience sake (Victoria Beckham had three).

Gina Crosley-Corcoran, a Chicago blogger and pre-law student, had a C-section with her first baby and chronicled nightmarish pressure from nurses and doctors to abandon a vaginal birth with her second. She followed up with a third child born at home in April.

"I do think there's a backlash against what's happening in hospitals," she said. "Women are finding that the hospital experience wasn't a good one."

In Portland, Ore., acupuncturist Becca Seitz gave birth to both her children at home, the first time in 2007 because she and her husband were without insurance.

"It was never on my radar, until we couldn't afford otherwise," she said. "I'm granola, but not that granola. It cost us $3,300, as opposed to over $10,000 in a hospital."

Her midwife was prepared with the drug Pitocin, oxygen and other medical equipment.

"They were both born over the toilet," she said. "It was a nice position. It's a way that we're used to pushing."

Dr. Joel Evans, the rare board-certified OB-GYN who supports home birth, said the medical establishment has become "resistant to change, resistant to dialogue, resistant to flexibility."

"Women are now looking for alternatives where they can be treated as individuals, as opposed to being forced to comply with protocols, which however well meaning, have the impact of both medicalizing childbirth and increasing stress and anxiety around delivery," said Evans, founder and director of the Center for Women's Health in Stamford, Conn., and an assistant clinical professor at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York.

By some accounts, in 1900, 95 percent of U.S. births took place at home. That slipped to half by 1938 and less than 1 percent by 1955.

Today, most midwife-attended births take place in hospitals in the U.S., and many midwives are licensed nurses. But there are also close to 1,700 midwives who practice outside of hospitals, said Davis-Floyd. In 27 states, so-called "lay" midwives who lack nurses' training but are licensed and certified as professional midwives can attend births legally.

Some women chose home births after learning about it from TV shows or documentaries. The show-all "House of Babies" on Discovery Health Channel from 2005 to 2009 was filmed at a Miami birth center run by a midwife. Actress Ricki Lake screened her movie, "The Business of Being Born," around the United States in 2007 after giving birth at home to her second child. The film also showed Lake's filmmaking partner, Abby Epstein, documenting her own frantic taxi ride to a New York hospital after abandoning her home birth because the baby presented feet first, with the umbilical cord wrapped around his neck.

Michael Robertson, 27, of Poulsbo, Wash., knew nothing about home birth before watching the TLC series.

"I just really had my mind set on a water birth, like on the show," she said. "It looked so cool, so relaxing."

She had two babies at home, but opted for a planned hospital delivery for her third child due to complications. She's glad she had the choice. "If you don't know your options, you don't know what's out there to begin with," she said. "I don't think an OB will say to you, `Hey, did you know there was this thing called home birth.'"

Most studies of home birth have been criticized as too small to accurately assess safety or distinguish between planned and unplanned deliveries, according to researchers Kenneth C. Johnson and Betty-Anne Daviss.

In 2005, they published a study in the British Medical Journal based on nearly 5,500 home births involving certified professional midwives in the United States and Canada. The study, considered one of the largest for home births, showed 88 percent had positive outcomes, while 12 percent of the women were transferred to hospitals, including 9 percent for preventive reasons and 3 percent for emergencies.

The study showed an infant mortality rate of 2 out of every 1,000 births, about the same as in hospitals at the time, Davis-Floyd said.

"Women who are truly educated in evidence-based maternity care understand the safety and the multiple benefits of home birth," she said.

___

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NEW YORK -- One mother chose home birth because it was cheaper than going to a hospital. Another gave birth at home because she has multiple sclerosis and feared unnecessary medical intervention. And ...
NEW YORK -- One mother chose home birth because it was cheaper than going to a hospital. Another gave birth at home because she has multiple sclerosis and feared unnecessary medical intervention. And ...
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09:04 PM on 07/09/2011
There are women who have no choice but to birth at home if they don't have insurance of some kind.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
William J Unverferth Sr
Snark attack.
05:50 PM on 07/09/2011
Pick your OB and Hosp with care. Also ask for an epidural before it's needed. We had three kids with the same OBs and hospitals and it was wonderful.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
theveggiedude
my body is a temple, not a living graveyard
02:46 AM on 07/09/2011
I was born at home and I hear that the first president to be born in the hospital was Jimmy Carter.
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irishdoc
It's not me..it's you. Really
05:54 PM on 07/08/2011
Woman are free to make the decision-just be prepared to deal with the consequences.

www.hurtbyhomebirth.blogspot.com
09:50 AM on 07/09/2011
You are so right. If you decide to give birth in a hospital, you are taking some really unnecessary risks. I suppose this woman wishes she had given birth at home because she would still have her arms and legs which she lost to the flesh-eating bacterial infection contracted at the hospital http://www.websleuths.com/forums/archive/index.php/t-42281.html. This husband also wishes he had made another choice, because he wouldn't have a brain-damaged wife caused by medical error injecting cleaning solution into her epidural http://growingyourbaby.com/2010/09/16/woman-damaged-during-epidural-recovering-slowly/ When you put +risks +hospitalization or +hospital birth into a search engine, you come up with unbelieveable risks. The 2 major risks are infections and medical errors. And the majority of people in the US say, "THAT is where I want to have my baby." In a recent thread one man justified his wife's hospital birth because it was better for the baby to have the "sterile" environment of the hospital! Don't people do any kind of research before having a baby? And don't even get me started on the risks of the high c-section rate, inductions, forceps, and a myriad of other unnecessary tortures placed on women & children. We really have to fix this broken maternity system in the US. Just look to virtually ANY other developed country and they do it better than here, evidenced by less women and children dying in childbirth.
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irishdoc
It's not me..it's you. Really
03:49 PM on 07/10/2011
I don't disagree that we need to fix our maternity system in the US, but the over romanticising of home birth is not the best way to accomplish that. In the US we have far too many woman who are too old and too overweight giving birth. We have far more diabetics choosing to have kids. We have few if any oversight on assisted reproduction and allow litters of children to be implanted in women.
But home birth creates a whole different set of problems for both individuals and society at large. Home birth victims are often astounded to find that there midwives have no malpractice insurance and both them and society at large bear the financial costs of a damaged child. Given the lack of oversight and profession requirements of midwives, there is no where to report ineffective and dangerous practicioners, leaving the public at large to conclude that since there are no formal complaints, that there are no problems. The dangers of home birth are routinely downplayed and woman and children who have been victimized by it are reluctant to speak out because of the backlash from zealots who disregard the dangers inherent in giving birth. There are two sides to the home birth story, and until woman are hearing both of them we can not continue to believe that they are making well informed decisions.
10:47 AM on 07/08/2011
I have a heart condition that makes me not want to have a home birth, but I think if I were totally healthy, I would go for it.
12:47 AM on 07/08/2011
Both my grandparents and a roommate couple found themselves delivering their own children, because the home care doc came and said it would be awhile.

My grandparent's baby died, the roommate's baby survived.

Personally, every birth I had turned out to be an episode of "What can go wrong when giving birth".

To round it out, I then hemorrhaged after each. I was still in the hospital the first time, second time I was already home, which led to a fun filled ride to the hospital, with paramedics saying all those exciting ER phrases, like "shock", "sinus tachycardia" (running out of blood), etc.

Of course, first baby was 10 lbs breech (he got in the wrong position day before I delivered, it was like "earthquake!".
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Lori Day
Educational psychologist and consultant
12:25 PM on 07/07/2011
I agree that for low-risk pregnancies, this is a wonderful option. However, I'd like to add a different consideration to the discussion. After my daughter was born (in the hospital), when she was 36 hours old, she stopped breathing. Had I not been in the hospital, and not chosen to put her in the nursery for her second night so I could get some rest, I'd have woken up with a dead child. The benefits to being in the hospital include the availability of round-the-clock medical observation of the baby. My child had a great APGAR score and seemed perfectly healthy. The doctors said this event was rare and usually occurs during the first 24 hours. But, in my daughter's case, it happened at 36 hours. This event totally rocked my world, and I tell the story often to women who choose early discharge home after 24 hours. It's every woman's choice to make, but I thank God every day I was in the hospital and not at home. There is nothing like hearing alarm codes during the night and finding your baby in the NICU, but it's better than what would have been the alternative.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sunnybunny
01:41 PM on 07/08/2011
I'm glad you're daughter is all right. It's good that that happened that way. But don't most moms and babies go home much sooner? I had my first baby in a hospital (I had the other two with midwives at home/birthcenter) and their policy was 6-8 hours or at least by the next day? At 36 hours we would have been at home anyway?
09:36 AM on 07/07/2011
One thing to note; the study only found comparable results among low-risk births. If your pregnancy is not low-risk, do not attempt a home delivery.
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OldTart
Let it begin with me...
09:16 AM on 07/07/2011
As a woman who had all five of her children at home, I can't extol the virtues enough. It is important for the expectant mother to educate herself in the process, to have good pre-natal care, to have a qualified attendant, and to allow for unforeseen complications that will necessitate a trip to the hospital. That said, there can be no more welcoming experience for both child and mother than the comfort of one's home post-delivery. I welcome this trend, which puts mother and child first, as they should be.
02:53 PM on 07/06/2011
Excellent article! No children for me yet, but when the time comes I'd like to enlist the services of a doula or midwife. Childbirth is not a "procedure" it is a natural process (albeit one that can necessitate medical intervention). I'd like the opportunity to treat it as such.
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sabelmouse
my micro bio is emty
06:52 AM on 07/07/2011
and i wish you luck. i had both mine at home, one in germany , one in holland, the latter being a great place for homebirth as midwifes have full status and are able to everything pre and post as well as the actual birth.
i read a lot of books the most helpfull being by sheila kitzinger and ina may gaskell and a little gem i can't remember the title of.
it was about midwives practising in the early 20th century in germany and austria, mainly the alps and there were some heartening stories of them having to walk for a whole day to get to a mountain farm and stay there for days to help with the birth. no possibility of outside help of course ,they just had to cope and cope they did with all sorts of methods that we'd now consider '' alternative.
the book also opened my eyes to the fact that most cases of maternal mortality were not birth related but due to postpartum problems very often to do with hygiene and very often to do with husbands demanding their '' rights '' to early.
as well as general over work and exhaustion of women in poorer circumstances.
i do wish i could dig that book up again though it's probably only available in german.
01:00 PM on 07/06/2011
Good to see positive articles on birth options! It would be lovely if they would talk more about the majority of normal reasons women choose home instead of starting off with the edgier and extreme reasons. To me focusing on those adds to the mystique that homebirth is less safe and for quacks. Neither of which is true.
10:27 AM on 07/06/2011
Great article, but got the details a bit wrong on my birth which was featured in the documentary I directed, "The Business of Being Born." We switched to a home birth at 28 weeks with the backing of my OB/GYN, but the baby was breach so our expectation of actually having a home birth was low. As it happened, I went into labor 5 weeks early and my midwife basically came over to escort us to the hospital. So it wasn't really an "abandoned" home birth. The taxi ride was pretty frantic, but only because the labor progressed super-fast. Our midwife quickly handed the reins over to the OB/GYN as the clinical situation was beyond her scope of practice. In fact, it was a great example of the way midwives and OB/GYNs could work together if our system was set up to accommodate out-of-hospital birth.
09:58 AM on 07/06/2011
For a Healthy woman expecting a healthy baby, home birth with a midwife is safer than hospital birth with an obstetrician. Going to a hospital exposes a woman and her baby to interventions that neither of them need and which can harm both of them: induction of labor, intravenous fluids, rupture of membranes, augmentation (speeding up) of labor which causes increased pain which leads to use of epidural anesthesia and cesarean section and dangerous post partum hemorrhage. Staying home means fewer interventions and fewer complications. Giving mothers more options means better outcomes.
Elizabeth Allemann, MD
Columbia, MO
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OldTart
Let it begin with me...
09:17 AM on 07/07/2011
Thank you for your professional endorsement of this most amazing experience.
09:20 AM on 07/06/2011
Thanks for this article. I think baby monitors are of great help but you just need to be a bit careful of their placement. rest i think just works fabulous.
http://www.monitoryourbaby.com/p35-Angelcare-Monitor-AC1100.html
VA Jill
Retired RN, Army mom. Bring the troops home!
12:01 AM on 07/06/2011
The medicalization of childbirth has caused plenty of complications. Women have a right to know their options and to be able to decide for themselves how they want their birthing managed. I would much sooner have my child delivered by a well-trained midwife either in my own home or in a birthing center, than to have the entire thing be managed by a doctor in some hospital. I had four babies, all in hospital because there was no alternative where I was, and of those four, two were hideous experiences. I chose to have my babies naturally (Lamaze) and I actually had one doctor complaining during the delivery because I didn't choose to have spinal anesthesia so he could drag the kid out with forceps.