And yet other wealthy countries seem to manage getting good outcomes with home birth. In the U.S. you are correct that outcomes are worse, likely because of the lack of professionalization in midwifery, persistent bias in the medical community against the midwife profession, and total lack of integration of models of care within the healthcare system. There are ways around those things in some areas, and home birth is slowly becoming more accepted so hopefully that will bring about improvements in home birth outcomes. |
Women need more options. I truly wanted something like a birthing center with a midwife that's attached to a hospital. I just wanted a safe place to labor and I did want OBs available in case of emergency.
I've had 3 kids that were induced. I had to BEG to be induced at 41 weeks, but preferred 42 weeks. Doctors and insurance just don't listen to you. So instead of waiting until I went into labor (I was healthy btw, not medically indicated), I was strapped to a bed with pitocin for over a day unable to move (no wireless monitoring at my hospital!). Last time the anesthesiologist kept pushing for a csection over and over again. I'm not even sure why she cared. |
Actually that's also a fantasy. For example, the Dutch homebirth rate is plummeting due to safety concerns (and desire for pain relief). https://brightthemag.com/dutch-moms-are-choosing-hospitals-over-home-births-and-maybe-thats-a-good-thing-23d2d304c7ed |
Even risking your baby’s life to have your way? |
+1 Doctors care about the wellbeing of the baby and mommy.......some women just care about having things their way....damn the evidence to the contrary. |
Bull crap!! |
Typical response from "modern medical people". This is exactly why I do my best to stay FAR away from his ilk. |
-1 The majority of doctors care *most* about lining their pockets. BUYER BEWARE! |
Hmm, this lady was angry at being transferred to the hospital - which her midwife did out of valid concern for the baby's safety. This is exactly how it's supposed to happen. If you're high risk of you develop a complication then it's not safe to give birth at home, period. I didn't see mention of the safety rate plummeting. Anyway there's plenty of evidence of the safety of home birth in countries where it's more accepted and the system is equipped for it. |
I wrote that inductions increase the risk of severe postpartum hemorrhage, which is more likely to kill you in the modern U.S. than the non-severe kind that sometimes happens after spontaneous labor for which the treatment is usually one or two shots of pitocin (both kinds of hemorrhage are extremely dangerous in under-resourced areas where hospitals don't typically have supplies of pitocin or blood banks). Here are some articles that make a strong or significant association between induction and severe postpartum hemorrhage: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0054858 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0002937810000220 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0002937810010264 https://europepmc.org/abstract/med/21366123 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.3109/00016349.2010.514324 https://obgyn.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1600-0412.2011.01298.x https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00404-015-3725-y Also, extra high-tech monitoring during labor does not reduce the need for c-sections, in fact, continuous fetal monitoring has been shown in study after study to do nothing but increase intervention without improving outcomes at all. What California did to reduce c-sections was to train nurses to provide more one on one labor support to the mom, to urge doctors to exercise patience during labor (and gave them tools for how to know when it is appropriate to intervene, to minimize errors of judgment) and to use intermittent rather than continuous fetal monitoring for low-risk patients. So yes, more attentive, personalized, low-tech care combined with judicious use of technology is what is needed as demonstrated by California reducing maternal mortality by half with these simple measures… and if you do that stuff at baseline then you won’t need as much of the high-tech care, and those resources can be focused on those who need them the most. |
The Dutch homebirth rate is falling, and the Dutch infant mortality rate is improving. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2015/07/08/why-home-births-are-safer-for-rich-women/?utm_term=.fc9b82df0e46 |
Once again, you completely miss the point. Women die because they don't get the high tech care they need, FFS! Women get induced due to conditions that will hurt them or hurt their babies. Just waiting it out does not actually improve infant or maternal health. https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/should-pregnant-women-be-induced-at-39-weeks/2016/06/27/e1bb9d16-27fe-11e6-b989-4e5479715b54_story.html?utm_term=.f08fbe2960d9 The problem is that high-risk women are being ignored and not getting the advanced medical care they need. Particularly women of color. |
Good try, but you won't get a response from the homebirth people on this. It goes against homebirth orthodoxy. |
Okay, that study found home birth neonatal mortality increased only for low-income women. It also only looked at where the women actually gave birth, rather than where they planned to. So if you choose a hospital birth and plan for that, and then you have an accidental home birth, that is generally a less safe scenario. All of the other home birth studies (including the one by de Jong et al that uses the same source data as the one in this article and concludes home birth is just as safe for low-risk pregnancies) recognize the confounding effect of using actual birth place and use only planned birth place. |
There’s actually a mountain of evidence that a lot of the things they induce for don’t improve outcomes. http://www.childbirthconnection.org/giving-birth/labor-induction/research-evidence/research-and-evidence-q-a/common-reasons-given.html At the end of the day, a 55% reduction in maternal mortality in the span of a few years by implementing a low-tech/low-intervention care model pretty much speaks for itself. |