Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why homebirthers want no medical intervention (hence doing it at home) but if the sh*t hits the fan, they expect the medical establishment to shoulder the responsibilty. They decided not to participate in modern medicine. I understand the history of obs v. midwives but it seems odd to me.
I'm not saying I agree with the amount of the settlement and I don't know enough about the particulars of the case, but seriously? This is just ridiculous reasoning.
They had an EMERGENCY and needed care!! The fact that they didn't start the birth in a hospital (which, BTW, is not against the law, or some experimental practice - you do realize babies are born outside of hospitals every day?) does not absolve the hospital of responsibility for adequate standard of care. So if I understand your reasoning, you are saying that once you choose to attempt a home birth you waive your rights to competent medical care??
It will probably be reduced on appeal, and perhaps it should be. However, to say choosing to have a baby at home negates your right to expect good medical care if needed is the stupidest thing I've heard in a long time.
-signed, mother who gave birth in a hospital but still thinks people who arrive at the emergency room deserve good medical care.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why homebirthers want no medical intervention (hence doing it at home) but if the sh*t hits the fan, they expect the medical establishment to shoulder the responsibilty. They decided not to participate in modern medicine. I understand the history of obs v. midwives but it seems odd to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm having a hard time figuring out which patient the report is talking about.
Is she the one who arrived at the hospital fully dilated and not progressing after pushing for hours? If so, I don't understand why they didn't do an immediate c-section even though I doubt that it would have helped the baby. That baby was injured during the home birth, there isn't much doubt about that. I guess the question is, did the hospital compound the injury by not doing the c-section right away? I would need to understand the medical reasoning for them not doing that. Was the patient refusing the c-section? What was going on?
In the nurse license suspension certification, it is Complaint #2 and Patient B and Baby B.
That is the question, yes. And the hospital is saying that a c-section right away would not have helped Baby B. From what I know of birth injuries, I don't disagree with them, but I'm not an expert or a doctor.
Anonymous wrote:I'm having a hard time figuring out which patient the report is talking about.
Is she the one who arrived at the hospital fully dilated and not progressing after pushing for hours? If so, I don't understand why they didn't do an immediate c-section even though I doubt that it would have helped the baby. That baby was injured during the home birth, there isn't much doubt about that. I guess the question is, did the hospital compound the injury by not doing the c-section right away? I would need to understand the medical reasoning for them not doing that. Was the patient refusing the c-section? What was going on?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does the home birth have to do with the hospital waiting 2 hrs to give her the c-section? Two totally different things.
If she was in the hospital in the first place, the operating room could have been prepped faster. The staff would have been ready for her.
You take these risks when you attempt home birth. Why would anyone want to do a home birth?!?!?
Sorry. No. Her midwife was responsible and sent her to the hospital the minute the birth was no longer a safe. If you arrive in an ambulance, the hospital needs to be able offer you care, otherwise what’s the point?
I’ve had all my children in a hospital (as planned) and I think if they couldn’t offer emergency care including emergency C-section surgery they gave no business calling themselves a level 1 trauma center.
BTW even if you plan to give birth in a hospital a very uncomplicated natural birth can turn into an emergency very quickly. I would be very upset if the hospital made me wait 2 hours for an emergency C-section.
The hospital is saying that, when she arrived, it didn't seem emergent. And that the birth injury had already occurred before she arrived at the hospital.
Whether she had waited 5 minutes or 2 hours for the c-section, the hospital is saying it would not have mattered. The first trial did not address the question. The second trial may.
The hospital probably monitored her from the get go and never saw any issues with the heart rate, fetal movement, etc and nothing unusual happened during the c-section birth. Since the baby did not appear to be in any distress once they arrived at the hospital, whatever happened must have happened before they arrived at the hospital. Given that something sent them to the hospital in the first place - whatever happened must have happened at home and it must have been worrisome enough for the midwife to send the mother to the hospital. By the time the mother got to the hospital whatever had gone wrong had resolved itself and the baby was no longer in distress. Had the mother been at the hospital when the baby went into to distress an emergency c-section would have been performed in time to save the baby injury. Unfortunately, that was not the case.
See complaint #2:
http://167.102.241.39/verification/%2Fpublicorders%2Fmuhlhan_evelyn-r060032-amdss.order-20120613.pdf
. Is the midwife facing criminal charges? Are the parents?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does the home birth have to do with the hospital waiting 2 hrs to give her the c-section? Two totally different things.
I don't know enough about the case to weigh in, but I agree that these things are separate. Obviously. You don't give up your rights to be treated when you go to a hospital because you didn't have a hospital birth. Whether or not you THINK someone should...it doesn't work that way. An emergency is an emergency.
Agree -- we don't have enough details to know whether JHU was at fault and they certainly aren't going to release those details.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does the home birth have to do with the hospital waiting 2 hrs to give her the c-section? Two totally different things.
If she was in the hospital in the first place, the operating room could have been prepped faster. The staff would have been ready for her.
You take these risks when you attempt home birth. Why would anyone want to do a home birth?!?!?
Remind me to make sure to have my car accident or heart attack at a hospital next time; after all, if they wait to treat me, it's my fault for not being there in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does the home birth have to do with the hospital waiting 2 hrs to give her the c-section? Two totally different things.
I don't know enough about the case to weigh in, but I agree that these things are separate. Obviously. You don't give up your rights to be treated when you go to a hospital because you didn't have a hospital birth. Whether or not you THINK someone should...it doesn't work that way. An emergency is an emergency.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does the home birth have to do with the hospital waiting 2 hrs to give her the c-section? Two totally different things.
If she was in the hospital in the first place, the operating room could have been prepped faster. The staff would have been ready for her.
You take these risks when you attempt home birth. Why would anyone want to do a home birth?!?!?
Sorry. No. Her midwife was responsible and sent her to the hospital the minute the birth was no longer a safe. If you arrive in an ambulance, the hospital needs to be able offer you care, otherwise what’s the point?
I’ve had all my children in a hospital (as planned) and I think if they couldn’t offer emergency care including emergency C-section surgery they gave no business calling themselves a level 1 trauma center.
BTW even if you plan to give birth in a hospital a very uncomplicated natural birth can turn into an emergency very quickly. I would be very upset if the hospital made me wait 2 hours for an emergency C-section.
Anonymous wrote:Reading over that report is horrifying.
This couples first home birth (which was contraindicated from the beginning as too dangerous due to the mother’s medical history) almost killed their child and yet they did it again.
The midwife was completely incompetent and did so many things wrong during the course of this ignorant woman’s labor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does the home birth have to do with the hospital waiting 2 hrs to give her the c-section? Two totally different things.
If she was in the hospital in the first place, the operating room could have been prepped faster. The staff would have been ready for her.
You take these risks when you attempt home birth. Why would anyone want to do a home birth?!?!?
Sorry. No. Her midwife was responsible and sent her to the hospital the minute the birth was no longer a safe. If you arrive in an ambulance, the hospital needs to be able offer you care, otherwise what’s the point?
I’ve had all my children in a hospital (as planned) and I think if they couldn’t offer emergency care including emergency C-section surgery they gave no business calling themselves a level 1 trauma center.
BTW even if you plan to give birth in a hospital a very uncomplicated natural birth can turn into an emergency very quickly. I would be very upset if the hospital made me wait 2 hours for an emergency C-section.
The hospital is saying that, when she arrived, it didn't seem emergent. And that the birth injury had already occurred before she arrived at the hospital.
Whether she had waited 5 minutes or 2 hours for the c-section, the hospital is saying it would not have mattered. The first trial did not address the question. The second trial may.
The hospital probably monitored her from the get go and never saw any issues with the heart rate, fetal movement, etc and nothing unusual happened during the c-section birth. Since the baby did not appear to be in any distress once they arrived at the hospital, whatever happened must have happened before they arrived at the hospital. Given that something sent them to the hospital in the first place - whatever happened must have happened at home and it must have been worrisome enough for the midwife to send the mother to the hospital. By the time the mother got to the hospital whatever had gone wrong had resolved itself and the baby was no longer in distress. Had the mother been at the hospital when the baby went into to distress an emergency c-section would have been performed in time to save the baby injury. Unfortunately, that was not the case.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does the home birth have to do with the hospital waiting 2 hrs to give her the c-section? Two totally different things.
If she was in the hospital in the first place, the operating room could have been prepped faster. The staff would have been ready for her.
You take these risks when you attempt home birth. Why would anyone want to do a home birth?!?!?
Sorry. No. Her midwife was responsible and sent her to the hospital the minute the birth was no longer a safe. If you arrive in an ambulance, the hospital needs to be able offer you care, otherwise what’s the point?
I’ve had all my children in a hospital (as planned) and I think if they couldn’t offer emergency care including emergency C-section surgery they gave no business calling themselves a level 1 trauma center.
BTW even if you plan to give birth in a hospital a very uncomplicated natural birth can turn into an emergency very quickly. I would be very upset if the hospital made me wait 2 hours for an emergency C-section.
The hospital is saying that, when she arrived, it didn't seem emergent. And that the birth injury had already occurred before she arrived at the hospital.
Whether she had waited 5 minutes or 2 hours for the c-section, the hospital is saying it would not have mattered. The first trial did not address the question. The second trial may.