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    Home birth on the rise by a dramatic 20 percent

    NEW YORK (AP) — 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.

    ___

    Leanne Italie can be reached at http://twitter.com/litalie

     

    1,130 comments

    • Dean  •  10 mths ago
      Of course they're concerned, it's cutting into their bottom line $$$, and it's always amazed me the simple fact that women for thousands of years have been doing this and we all somehow got here!!!
      • Scythe Falling 10 mths ago
        Exactly! Doctors organizations were the first to cast aspersions on home births and midwifery because it was so popular and the hospitals were not profiting from it. Many capable midwives were denied the ability to serve women for some time until the statistics were revealed, and complaints about hospital births began to be heard.
      • Glassy 10 mths ago
        It is sad, the bodies of women are basically being strip mined for cash so that hospitals can stay in business. Then the hospitals and doctors make it as hard and as dangerous as they can for women who try to avoid this abuse and exploitation.
      • D 10 mths ago
        "The bodies of women are being strip mined for cash." ??? Wow. My wife and I just had a kid and the hospital had birthing classes where they described options including doulas, midwife, or docs, and they showed videos of women doing it at home. We chose the hospital route b/c we wanted all safety nets available in case something went wrong. Personal choice. No coercion. Ease up on the conspiracy theories. It isn't really like that.
    • Jenn J  •  10 mths ago
      "Some doctors also question whether a "feminist machoism" is at play in wanting to give birth at home."

      Quite frankly, I find that offensive. Medical machoism, anyone? Women's bodies were made to give birth. Stop acting like a hospital is an irreplaceable part of that process.
      • Chrysla 10 mths ago
        My body was not made for giving birth apparently. I used no meds and had an incredibly hard time. 32 hours later, I had a 9 lb 5 oz healthy boy, a torn cervix, a torn perineum all the way to my anus and rectum, and a broken pelvis. I wish to God I had been in the hospital instead of wanting to be a "natural" mom. Home birth is not for everyone.
      • Cassie 10 mths ago
        I agree with the idea that there is a sort of "feminist mechoism" at play. I wanted to have a natural birth because I felt like if I didn't it meant that I was weak and somehow unworthy to be a mom. Then after I ended up in the hospital at 38 weeks dehydrated and sick, and had an induced labor due to fears I had a uterine infection, I realized that having an epidural and having some medical interventions were really not a big deal in the grand scheme of things. Had I not been in the hospital, I would have been rushed to the ER post delivery, or been in transit, because I ended up being a high risk delivery and had post delivery hemorrhaging. I could have bled out had I not delivered in hospital.
      • Simeitsa 10 mths ago
        Me too Jenn. When I saw that it was just irritating. They just are trying to find something to put the blame on! And what more than calling women feminists and Macho would annoy us more!
    • Thalia  •  10 mths ago
      All of the children (my two brothers and one sister) in my family were born in a planned home birth with amazing pre- and post natal care by a wonderful midwife who was there for my own children's births as well. I even got to cut my brother's umbilical cord. Homebirth is amazing and wonderful and healthy!
      • mrs.mercy owusu-sampong 10 mths ago
        this is true. my mother had eight children and all were home born. this proves that child bearing is a natural thing which God established. it is amazing . just think about how animals give birth without a midwife.
      • Patrick Jacov 10 mths ago
        Amen.
    • Annie  •  10 mths ago
      The benefits are amazing. Why do we American women have the mentality that we can't give birth?!? It's not a disease, it's a natural process! It's not just Dr's pushing
      C-Section, it's all the interventions that are pushed at the hospital as well-- lying on your back for birth is the worst position! Not moving around sure can cause a lot more pain too. Lack of privacy, comfort, etc. etc. No wonder women think they need interventions like epidurals. No wonder labor stops when they reach the hospital, "requiring" induction (with some dangerous drugs, like Cytotec.) Every unnecessary intervention only increases risk. The best birth is a natural birth--why improve on something that works well 99% of the time? These interventions are only necessary for a small few.

      I'm so glad to see this article on a main stream website. It comforts me to know that the message is finally getting out. The hospitals and Dr.s have tricked us pretty good but it's time to learn the -real- facts, not the myths we grew up hearing.

      I highly recommend reading "Born in the USA" by Dr. Wagner, and "Birth: The Surprising History of how we are born." by Tina Cassidy. Especially if you disagree with this viewpoint.

      The American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ACOG) is an organization of Drs that is only looking out for it's own good--not the health and safety of women! Many of their "recommendations" are only for safety from litigation, and their own bank account. ACOG also has NO authority to set standards for childbirth, and yet our insurance companies and hospitals look to them for advice and follow their rules like law. They are the reason VBACs have become impossible to achieve, due to lack of Dr support and insurance coverage.

      MANY countries have better birth safety statistics than ours, and many of those countries use LESS intervention than ours. So how is it safer to go to a hospital?
      • griffgirl82 10 mths ago
        I had a male doctor and i was prepared to tell him, that when he could lie flat on his back and poop a basketball, I wouldn't say a word about laying down to deliver my son. Unfortunately, my son came a month early so they wouldn't let me do anything I wanted. Also, my mom is deathly allergic to pictocin, so I told them I didn't want it, since I wasn't sure how I'd react, the nurse put it in my IV without telling me. I only found out later. I was furious and told my mom quite loudly, "Well, I'm not dead so I guess I'm not allergic to it too, thankfully!!"
      • Jeeves 10 mths ago
        Wow that's appalling that the hospital staff directly and blatantly went against your specific request, to not listen to you, to continue to be in total control of your experience and potentially put your life and that of your child in immediate danger of real complications!

        Just goes to show how much of a monopoly these large institutions of medical establishments (including insurance) have over us and the influence of the almighty dollar has on all of our lives!
      • Chrysla 10 mths ago
        My body was not made for giving birth apparently. I used no meds and had an incredibly hard time. 32 hours later, I had a 9 lb 5 oz healthy boy, a torn cervix, a torn perineum all the way to my anus and rectum, and a broken pelvis. I wish to God I had been in the hospital instead of wanting to be a "natural" mom. Home birth is not for everyone.
    • JuJu  •  10 mths ago
      The good old USA is still the leader in making a normal event like giving birth into an "illness" that requires doctor intervention. Home births that are planned and monitored are extremely safe. We tend to forget that thousands of babies are born every day in places not only no doctors or hospitals but also with no running water or electricity. In fact, MOST babis are still born outside of hospitals. I wasn't a "hippie" when I gave birth to my last two children at home, nor were most of the 500 or so of the women whose births I attended as a midwife during the 70s and 80s. My clients ranged from college professors to hells angels to preachers wives and from teenagers with first babies to 40+ mothers on their 7th or 8th baby. But by in large they were, like me, middle class homemakers who chose home birth strictly as an informed decission after much research,
      • It's 2011 10 mths ago
        thousands of women also DIE in childbirth everyday. lets not treat this as getting over a common cold...
      • Hannah 10 mths ago
        Thousands die It's 2011 but how many of them had a serious condition that did require a c-section? I am lucky, 6 hrs old and the docs found a problem so I have no choice but to goto a hospital. There are many ppl out there that have no idea they have a medical condition. That is most likely what the route cause of the mortality rate. Remember sometimes even docs can not prevent the death of the mother, baby, or both.
      • kenneth 10 mths ago
        ya great idea lets risk a newborns life so you can be comfy. no doctor needed? maybe or maybe advanced life support is needed for baby or mother then what call an ambulance sure they will be there in minutes when seconds count. maybe we should do kidney transplants at home too. oh and those babies born in the jungles and deserts of africa....ya they never have any problems look it up dummy high mortallity rates for both mother and baby. quit being sellfish and hip and give birth in a hospital!!!
    • Cat ^..^  •  10 mths ago
      I've worked in healthcare for over 20 years.

      High C-Section rates are about REVENUE, not liabilities. Even for non-profit hospitals, higher revenue means better pay for administrators, department managers and doctors.

      Since my department was responsible for maintaining the charge master, I was privy to revenue meetings with physicians. These meetings occurred behind closed doors, where doctors were quietly encouraged to increase utilization of lucrative services regardless of patient need. C-Sections use a LOT of extras, and thus doctors were encouraged to push C-Sections to the absolute limit of "national averages".

      Doctors would actually be questioned/challenged if their utilization rates were far below hospital goals - once again, this was regardless of whether their patients actually NEEDED the services. There were lucrative bonuses each year for doctors who exceeded utilization goals - again, without any regard to whether the procedures were warranted. One of our BEST surgeons - highest success rates in patient outcomes - was "let go" because she REFUSED to play the game and had low utilization rates.

      So, NO, we're not "all ignorant" about hospitals. In fact, some of us work there, and know EXACTLY what's going on.
    • craig  •  10 mths ago
      My two youngest were homebirths, and I was the delivering "doctor". Midwives were intended to be there, but for various reasons either arrived after the birth, or were too sick to do it. So I did them myself. Zero complications. My wife opted for homebirths because of the ugly treatment she got at the hands of nurses in general hospitals. They treated her like a cow.
    • Harold  •  10 mths ago
      maybe the grand medical communit has priced themselves out of the market? Imagine that.
    • snn  •  10 mths ago
      I had 2 home births, in 1981 and 1985. I'm an RN (not a hippie) and I knew by staying home I had a better chance of a happy delivery and a healthy baby. I had seen too much unnecessary intervention in the hospital with unfortunate results.
    • klmnalem  •  10 mths ago
      My first was by C-section, the morbidity afterward was so great I didn't want to see my new son for three days. I cried when I knew I was pregnant with my second child cause I didn't want to go through the C-section experience again. I was fortunate to discover the Cesarian Prevention Movement. I had a wonderful second birth experience - I had a lay mid-wife who monitored my labor and determined when we needed to head to the hospital 45 minutes away where I was met by my certified nurse mid-wife. I was able to give birth naturally in a way that felt right to me, without all of the trappings of "modern" medicine. This was back in the late 80's. I'd do it again in a heart beat. It was worth every minute to buck the system and birth "MY WAY" and fire the OB at 7 months term.
    • Ashlee  •  10 mths ago
      I had an emergency c-section and a scheduled c-section - my best friend has had all home births. Each experience was perfect for both of us and neither of us would trade it. As long as it's not a high risk pregnancy and you have a trained professional in the home and easy access to the hospital if necessary, you should do what makes you comfortable. I will never try a VBAC birth, let alone a home birth, as I've raised the pros and cons of both but I'm not so quick to judge other people's personal decisions as long as there is no child endangerment involved.
    • renovatio  •  10 mths ago
      What happened to all the comments? I've been trying to read through them but kept getting errors. Now they've all disappeared? Is this some sort of subtle censorship?
    • Blessing  •  10 mths ago
      Maternal Ignorance is giving all of your power away to the "system."
      It is blindly believing that all Dr.s are absolutly right- without question.

      Maternal ignorance is about thinking you are doing the right thing because the MEDIA says so, because a new chemical in formula stimulates the baby's brain.

      Maternal ignorance is about losing touch with your God given Natural intuition and trusting in superficial things.

      Maternal ignorance is about falling into the hype that birth is a "condition" to be treated, an "illness" to be cured and an "emergency" to be attended to.

      Maternal ignorance is about trusting that a Chemical Company can make better milk for your baby than your body can. We are mammals for a reason....

      Maternal ignorance is about belieiving your baby is healthier in an incubater when premature instead of using Kangaroo Care--touch and warmth are scientifically proven to "grow" babies faster than plastic boxes.

      Maternal Ignorance...dominates the mainstream because it is what is comfortable, it is what one "should" believe--because everyone else is doing it.
    • Cassandra  •  10 mths ago
      Give me the hospital and lots of drugs. Pain is not my friend.
    • Happy to Be American  •  10 mths ago
      I'd venture a guess that this has also to do with economics.
    • d  •  10 mths ago
      Here are the stats as of 2009 for Infant/Maternal mortality rates amongst several industrialized nations:
      Austria; 1 Maternal death per 4900, 5 infant deaths per 1000 Live Births. Canada; 1 Mom/ 7700, 6 Infants/ 1000.
      Denmark; 1 Mom/ 5800, 4 Infants/ 1000.
      Netherlands; 1 Mom/ 4300, 5 Infants/ 1000.
      Norway; 1 Mom/ 7300, 4 Infants/ 1000.
      Sweden; 1 Mom/ 6000, 3 Infants/ 1000.
      Singapore; 1 Mom/ 4900, 4 Infants/ 1000.
      Switzerland; 1 Mom/ 8700, 3 Infants/ 1000. *#1*
      United Kingdom; 1 Mom/ 5100. 6 Infants/1000.
      USA; 1 Mom per 3500, 7 Infants per 1000!!! BOOOO!!
      This data is from: savethechildren.org, which includes a 'State of the World Mothers Report'.

      And Guess What? *80 to 85% of Northern European and Canadian births are attended by Midwives AT HOME!* The Northern European countries have the best Maternal/ Infant mortality ~per live birth~ stats!!

      And an article from 2006:
      U.S. has second worst newborn death rate in modern world, report says
      May 10, 2006|By Jeff Green CNN
      "The United States has more neonatologists and neonatal intensive care beds per person than Australia, Canada and the United Kingdom, but its newborn rate is higher than any of those countries," said the annual State of the World's Mothers report, (by Save The Children Foundation.)
      Only Latvia, with six deaths per 1,000 live births, has a higher death rate for newborns than the United States, which is tied near the bottom of industrialized nations with Hungary, Malta, Poland and Slovakia with five deaths per 1,000 births.
    • EarthWindFire82  •  10 mths ago
      Um, yes...doctors are concerned because that's lost money for them and the hospitals. My son's delivery was a total of $30K before insurance. Thing is, it was mostly the intervention that made his birth so traumatic. And 10 months later, my stomach is still numb from the c-section...
    • A_Nonny_Moose  •  10 mths ago
      I don't blame these people at all. Hospitals are the primary breeding ground for some of the most horrifying and drug resistant diseases on earth. They are expensive and are only interested in profiteering off the sick ($80 aspirin anyone?). All too often, the staff disregards your wishes to delay immunizations and every year thousands of newborns go into shock, coma, and die within hours of immunizations. Most all of them are declared died of "natural causes".
      Here's a clue people; otherwise perfectly healthy newborns going into shock, coma, and dying is NOT natural.
    • dave  •  10 mths ago
      no such thing as an ugly baby? lmao... this pic proves it to be false!
    • Kathryn Brown  •  10 mths ago
      Human beings have been giving birth without hospitals for years, the majority of the babies born into the world aren't even born in hospitals! They need to stop labeling these things like they're illnesses... they're not, it's totally natural The medical field is becoming increasingly about the $$$ instead of the well-being of the individual... expecting mothers and/or their babies shouldn't be treated like dirt!
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