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Waterbirth Specialists
Are you the kind of woman that ends a hard day with a soak in a
warm bubble bath?
Do you ease discomfort by relaxing in the tub? Do you want to
experience natural childbirth with minimal discomfort?
If you answered yes, chances are you too can benefit from
aquatherapy during labor and/or birth.
The warmth eases away tension and fights away pain, so that you
can relax and enjoy your labor.
Does it really work?
Oh yes! Waterbirth absolutely works! 80% of our moms deliver in
the water and love it- you will too!
We
Love Homebirth
There's no Place
Like Home
The advantages and and joys and of giving birth where you live.
By Pam England
"I know that I'm
healthy and everything's going well with my baby and I know
everything's going to be fine."
Those words, uttered by an extremely pregnant Dawn Louro on
CBS's Morning Show in February, sound more innocuous than
momentous. But in some ways, they are revolutionary. Because Ms.
Louro's calm assessment of her pregnancy came only weeks before
she gave birth on television, before an audience of millions. At
home.
In some circles, laboring or birthing at home is considered
quite radical. Most first-time mothers probably doubt that they
know enough to give birth anywhere, much less at home. They are
surprisingly out of touch with the innate, miraculous processes
involved in giving birth. Even though those mothers do not know
birth technology either, they know it is out there. Daughters of
our technological age, users of cellular phones and computers,
understandably have faith in technology.
In addition, women who plan to labor and give birth at home
typically get little support and a lot of anxious skepticism
from those around them. Under such circumstances, it is not
surprising that so few women today give birth at home.
But that may at last be changing and more than 20 years after
Mothering first began writing about the possibility and the
pleasures of delivering your child in his or her own home. Oprah
Winfrey has done shows about alternatives to hospital birth.
Chris Bohjalian's book Midwives has been a national bestseller.
And then there was Ms. Louro's labor. "I just want it to be in
my own home environment," Mr. Louro told the CBS correspondent.
"I want to be able to get up, walk around, and have my whole
family around me after the baby is born."
As a childbirth teacher, one of my greatest challenges is to
inform people objectively about their choices and give them
respectful support in their decision-making, so they are not
left feeling coerced or guilty about whatever informed choice
they eventually make. That is what I wish to do here. Homebirth
may not be right for you, for reasons of physical health or
personal philosophy. It also may be the perfect choice for you,
but one you hadn't considered until now. In a childbirth class I
taught recently, the topic arose spontaneously. A couple, one of
whom was a physician, said they were thinking of a homebirth.
The class erupted into animated discussion, provocative
questions, and a sense of hopeful excitement.
At the end, one mother turned to me and sighed happily, "I feel
more relaxed just knowing that a homebirth is a possibility,"
she said, "whether or not I choose it."
IS HOMEBIRTH SAFE?
The Farm is a 1,700 acre commune in Summertown, Tennessee,
founded in 1971 by Stephen and Ina May Gaskin. The trained and
skilled midwives there have professional consulting
relationships with physicians and refer mothers with
complications or risk factors to the hospital.
In 1992, a major study compared 1,700 homebirths attended by The
Farm midwives to a sample of 14,033 physician-attended hospital
births. The findings were dramatic and heartening: The cesarean
rate among mothers who received prenatal care at The Farm was
only 1.5 percent compared to 16.5 percent in the doctor-attended
group. The transfer-to-hospital rate was 13.5 percent. There was
no significant difference between the two groups for perinatal
death, bleeding, birth injury, or respiratory distress syndrome.
This excellent outcome for those choosing homebirths has been
found in other studies as well. In a famous 1977 project, Dr.
Lewis Mehl studied birth outcomes from the medical records of
1,146 elective homebirths in the San Francisco area. The
results: the perinatal mortality rate among women who elected
homebirth was 9.5 per 1,000 births and compared to a rate of
20.3 per 1,000 among California women who gave birth in the
hospital. In other words, as Dr. Mehl concluded, "the
[homebirth] outcomes were better than average and the
complications rates lower than expected."
And then there are the subjective, anecdotal reports from women
who have chosen a homebirth. According to a wide-ranging 1992
survey, "91 percent of . . . women who had had their last baby
at home said that they would prefer to have their next baby at
home, compared with 15 percent of those who had had their baby
in a hospital. Among the few women who had experienced both a
homebirth and a hospital birth, 76 percent preferred giving
birth in their homes."
THE ECONOMICS OF HOMEBIRTH
Homebirth is significantly cheaper than a hospital birth. But
that doesn't mean it will save you money. Why is that? Consider
the following: In 1997, a normal hospital birth cost between
about $4,000 and $6,000, with a complicated birth costing many
thousands more. In comparison, most homebirth midwives have an
inclusive fee of about $2,000, which not only covers labor and
delivery but also all prenatal care and several postpartum
visits.
In some states, homebirth midwifery is covered by private health
insurance. Unfortunately most HMOs do not yet reimburse licensed
homebirth midwives, which in effect limits consumers' freedom of
choice. It is extremely difficult for some people to make a
"choice" which requires substantially greater out-of-pocket
expenses.
If your healthcare coverage is limited only to in-hospital
birth, write the benefits manager at your place of employment;
they seem better able to exert leverage on insurance companies
and HMOs than can individual consumers. Issues like this also
are being considered in some state legislatures. Write a letter
to your local representative or call and make your opinion
known.
FINDING A MIDWIFE
Rare is the doctor who will actually attend a homebirth. But a
few do. To see if any practice in your neighborhood, contact
HomeFirst Health Services through their Web site:
http://www.homefirst.com.
It's extremely likely, however, that you'll need to find a
midwife to attend your birth. Midwives come in several
varieties. Nurse midwives have an RN and have completed
postgraduate training at an institution accredited by the
American College of Nurse Midwives (ACNM). Direct-entry midwives
have trained as midwives but without obtaining an RN (which is
the usual route of entry in many countries overseas, including
most of Europe). The Midwifery Education Accreditation Council
(MEAC) has begun accrediting direct-entry midwifery training
programs. Two other organizations offer certification to
direct-entry midwives: The ACNM and the North American Registry
of Midwives (NARM). Not all midwives are certified.
How can you find a midwife who is compatible with your
personality and birthing goals? Begin by asking friends or
acquaintances who've had a successful homebirth for a
recommendation. You can also contact one of the national
midwifery agencies for referrals (see below). But most important
is to meet and develop a rapport with any midwife you're
considering. She will, after all, be key to the success of your
home delivery. You should feel you can trust and rely on her.
And, as her client, she will probably wish to feel the same
towards you.
THE LAST WORD
Almost every homebirth that I have attended has been a profound
experience for everyone involved, including me. After the last
such birth, I formulated a few principles regarding homebirth.
They can, I think, stand as a summation of why the experience
affects people so powerfully, and why it is a moment few new
parents ever will forget:
- Pregnancy and birth are natural
physiological events, so normal birth does not belong in
hospitals.
- The natural course of labor is already
perfect, and should be interfered with as little as
possible.
- Pain is part of an essential and healthy
feedback mechanism in labor. Women can learn to cope with
it, especially with the proper encouragement and support.
- Medical management of pregnancy and
birth should be limited to those which are medically
complicated.
- Unnecessary medical interventions
complicate normal labor, creating additional risk and the
need for more intervention.
- Comfort and security help mothers cope
with labor. Comfort and security exist at home.
Pam England is a certified nurse midwife
in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where she directs the Art of
Birthing Doula Training Program. This story was adapted from her
book Birthing From Within (Partera Press, 1998). To order a
copy, call Partera Press at 505-268-8206 or visit the Web site:
http://www.birthpower.com
To Learn More
These are a few excellent books and articles that address
homebirth:
Declercq ER, Paine LL, Winter MR. "Home Birth in the
United States, 1989-1992. A Longitudinal Descriptive Report of
National Birth Certificate Data," Journal of Nurse Midwifery,
1995; 40 (6): 474-82.
Duran, AM. "The Safety of Home Birth: The Farm Study," American
Journal of Public Health, no. 82 (3):450-453.
Goer, Henci. Obstetric Myths Versus Research Realities:
A Guide to the Medical Literature (Bergin & Harvey, 1995)
Hannon, Sharron. Childbirth: A Source Book for Conception,
Pregnancy, Birth, and the First Weeks of Life (M. Evans and
Company, Inc., 1990)
Mehl, Lewis, et al., "Outcomes of Elective Home Births:
A Series of 1,146 Cases," Journal of Reproductive Medicine, no.
19 (5):281-290.
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