It is exciting to live in a day and age where there are several options for you to choose for your baby's birth place. One is your home, the other more obvious choice is the hospital, and finally there is the birth center. Birth centers are divided into two main categories (though there may be others)- there are hospital-owned birth centers staffed by midwives, and there are free standing birth centers owned and run by midwives. Birth centers of all types are inspected randomly by DHEC in South Carolina so you can be sure that they are always up to standard.
A birth center by definition is simply a place other than your home, and outside of the hospital, that is equipped to assist you in birthing your baby. Most birth centers offer the completely natural childbirth option, since they do not have doctors available to administer drugs like Stadol or epidurals. So, if you are choosing a birth center, you may need to take a childbirth preparation class like The Bradley Method. You can also be sure that you will not be encouraged to take any medication during your labor in a birth center. Midwives in general are experts in normal birth, and would love to see you birth your baby in the most natural way possible. Of course, if anything goes awry, your midwife would call emergency transport and get you to the nearest hospital as quickly as possible.
The World Health Organization recommends that midwives attend normal low-risk, healthy births but doesn't necessarily suggest where you are to be attended. But a birth center in your area is a great choice. In Spartanburg and Greenville there are several to choose from. Labors of Love Birth Center is located on Floyd Road Extension, and is about 6 minutes from Spartanburg Regional Hospital. Various other birth centers include Carolina Water Birth and Blessed Births, both located in the Greenville and Simpsonville area. Labors of Love is run by Linda Weaver and Amy Bixby, both licensed midwives with hundreds of healthy babies under their belts.
Why should you choose a birth center? Well, there are several reasons. Many birthing centers offer the huge jacuzzi type tubs to labor in. Studies have shown that water births are less painful than "dry" births and that babies are born more "gently" into the water. A great read for this type of birth is Gentle Birth Choices by Barbara Harper. She provides some significant data about water birth and is convincing about the positive aspects water allows. Another reason to choose a birthing center is if you live more than 30 minutes from a hospital staffed with a 24-hour anesthesiologist and obstetrician. The reason for most hospital transfers is not emergency- it's getting tired of the labor process and choosing to go in for an epidural. If it is 3am, and there is not an anesthesiologist on duty, you don't get your epidural, at least not until he/she arrives. Less commonly, something may go wrong with the baby or mom, and an emergency transport is required. An obstetrician needs to be available immediately for a potential cesearean section upon arrival at the hospital. Again, this isn't a likely outcome, but it is a possibility. A third reason that families choose a birth center is being uncomfortable with the idea of giving birth in their homes. Perhaps they have dogs or live in an apartment or condo. There are not reasons that prevent a home birth, but they can inhibit the natural process if the mother is consumed or distracted by them.
Statistically speaking, birth center births are not safer than home births, unless the home is more than a 30 minute drive from the hospital. If I had had the option of a birth center birth for the first baby, I would have done it in a heart beat. Sometimes it just feels like a more controlled environment since it is a place designated for births. And it is certainly a great option if you are not comfortable giving birth in your home, but don't want the added stress of going to the hospital for your normal, non-medicated birth experience.
I encourage you to do your homework. Interview midwives and tour birth centers. You can always fall back on the hospital. But a birth center will make your natural birth experience so incredibly special!!
Showing posts with label midwifery care. Show all posts
Showing posts with label midwifery care. Show all posts
Monday, April 27, 2009
Monday, April 20, 2009
Why Would I Choose a Midwife?
The majority of births in the United States happen in an actively managed hospital setting. Active management means that the medical staff has an active role in the labor process- doing vaginal exams, inserting an IV if the patient is hungry or thirsty, augmenting the labor via Pitocin or Cytotec to help speed things up, artificially breaking the amniotic sac... All of these things are active management of labor.
Midwives come from a different philosophy. They understand that the bell curve for pregnancy and labor is massive, with many variations being within the normal range. They care for the emotional and mental (and in some case, spiritual) needs of the mother, in addition to her physical needs. A point I found interesting when I switched from obstetric care to midwifery care was that I was no longer a "patient" but a "client". If you consider what this means, it is monumental. In obstetric care, you are viewed as a person who has a problem, an illness of sorts. You are pregnant and they must monitor you to make sure that you get better. But as a client, you are going to your midwife to continue to make sure everything is going well, as you assume it must be. Midwives are consummate experts when it comes to normality. And with that comes the immediate recognition of abnormality. For example, in banks the forgery department for legal US tender doesn't scrutinize all the variations of the dollar bills. They study the real deal over and over and over, and are able to immediately detect a fake. The same applies in midwifery. Midwives have attended the labors of hundreds of women, from whenever the woman calls them to the baby emerging. So, they have seen the hundreds of variations of normal.
Another difference in midwifery (and this is pronounced "mid-WIF-ery", though some choose to pronounce it "mid-WIFE-ery") is that they don't "deliver" babies. They "catch" babies, so some of them are called "baby catchers." If you think about what that means, it is again, interesting. Why do babies need to be delivered from their mothers' bodies, as if they were dangerous, malignent places? Midwives simply catch the babies who are making an entrance into the world.
Did you know that the majority of babies worldwide are caught by midwives or someone acting as a midwife? Did you know that the World Health Organization recommends that pregnant women who are low-risk and healthy should have midwives as their primary care providers? The statistics are staggering. The United States has the absolute highest mother and infant mortality rates of any of the industrialized countries. In fact, a friend of mine sent me an email about her friend who passed away during childbirth this past week. The routine epidural numbed her from the waist up, instead of the waist down. She went into respiratory distress, had an emergency cesarean section, hemorrhaged and died. It was her fifth child. Do you know who has the lowest maternal and infant death rates in the world? Finland. Why? Well, depending on who you ask, there are various reasons. One may be because Finland doesn't have the high rates of obesity that the US has, and therefore healthier babies are born there. Another may be that premature babies born before 25 weeks aren't counted as infant mortalities, but are considered miscarriages. But the most conclusive reason is because the majority of their births are attended by midwives. When a Finlander calls the hospital to let them know she is in labor, the hospital sends out a team of midwives to assist her. The midwives will transport her to the hospital if she needs to be. Otherwise the babies are born in their own homes. Is that strange? I don't think so. In the US, when a person calls 9-1-1 for an emergency (say he/she is having chest pains) a cardiac surgeon isn't sent out to assess the situation- a trained EMT is. That EMT can determine whether the person is having heartburn, indigestion, or is really having a heart attack. They can administer some oxygen and assist the person, or can immediately transport that individual to the hospital. It makes sense.
Another aspect of midwifery care that differs from obstetric care is the fact that midwives' practices run on a smaller scale than the local OB practice. This means that the amount of time spent on you is greater. My midwife scheduled my appointment for the following month or week at say, 10 am. I showed up at 5 minutes to 10 am, and was seen from 10am to 11am. What in the world takes an hour, you ask? Well, the first 30 minutes were spent in discussion- how I was feeling both physically and emotionally about the pregnancy, how my nutrition was, whether I was doing my Kegel exercises, and any questions I may have were answered. And the last 30 minutes was the "medical" side- the protein check, heart tones, blood pressure, and the like. In my OB practice, my appointment was at 10am. I was seen around 11:30am, and was walking out the door by 11:50am. The care in a midwifery practice is much more personal, more nurturing, more supportive of the natural process- in my opinion.
And finally, midwives don't have the fear of litigation that obstetricians have. Therefore they can feel able to treat you like a well person, instead of a sick person. The decisions that are made for you in an obstetric practice are based on the fear that you will sue them- ie. EFM (constantly listening to the baby's heart beat), IV (giving you liquids because of their non per oris mandate- or nothing by mouth, in the event that you must have an emergency c-section)... all of the interventions that seemingly prevent you from being able to sue them are actually probably creating the problems in the first place! In midwifery practice, you are accepting the fact that there is no medical intervention, but you are placing your trust in your midwife's ability to detect a problem and get you to the appropriate medical care if an emergency arises. A huge North American study was done a few years back that showed the safety of a planned homebirth with a certified birth professional (ie. midwife) versus hospital birth. You should read it.
Are you low-risk and healthy? Are you interested in having a natural childbirth experience? Then you should choose a midwife. There are more and more available and you can interview one within a few days. In the Upstate there are many wonderful women serving pregnant women as midwives. My personal experience has been with Labors of Love- Linda Weaver and Amy Bixby. I cannot sing their praises loudly enough. But there are others out there as well. Your childbirth experience is a once or twice (maybe more!) in a lifetime experience. Your pregnancy, labor, and birth is as special as you are. Find someone who treats you that way!
Midwives come from a different philosophy. They understand that the bell curve for pregnancy and labor is massive, with many variations being within the normal range. They care for the emotional and mental (and in some case, spiritual) needs of the mother, in addition to her physical needs. A point I found interesting when I switched from obstetric care to midwifery care was that I was no longer a "patient" but a "client". If you consider what this means, it is monumental. In obstetric care, you are viewed as a person who has a problem, an illness of sorts. You are pregnant and they must monitor you to make sure that you get better. But as a client, you are going to your midwife to continue to make sure everything is going well, as you assume it must be. Midwives are consummate experts when it comes to normality. And with that comes the immediate recognition of abnormality. For example, in banks the forgery department for legal US tender doesn't scrutinize all the variations of the dollar bills. They study the real deal over and over and over, and are able to immediately detect a fake. The same applies in midwifery. Midwives have attended the labors of hundreds of women, from whenever the woman calls them to the baby emerging. So, they have seen the hundreds of variations of normal.
Another difference in midwifery (and this is pronounced "mid-WIF-ery", though some choose to pronounce it "mid-WIFE-ery") is that they don't "deliver" babies. They "catch" babies, so some of them are called "baby catchers." If you think about what that means, it is again, interesting. Why do babies need to be delivered from their mothers' bodies, as if they were dangerous, malignent places? Midwives simply catch the babies who are making an entrance into the world.
Did you know that the majority of babies worldwide are caught by midwives or someone acting as a midwife? Did you know that the World Health Organization recommends that pregnant women who are low-risk and healthy should have midwives as their primary care providers? The statistics are staggering. The United States has the absolute highest mother and infant mortality rates of any of the industrialized countries. In fact, a friend of mine sent me an email about her friend who passed away during childbirth this past week. The routine epidural numbed her from the waist up, instead of the waist down. She went into respiratory distress, had an emergency cesarean section, hemorrhaged and died. It was her fifth child. Do you know who has the lowest maternal and infant death rates in the world? Finland. Why? Well, depending on who you ask, there are various reasons. One may be because Finland doesn't have the high rates of obesity that the US has, and therefore healthier babies are born there. Another may be that premature babies born before 25 weeks aren't counted as infant mortalities, but are considered miscarriages. But the most conclusive reason is because the majority of their births are attended by midwives. When a Finlander calls the hospital to let them know she is in labor, the hospital sends out a team of midwives to assist her. The midwives will transport her to the hospital if she needs to be. Otherwise the babies are born in their own homes. Is that strange? I don't think so. In the US, when a person calls 9-1-1 for an emergency (say he/she is having chest pains) a cardiac surgeon isn't sent out to assess the situation- a trained EMT is. That EMT can determine whether the person is having heartburn, indigestion, or is really having a heart attack. They can administer some oxygen and assist the person, or can immediately transport that individual to the hospital. It makes sense.
Another aspect of midwifery care that differs from obstetric care is the fact that midwives' practices run on a smaller scale than the local OB practice. This means that the amount of time spent on you is greater. My midwife scheduled my appointment for the following month or week at say, 10 am. I showed up at 5 minutes to 10 am, and was seen from 10am to 11am. What in the world takes an hour, you ask? Well, the first 30 minutes were spent in discussion- how I was feeling both physically and emotionally about the pregnancy, how my nutrition was, whether I was doing my Kegel exercises, and any questions I may have were answered. And the last 30 minutes was the "medical" side- the protein check, heart tones, blood pressure, and the like. In my OB practice, my appointment was at 10am. I was seen around 11:30am, and was walking out the door by 11:50am. The care in a midwifery practice is much more personal, more nurturing, more supportive of the natural process- in my opinion.
And finally, midwives don't have the fear of litigation that obstetricians have. Therefore they can feel able to treat you like a well person, instead of a sick person. The decisions that are made for you in an obstetric practice are based on the fear that you will sue them- ie. EFM (constantly listening to the baby's heart beat), IV (giving you liquids because of their non per oris mandate- or nothing by mouth, in the event that you must have an emergency c-section)... all of the interventions that seemingly prevent you from being able to sue them are actually probably creating the problems in the first place! In midwifery practice, you are accepting the fact that there is no medical intervention, but you are placing your trust in your midwife's ability to detect a problem and get you to the appropriate medical care if an emergency arises. A huge North American study was done a few years back that showed the safety of a planned homebirth with a certified birth professional (ie. midwife) versus hospital birth. You should read it.
Are you low-risk and healthy? Are you interested in having a natural childbirth experience? Then you should choose a midwife. There are more and more available and you can interview one within a few days. In the Upstate there are many wonderful women serving pregnant women as midwives. My personal experience has been with Labors of Love- Linda Weaver and Amy Bixby. I cannot sing their praises loudly enough. But there are others out there as well. Your childbirth experience is a once or twice (maybe more!) in a lifetime experience. Your pregnancy, labor, and birth is as special as you are. Find someone who treats you that way!
Labels:
childbirth,
midwife,
midwifery care,
natural birth
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