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Henci GoerFind out what other moms-to-be are asking.  Join in the discussion with Henci Goer, an expert in obstetric research. If you would like to contact Henci outside of the Ask Henci forum, send an email to Goersitemail@aol.com.

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Reply To Topic Topic: two questions
:
Posted By on 08 Jul 2008 03:13 AM
I am a general surgeon in California currently working as mother. I had my now five year old by cesarean for breech and asystole with an attempted external version with my obstetrician friend. I had my now three year old in water at home with a midwife with my obstetrician friend as my backup.

I think studies can be interpreted in different ways. I was merely pointing out the data. The reason you were not sure which side I was one is because I am not on the home birth or the hospital birth side. I am on the mother’s side.

Some events that happen during labor and birth are not resolved immediately after birth. Sometimes babies survive for weeks or months on life support only to die later. Researchers have different time periods (infant, neonatal, intrapartum, perinatal mortalities) because they are trying to answer different questions, and sometimes they disagree on which time period to use. Sometimes there is no right answer.

Prenatal care and its effectiveness or ineffectiveness have been studied. Studies are inconsistent in part because the purpose of prenatal care is not consistent. Is the goal a lower maternal/ neonatal mortality rate? Or breastfeeding success? Or avoiding repeat cesarean sections? See the Cochrane database at: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17636711?ordinalpos=9&itool=EntrezSystem2.PEntrez.Pubmed.Pubmed_ResultsPanel.Pubmed_RVDocSum

Although you may not perceive any difference in monitoring between a home and a hospital, those who feel they “do it better” have very strong beliefs about how intrapartum and neonatal mortality is affected by location of birth and birth attendant. For some, being ten minutes from the hospital is too far. For others, an hour is close enough.

As far as a general consensus, I don’t know of one. Perhaps obstetricians believe that the advantage of a hospital birth is that they are there, along with all the equipment and personnel with which they are comfortable. In fact, most people have some element of this. If you plan a home birth, is your backup plan to go to the most rural hospital without a neonatal intensive care unit? Or is it to go to the hospital with a perinatologist on call 24/ 7? Are you more likely to take the words of an obstetrician or a mother more seriously? Is not having a continuous fetal monitor only ok if you have a Doppler? Or is a fetoscope enough? All of us participate in the idea that doctors know more than us and that technology and science make things safer. Some less than others. Robbie Davis-Floyd says it best in her book Birth as an American Rite of Passage with her discussion of our societal values of paternalism and technocracy.
http://www.amazon.com/Birth-as-American-Rite-Passage/dp/0520229320/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1215502269&sr=1-3

Tienchin
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