Relaxing Doesn't Make Babies

Homebirth Petition

July 2, 2008 — 9:03 pm

I keep talking about birth as an experience, as a pivotal life-changing event in a family, in a woman’s life, and how important it is to preserve a woman’s right to choose the manner and place of her birth. Here’s your chance to voice it, to fight for it. Please sign the petition to prevent the AMA and ACOG from making homebirth illegal.
http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/birthathome/

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I received this in a group email, and it is a very good read.

Animal vs. Human Birth

The protocols in the world of animal husbandry to protect an offspring at the time of birth—no strangers, dimmed lights, freedom of movement, familiar environment, unlimited nourishment, respectful quiet, no disruptions—are done without hesitation because to do otherwise invites “unexplained distress” or sudden demise of the offspring. These thoughtful conditions are the norm, along with careful observation to determine when to use the technological expertise in true emergencies. When we have veterinarians in our childbirth education classes, they always start to smile and nod when I tell this story. These are givens—instinctive givens, even, for animals of all descriptions!

Yet what are the “givens” for the human who births not in a barn, but in a “modern and advanced” hospital? In many cases, 100% the opposite! Usually a minimum of a dozen strangers pass through the world of the laboring mother in her first 12 hours in the hospital—security officer, patient transporter, triage secretary, admission clerk, triage nurse, resident and/or doctor on call, admitting nurse, first shift nurse, break nurse, additional nurse at delivery, doctor or midwife plus possibly students, anesthesiologist, pediatrician, etc. Bright lights in the triage and labor rooms are challenging to dim. Mothers are tethered to monitors or IV poles and are moved through a bright hall with unfamiliar sounds to a new room in a building devoted to illness/trauma that most have visited once briefly if at all. They receive poor quality “clear liquids only.” They are exposed to voices of others in the hall or chatting by the attendants during contractions and endless disruptions throughout! But then, do we ever find that we have an offspring experience “unexplained distress?” Of course, and at frightening rates! Yet, oddly, many of these disruptions are promoted as minor inconveniences or necessary to “protect” the baby.

Curiously, while veterinarians commonly have to defend interventions in light of the additional cost and the risks associated with interfering with nature, providers caring for human mothers within the medical system more commonly are forced to defend why they did NOT intervene! Consider the high rates of inductions, epidurals, artificial rupture of membranes, immediate cord cutting, cesareans and the vigorous defense necessary to fight for anything different, especially if time is involved (time to go into labor, to progress, to push, to allow the cord to stop pulsation or to get “done” bonding). I’ve recently seen outstanding CNMs and obstetricians sacrifice their own political reputations and suffer departmental reprimands for births with great outcomes where they protected the mothers’ yearning for privacy, allowed extended pushing time with great vital signs or, during a healthy normal birth, followed their intuition and honored the mother’s begging to check heart tones frequently by hand during pushing instead of what the mother considered the massive intrusion of wearing the monitor belt. Interventions are considered to be the ultimate protection from litigation in human care, yet they contribute mightily to the high rates of distress in mothers and babies!

In animal husbandry, the first line of defense for protecting the unborn is to protect and nurture the nutritional needs and comfort of the birthing female. In the case of institutionalized birth for humans, however, in spite of evidence to the contrary, the norm is to act as if the nutritional needs and the comfort of the birthing mothers are of concern to, at most, the marketing and public relations department! It’s an affront to common sense that as a society we are currently more accepting of the needs of foaling mares, whelping poodles and high-producing cows than of our birthing humans. From the high rates of fetal distress, meconium staining and breastfeeding problems, the consequences are clearly devastating to our infants, just as any decent horseman would predict.

— Beth Barbeau
Excerpted from “Safer Birth in a Barn?,” Midwifery Today, Issue 83
View table of contents / Order the back issue

5 responses to “Homebirth Petition”

  1. Julia says:

    You know, sweeping generalizations on either side make me very uncomfortable. My (teaching) hospital is non-interventionist, respectful, and very comfortable and comforting. I would definitely not choose to give birth in a barn over that environment. On the other hand, I would also not choose to give birth in the other teaching hospital in my city. All I am saying is that a much more nuanced discussion is needed than the flame-throwers on either side seem interested in.

  2. Nat says:

    I’m assuming you’re making your remarks in reference to the article itself, considering how I gave birth and will give birth again in a hospital that I really really liked. ;) I posted the article because I found it was interesting how we treat humans so different from other animals, when really our needs boil down to the same thing. All articles need to be taken with a grain of salt.

  3. Julia says:

    Yup, it was about the article– sorry about not being clear. I just get annoyed with articles like that because they are clearly promoting an agenda via sweeping generalizations (and also with disingenuous slights of hand– we are willing to and lose a lot more animal mothers and babies in childbirth than we ever do for humans, even with all that is wrong with the system now). And what I think gets lost in that is the middle ground for calm rational discussions. Childbirth has been turned so much into the us-vs-them thing, fodder for mommy wars that it really makes me crazy. Going into that discussion with “my way is right and your way is dangerous” mindset can’t possibly be helpful. Making women feel crummy about their choices is not helpful, either way.

  4. Shannon says:

    I was in the stirrups the other day thinking about how it really, really is not a very comfy position. And not one I look forward to being in for hours upon hours before I push a baby out.
    I don’t like the idea of getting an IV and not being allowed to eat or drink.
    But unfortunately the only birthing center covered by my insurance is over an hour and a half away.

    I agree with you that women should have the option of choosing a homebirth.

  5. Nat says:

    Shannon, hopefully your hospital will offer other options than laying there in labor. I sat cross-legged, it was the most comfortable for me. At the very least ask if you can move around, hopefully they’ll help you out!