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Doctor: "Having a home birth is like not putting your child's seat belt on"

 

 

 

 

It has been called a ‘silent tragedy’.

A ‘silent tragedy’ as parents risk the possibility of their baby having a long-term disability by choosing a home birth.

A ‘silent tragedy’ because the talked about risks of home birthing focus more often on the heartbreaking baby and maternal deaths.

A ‘silent tragedy’ because Australian parents are still often risking the futures of their unborn babies by making birthing decisions based on parental needs rather than the needs of the baby.

And Doctors are now demanding that this ‘silent tragedy’ comes to the fore.

A leading Australian obstetrician has argued that the risk of future long-term disability to newborns should “weigh heavily” in decisions about whether to give birth at home or in hospital.

Writing in the Journal of Medical Ethics, Associate Professor Lachlan de Crespigny of the University of Melbourne says that most arguments have focused on the risk of death, but he and Oxford University’s Professor Julian Savulescu believe the possibility of long-term disability deserves as much attention.

“Having a home birth may be like not putting your child’s car seat belt on,” they write. “The risk of being injured in a single trip by not wearing a seat belt is extremely low. Still, we expect people to wear a seatbelt to make the risks as low as possible, despite some inconvenience and diminution of driving pleasure.”

Professor de Crespigny feels that women and their partners may be poorly informed of all the potential risks they could be taking by choosing a homebirth.

“Obstetric care is a specialty where things go wrong very quickly,” Professor de Crespigny told AAP.

“Something that scares all people involved in delivery is shoulder dystocia, where the head is delivered but not the shoulders. The baby asphyxiates very quickly.

“To deal with that you need excellent training and hospital-level resuscitation facilities.”

They cited a study from the Netherlands which found that when travel time from home to hospital is more than 20 minutes, there is an increased risk of the baby dying or suffering a long-term condition, and other studies which showed that delays in accessing emergency care increased risks of brain damage.

Even a minor complication could lead to long-term educational and other developmental issues, he said.

Speaking to the ABC he singled out two main issues – of learning disabilities and cerebral palsy.

He told the ABC of the duplicity there is with women so concerned for the long-term effects of smoking or drinking, and yet no consideration is given to the potential long-term effects of home-birthing.

He said:

During pregnancy women are very, very focused on things that might cause problems to the baby after birth and they avoid alcohol and cigarettes and illicit drugs and are very careful with diet. They go to all sorts of lengths to try to produce the healthiest baby. But when it comes to home birth, it’s not always the focus that it should be.

Previously Professor de Crespigny has written for the SMH on the issue arguing that there is never a justification for taking a risk with a baby’s future.

To take an extreme example, home birth might result in quadriplegia. Now what risk could/should a couple take to have ”a really lovely spontaneous birth at home” that justifies quadriplegia? One in 1000? One in 1 million? Anything?

We contend that the choice to have ”a really, lovely spontaneous birth at home” is only justified if it exposes the future child to the lowest possible risk of avoidable disability. And this is just never the case at home.

A blogging site Hurt by Homebirth tells the story of Sam Comstive who was born in 2011.

His parents had planned a homebirth, but things went tragically wrong. The midwife involved failed to transfer Sam’s mother immediately to hospital, his brain was affected by the lack of oxygen he received and he suffered severe developmental delays, just like those described by Professor de Crespigny.

Sam died at the age of three.

The autopsy said his death was directly related to his labor and birth injuries. His mother wrote on the blogging site:

“Sam never talked, sat up, crawled, stood, walked, used arms/hands purposefully. He was completely dependent on us for his care. He was orally fed but it was always a challenge and he never had enough caloric intake….Sam was still on a bottle.”

Charges were brought before the midwife who failed to call an ambulance. She was given six months probated suspension.

In the article in the Journal of Medical Ethics, which came out yesterday, Professor de Crespigny and Professor Julian Savulescu call for hospitals to do more to make their environments acceptable for women.

“The more we can cater to all women’s needs the better it will be for everybody,” said Prof de Crespigny.

The article does not call for women to be forced into a hospital birth; in fact they acknowledge that hospital births are not without their own risks.

“We are not calling for home births to be banned, but we believe they should be actively discouraged.”

 

Home birth is a highly emotional topic for many to discuss, yet it is something we need to continue a discourse about to stop it being a ‘silent tragedy’.  Does this latest paper into the practise concern you? Would it put you off choosing this method of birthing? 

 

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Top Comments

Marina 10 years ago

I can only base my opinion on my experiences - 4 births - 3 at home and 1 in hospital. The first three were brilliant, I had two experienced midwives who also practised in a hospital and we were living close to the hospital. The first had issues, but they talked me through it and to a successful birth. When the issues were a possibility I was talked through the options and I trusted their instinct.
The fourth was a schamozzle of a birth. I was induced and basically left to labour on my own. On on check when there was a change over of staff, I was told it's time to push. Ah - nah - not yet the head isn't engaged, I knew what that felt like - the old pushin out a watermelon. Then she said to put my hand down there to feel the head - no head but a hand!!
I had to beg for a C Section - the doctor was even saying "just have push love and we'll see what happens" - then the best bit - "If you tear, we'll just stitch you up and the baby's bones are soft so she's unlikely to break anything!!!"

Ah - NO - Give me a CSection NOW!! Was my response.

If I had a great experience in hospital - I'd be an advocate. My experience though is that I've had to care for dozens of babies and mums over the past twenty years who have been traumatized by their hospital births. Until we have a good system - home, with experienced midwives with the balls to say - honey we are going to hospital, is still a great and SAFE place to be. Hospital CAN be nurturing, but we need more staff and more consistency of care before we can achieve that.

chillax 10 years ago

Sounds like you were a public patient? I doubt you would have to beg a private Obstetrician for a c-section. That is often why private hospitals have higher rates of csections because women know that you can ask for one. You ask, you get!


An opinion 10 years ago

People need to make properly informed choices. That for me is going to the hospital & putting my life & my child's in the hands of people who have trained extensively & have the equipment, if they need it to save mine & my child's life.

Just because having a child is meant to be the most 'natural' event doesn't mean you shouldn't put yourself & your baby into the safest environment to go through this process.
For those that take the heightened risk of having home births extra pressure on themselves, their babies & the care givers. Why take that risk. And please stop saying doctors just take over. They make a medical call & do what is necessary. Quite simply nurses/midwives & others involved in home deliveries do not have the experience or skill to save you or your baby. If something goes wrong you know what they do (or should do) they call & get specialist involvement. And then when that doctor has not been given the time they need, things can go really wrong.
I say good luck if you choose to have a home birth but weigh up the risks, even if you have a low risk pregnancy. Having a baby is not easy and the more help you have the better I say.
And on a side note can we please move on from this concept of a'natural' birth. However my baby has come out or how my next one will they have both come from me naturally, the delivery process does not change this.