Home Birth With Midwife As Safe As Hospital Birth: Study

Canadian researchers find lower rate of complications

Posted: August 31, 2009

By Amanda Gardner
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Aug. 31 (HealthDay News) -- Having your baby at home with a registered midwife is just as safe as a conventional hospital birth, a new study says.

In fact, planned home births of this kind may have a lower rate of complications, according to the study published in the Sept. 15 issue of CMAJ.

Even though the study was conducted in Canada, where attitudes toward midwifery are more accepting than in some other countries, the findings may help to calm an ongoing controversy in the United States and elsewhere.

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists is opposed to home births, as are certain organizations in Australia and New Zealand. More organizations in Great Britain are supportive and Canadian provinces are currently transitioning to midwifery, said study lead author Patricia Janssen, director of the Master of Public Health Program at the University of British Columbia.

Janssen, a registered nurse who has midwife training though not certification, said: "People who function as independent midwives are not necessarily tightly regulated [in the U.S.] depending on which state you're in, so there may not be a guarantee that they have had an adequate level of training or a certified diploma or anything like that. And they may not be monitored and regulated by a particular professional college."

The controversy has resulted in a lack of clear regulation and licensing requirements in the United States, said Dr. Marjorie Greenfield, associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at University Hospitals Case Medical Center in Cleveland.

According to Greenfield, the National Association of Certified Professional Midwives does have a certification process but many states don't recognize it. "If you're a woman who wants to have a home birth, how do you determine if this person has appropriate qualifications?" she said.

The authors of the new study compared three different groups of planned births in British Columbia from the beginning of 2000 to the end of 2004: home births attended by registered midwives (midwives are registered in Canada), hospital births attended by the same group of registered midwives, and hospital births attended by physicians. In all, the study included almost 13,000 births.

The mortality rate per 1,000 births was 0.35 in the home birth group, 0.57 in hospital births attended by midwives, and 0.64 among those attended by physicians, according to the study.

Women who gave birth at home were less likely to need interventions or to have problems such as vaginal tearing or hemorrhaging. These babies were also less likely to need oxygen therapy or resuscitation, the study found.

The authors acknowledge that "self-selection" could have skewed the study results, in that women who prefer home deliveries tend to be healthier and otherwise more fit to have a home birth.

Janssen said she hoped "this article will have a major impact in the U.S." But there is a definite "establishment" bias against home births. And the issue is an emotionally charged one, she said.

"There is a political and economic issue about controlling where birth happens, but also a deep belief by physicians that it's not safe to have your baby at home," Greenfield said. "Doctors see every home-birth patient who had a complication, but we don't see the ones that have these beautiful, fabulous babies at home who may breast-feed better or have less hospital-acquired infections. There may be medical benefits," she added.

"Midwifery needs to be regulated. It can't be under the radar because then it's dangerous," Greenfield said. "There has to be a regulatory process and a licensure process [to protect] women who are going to choose home birth anyway."

More information

Visit the National Association of Certified Professional Midwives to learn more about this specialty.

good article

US News did a nice job, better than many other articles of similar content. Amy, even US CNM's do not get trained in homebirth AND hospital birth. I applaud the Canadian Health system for designing a birth model that allows Midwives to attend women in either birth setting, according to the woman's choice. The UK, Netherlands, and other countries approach birth in the same way and their excellent statistics reveal how successful that can be. American Certified Professional Midwives do have equal training to American Certified Nurse-Midwives, in midwifery. The North American Registry of Midwives website explains all that,....check it out. What they do NOT have is years spent learning the medical model of anything. CNM's typically enter midwifery school after having been a nurse, and worked in various areas of nursing, before deciding to enter the field of midwifery. Professional Midwives typically enter into midwifery as their first and primary passion, after years of time around birthing women. The CPM training model is a shining example of how to acquire education and skills training in ways the ACNM could only dream of. I might add that if OB's hadn't been so aggressive at wiping out ALL midwifery all these past decades, an integrated approach to educating them would have emerged, but they'll have none of that. They already are permitted to limit CNM's in ways they shouldn't. Moms, beware! OB's make decisions about your and your baby's health based on litigation-driven assumptions, not your health's best interest. More than another other area of medicine, Obstetrics is ridden with a wake of bad practices that were eventually abandoned. Which of today's current protocols, 20-30 years from now, will be phased out? Remember DES, twilight sleep, full shaves, and a host of others? (Go ask your mother/grandmother!) Let's get rid of: eating restrictions, immediate cord cutting, pushing on your back, pitocin inductions, there's just not enough ROOM!!! Midwives already practice evidence-based maternity care. IT's BETTER FOR MOMS AND BABIES!!! Try it Dr. Amy, your patients would like it.

clementine of IL @ Sep 04, 2009 09:56:19 AM

American OBs block access to safest option

It's wonderful to see Amy Tuteur state publicly that homebirth is safe!

Of course, she can't help slamming American midwives using voodoo statistics that neither the authors nor the peer reviewers of the study she references recognize. That study, too, showed excellent/equivalent morbidity and mortality outcomes for homebirth - in America, with CPMs - but was suppressed by the ACOG.

Both Greenfield and Tuteur disingenously mention difficulties with consistent training and licensure standards for American midwives without admitting the direct cause: American obstetricians, unlike most of their counterparts in our peer nations, have pursued a vendetta against homebirth midwives and a monopoly on birth services. The campaign has been vicious, shameless, and sustained.

If the AMA and ACOG were really motivated by safety, they would be supporting consistent training and licensure standards nationally and collaborating seamlessly with qualified homebirth midwives, not trying to outlaw homebirth!

American women are being lied to. There is a better option for most women, and the ACOG and AMA know they can't compete on safety or patient satisfaction. Find out the legal situation in your state and let your representatives know you will not tolerate the ACOG's anticompetitive practices.

Dana of OH @ Sep 01, 2009 10:21:11 AM

CPMs are trained, effective maternity care providers

Certified Professional Midwives are the only maternity care providers in the U.S. whose specialized training prepares them for out-of-hospital births.

As OBs leave rural communities to serve in the growing exurbs, community hospitals close their L&D units, and increasing numbers of families face the need for care without insurance coverage, CPMs are stepping into the gap to provide skilled, evidence-based, culturally competent care at a fraction of the cost.

Additionally, the model of care that CPMs is being demonstrated to substantially decrease the rates of pre-term labor and low-birth weight babies in communities at increased risk for disparities in outcomes.

I absolutely support the drive to provide for a legal framework for CPMs to practice within and am working wholeheartedly to see that happen in my own home state.

Stephanie BB of OH @ Aug 31, 2009 23:53:35 PM

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