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Janine Melnitz's avatar

I am an obstetrician and I have delivered about 10000 babies. There are some generalizations in this article that could be a bit more nuanced. I agree that there has been the over medicalization of pregnancy and child birth. Electronic fetal monitoring was going to lower cesarean sections, reduce CP, etc. It has done none of that. There are some instances when it has been life saving for the baby, but mostly I see people "over reading" fetal heart rate strips and rushing to surgery. The fear of being sued is a huge reason, too. Newborns should not be given vaccines on day one is another example. I think it is important to look at the hospital you plan to deliver your baby. Our hospital has a cesarean rate well below 20%, I cant remember the last time I did an episiotomy....(I think they are barbaric), used forceps, etc. I have worked with midwives my entire career both civilian and military and they are an integral and invaluable part of care. Home births are great until they are not. I am at a tertiary care hospital and we accept patients who are trying home births by lay midwives and I have seen dome catastrophes. The answer does lie somewhere in between. Ready access to a hospital for emergencies is key along with people knowing their limitations regarding child birth. PS-I think ACOG has lost their collective mind in the last 10 years. They are so pro-abortion it is ridiculous. I went into OB/GYN to promote healthy moms and babies. I don't think that abortions should be illegal but what happened to safe, rare and legal?

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Tara Drerup's avatar

As a Certified Nurse Midwife, having worked in Military hospitals, private practice, and in out-of-hospital birth in freestanding, midwifery-led birth centers, I see the biggest risk in out-of-hospital birth being the lack of integration with the hospital, to include outright hostility towards the patient and the midwife by hospital staff...mostly physicians. In studying out-of-hospital birth, we also need to distinguish between direct-entry, or lay midwives, and Certified Nurse Midwives (Advanced Practice Nurses). I believe the answer lies, at least in part, in granting CNMs who attend out-of-hospital birth hospital privieges to provide for continuity of care. While approximately 90% of CNMs work in hospitals, this crucial piece of continuity is key, and many hospital bylaws (not state laws) prevent CNMs from being granted hospital privileges without being employed by a physician.

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