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- #1: You want to have a homebirth, but don’t want to freak out your family too much
- #2: You want to have a homebirth, but would prefer to have at least some medical equipment on hand as labor/delivery is usually quite unpredictable
- #3: You want to avoid an epidural and have a natural birth
- #4: You do not want a continuous fetal monitoring device used on you during labor
- #5: You do not want to be induced
- #6: You subscribe to the philosophy that hospitals are for sick people, not mothers giving birth
- #7: You don’t want your water to be forcibly broken
- #8: You want a homier and less sterile environment
- #9: You hate the smell of hospitals
- #10: You want to avoid a C-section
- #11: You want to avoid a forceps delivery
- #12: You want to birth in an upright position
- #13: You want a water birth
- #14: You want to eat and drink during labor
- #15: You don’t want the umbilical cord cut until it stops pulsing
- #16: You plan to exclusively breastfeed your child
- #17: You intend to use Oral Vitamin K
- #18: You want to actually get some rest after the baby is born
- #19: You intend to skip the ointment that is typically applied to a newborn’s eyes
- #20: You Plan to Use Homemade Baby Formula
- #21: You intend to skip the newborn PKU heel prick test
- Where to Find a Birth Center Near You
When I first found out I was pregnant with my first child, there was no question that I would give birth at the hospital. In all honesty, the thought of having my child outside a hospital environment never crossed my mind or was it even discussed with my husband. Being from a medical family with two MDs and a nurse in the immediate family sealed the deal.
After informally polling a dozen or so women about their recent birth experience to determine which hospital was “best”, however, I inadvertently discovered that literally, every single woman I chatted with about her baby’s hospital birth had a terrible experience.
The full reality of the situation was staring me clearly in the face. My chance of experiencing a dream birth at a hospital was basically slim to none.
At that point, I didn’t know what I was looking for but I knew I didn’t want to have my baby at the hospital and I didn’t want a homebirth either.
Birthing outside the hospital was rare even back in the late 1990s and “googling” to find out info was not yet in vogue either, so I had to find information out the old fashioned way – by asking around! After a number of weeks, I finally found someone who suggested that I try to find a birth center.
Believe it or not, I had never heard of a freestanding birth center before but after visiting one, I realized that the idea really meshed well with the type of birth I was seeking.
I ended up delivering all three of my children at a freestanding birth center. This type of birth center is not affiliated with any particular hospital and generally does not have any doctors on staff. It offers state of the art care with nurse and licensed midwives during delivery but without interference or restrictive policies that require you to deliver on your back or within a certain number of hours else they wheel you in for a Cesarean section.
Birth centers offer a much more individually tailored approach to birth with the benefits of hospital birth and the freedom of a homebirth all wrapped into one.
Does this approach to birth appeal to you? If so, here are 21 reasons why you might consider having your baby at a birth center too!
#1: You want to have a homebirth, but don’t want to freak out your family too much
Birth centers are a good choice if you don’t have a husband, parents, or in-laws on board with the whole out of the hospital birth thing. A birth center is a happy medium that everyone can agree to.
#2: You want to have a homebirth, but would prefer to have at least some medical equipment on hand as labor/delivery is usually quite unpredictable
This reason played a big factor for me in choosing a birth center. I wanted the freedom of a homebirth but felt more comfortable in a location where the equipment was ready to go or a quick transfer to the hospital could occur (freestanding birth centers are frequently located in close proximity to a hospital) in case something unpredictable happened.
And, let’s face it. Birth is one of the most unpredictable experiences a woman can ever have!
#3: You want to avoid an epidural and have a natural birth
The truth is, hospitals give lip service to natural birth. They make a lot more money with a labor/delivery that involves an intervention of some sort.
A favorite tactic I’ve heard used to encourage an unwanted epidural is for the nurse to sweetly say when the woman is at her most painful contractions, “Don’t you want some medication for that, honey? You’ll feel a whole lot better right away!”.
Asking you if you want medication at the height of labor and when you are emotionally at your most vulnerable is a low blow. Most women would say “YES, GIVE ME DRUGS!”. I know I would have!
At a birth center, you don’t get those kinds of tactics. The nurses work through the contractions with you and there are many pieces of equipment like a birthing ball or birthing tub to assist you and relieve pain.
If you desire the amazing and empowering experience of natural birth, your chances of success at a birth center are a lot more favorable!
#4: You do not want a continuous fetal monitoring device used on you during labor
Who wants an ultrasound device strapped to her belly during labor? Talk about uncomfortable. Not to mention that the safety of such a device is highly questionable.
Did you know that 50 causal human studies have demonstrated the huge dangers of fetal ultrasound? I never had an ultrasound with any of my pregnancies, and I sure didn’t want one attached to my body during labor either.
When birthing at a hospital, you frequently don’t even have a choice about continuous electronic fetal monitoring. If you want to have a midwife check the baby’s vitals only between contractions as it should be, then go to a birth center.
#5: You do not want to be induced
Induction with Pitocin greatly increases a woman’s chances of a C-section. It also increases the odds of needing an epidural as the contractions from inducing labor progress are much stronger and more painful than natural contractions.
Hospitals are very Pitocin happy. If a woman is not progressing fast enough or her labor has stalled at 6-7 cm, a little shot of Pitocin is encouraged. Stay away and birth in a birth center if you want to avoid induction with drugs. This article on natural induction suggests alternatives.
#6: You subscribe to the philosophy that hospitals are for sick people, not mothers giving birth
Hospitals are indeed for sick people. No surprise then that the birth process at the hospital is treated as a clinical event and not the joyous, natural occasion it truly is.
#7: You don’t want your water to be forcibly broken
Hospitals just love to bust a laboring woman’s water. Why? It speeds things up considerably. Unfortunately, it also increases the pain of contractions significantly. Think “baby’s head ramming your dilated cervix” or “baby’s head cushioned by a bag of water ramming your dilated cervix”. Which would be more painful do you think?
When contractions become more painful, a woman is more likely to request or give in to pressure from the attendant nurse for an epidural.
As a woman who has labored all the way to 10cm with her bag of waters intact, I can tell you that it is MUCH more comfortable this way. I actually have pictures of myself talking on the phone to my Mom with a cup of tea in my hand while laboring, completely unmedicated, at 9cm.
Trust me, you don’t want some intervention happy nurse messing with your bag of waters just so he/she can go to lunch break on time!
#8: You want a homier and less sterile environment
The picture above is the birth center where I delivered my third child. Notice the rocking chairs on the wrap-around porch, the lovely lake at the back and the overall serene environment. Isn’t this better than walking the cold, sterile halls of the hospital during labor if they even let you walk around at all?
Calm is good during birth. Things go quicker and tend to have better outcomes when you are peaceful and calm.
#9: You hate the smell of hospitals
I hate the smell of disinfectant and all the other chemical smells that seem to exist permanently inside a hospital. Your sense of smell is heightened significantly during pregnancy too – at least mine was. The smell of a hospital would have made me ill during delivery which is another reason I chose to stay away.
#10: You want to avoid a C-section
Birth in a hospital and your chances of C-section are somewhere between 25-40% depending on the facility. Deliver in a birth center and your chances of a C-section are less than 5%. ‘Nuff said.
#11: You want to avoid a forceps delivery
Delivery by forceps can cause injury to your newborn. It is also the result of draconian procedures at many hospitals that require a woman to deliver on her back. Go to a birth center for more flexible policies that avoid the use of a dangerous instrument like a forceps and midwives who are skilled at delivering babies who seem to get “stuck”.
#12: You want to birth in an upright position
I found birthing in an upright position to be optimal for me. It allows gravity to work in your favor and it also involves less stress on your baby because pushing on your back can briefly cut off the baby’s blood supply.
Delivering in an upright or squat position is unthinkable in most hospitals. Can you see a doctor or nurse down on the floor underneath you ready to catch the baby in a hospital? Go to a birth center where midwives are more flexible and know how to handle deliveries from different positions.
#13: You want a water birth
I myself didn’t want a water birth, but many ladies do. Birth centers provide this service (usually for an additional fee), and you get the bonus of being able to labor in the tub too which does reduce pain.
Be forewarned, though, water birth is not the ideal approach to giving birth that it is promoted to be. The linked article discusses this little-discussed downside.
#14: You want to eat and drink during labor
I liked to eat and drink during my labor. This is a no-no at the hospital because eating before major surgery like a C-section could cause complications. Since the chance of C-section is so high at hospitals, many make it easy on themselves by just forbidding eating and drinking during labor.
#15: You don’t want the umbilical cord cut until it stops pulsing
After the baby is delivered, the umbilical cord should ideally not be cut until it stops pulsing. This allows all the blood in the cord to go to your baby and provide extra oxygen. A baby whose cord is cut too soon can be deprived of oxygen and even possibly brain-damaged.
If you want to learn more about why it is so important not to cut the cord too soon as is the practice in many hospitals especially when the parents plan to bank some of the newborn’s stem cells, please refer to this article on the dangers of fetal cord clamping.
#16: You plan to exclusively breastfeed your child
Hospitals love to shove a bottle of sugar water in a newborn’s mouth even if the parents have previously indicated objections to the practice. This mistake which is fairly common, can cause nipple confusion and reduce the chances of successful latching/breastfeeding.
You don’t want anything messing with your chances of a successful nursing relationship with your newborn. Your chances of successful breastfeeding are better at a birth center where bottles of sugar water and pacifiers don’t exist and supplementation with formula is not pushed.
#17: You intend to use Oral Vitamin K
The vitamin K1 injection is a synthetic form and an unnecessary intervention and pain experience for your baby. It also contains a number of dangerous ingredients and should be avoided if at all possible. If you wish to skip it, best to stay away from the intervention happy delivery teams at the hospital. Oral Vitamin K is used in Europe and is much safer.
#18: You want to actually get some rest after the baby is born
Hospital procedures require nurses to check you and your baby every few hours to make sure everything is “ok”. This requires poking and prodding even when you are obviously sleeping! If you want to get some decent rest after your baby is born, go to a birth center where they won’t be bothering you or your baby unless it is truly necessary.
#19: You intend to skip the ointment that is typically applied to a newborn’s eyes
There is absolutely no need for the eye ointment hospitals squirt in all newborn’s eyes. This stuff blurs their vision and interferes with the bonding process. I remember when my children were just born, I held them very close to my face and spoke softly to them and they were alert and their eyes definitely focused on my face. A newborn can see just fine from 6 or so inches away unless you squirt some useless ointment in their eyes!
If your child develops some sort of eye infection within a few days after the birth (which the eye ointment is supposed to prevent), simply drip a drop or two of breastmilk colostrum in each eye and it will clear up almost immediately.
#20: You Plan to Use Homemade Baby Formula
If you plan to use a quality homemade DIY baby formula recipe once you get home, revealing this in the hospital risks bringing in Child Protective Services.
Midwives and staff at a birth center know this option is healthy and wonderful for women who cannot breastfeed. Hence, you don’t have to have whispered conversations in a birth center about your holistic plans like when you birth in a hospital!
#21: You intend to skip the newborn PKU heel prick test
Before a newborn leaves the hospital, he/she is pricked in the heel to draw blood to test for the genetic disorder Phenylketonuria. This disorder only affects 1 in every 10,000-15,000 babies. If you wish to spare your child the pain of this, in my view, an extremely unnecessary test, then have your baby at a birth center.
I made the mistake with my first child of going to the pediatrician 2 days after he was born at a birth center to get this test. Because I was so healthy and his blood so full of natural vitamin K because I drank nettle tea in the final weeks before giving birth, his blood clotted too quickly for the test to “take”.
The doctor and nurses stabbed his heel 3 times to draw blood with the test failing each time due to his blood clotting so fast. After the third failed attempt, I could take my child’s screams from the pain no longer and finally walked out of the doctor’s office despite their protests.
My child never did have a successful PKU test and my other two children were never subjected to this test as I never allowed it again. This is one thing that if I could do over, I would have handled differently as I would have skipped the PKU completely from the get-go.
I hope this list encourages you to consider having your child at a birth center instead of the hospital.
If you are an experienced birth center Mom, doula or midwife and I’ve inadvertently left out some additional reasons for evaluating an out of hospital birth, please add them in the comments section for those who may use this post as a checklist for making this important decision!
Where to Find a Birth Center Near You
Back when I found a birth center near me, there was not much of an internet and no smartphones to easily research local establishments.
I had to do it the old fashioned way…ask around!
I inquired at health food stores, gyms and other places where folks with a healthy living mindset hang out.
Finally, one day, a chiropractor told me that he “had heard” about a local freestanding birth center in a town nearby. I called the local library and Chamber of Commerce in the area until I found the name and phone number.
I still think this is the best way to find one, as you will typically get feedback on whether the birth center is reputable or not. Reviews online can sometimes be gamed. Talking to someone about their experiences is legit.
If I can give you one piece of advice, I would suggest going with an independent birth center rather than one affiliated with a hospital. Once a birth center becomes an arm of the hospital, the midwives that staff it become restricted by the same, overly rigid standard of care procedures.
Flexibility and choices in the prenatal and birth process are the biggest reason that you probably want a birth center in the first place!
Barbara
My husband has worked in Newborn Screening for over 30 years. It’s not just a PKU test. Most states test for more than 30 disorders. The incidence of these metabolic disorders is low, but they do happen. With some disorders the baby gets extremely ill quickly and it is not easily diagnosed. The quick results of the newborn screening test have saved baby’s lives and prevented severe mental disabilities for many babies. I’ve heard countless stories of babies near death at the hospital, the diagnosis made and called in and the baby going home the next day. Yes, the heel stick can be painful, but this panel of tests is well worth that pain.
While rightly discarding some of the unnecessary things that medicine has foisted upon us we should be careful of ignoring the truly helpful.
http://www.marchofdimes.com/baby/bringinghome_screening.html
CHEESESLAVE via Facebook
I’m hoping to have a waterbirth with my next baby.
Kristin
Great list! I attend births both at home and in a birth center. I would like to inform your readers that reason #2 is not completely accurate. While it is true that birth centers are often closer to a hospital than many people’s homes are, it is not true that there is less medical equipment available at a home birth. Home birth midwives are “mobile birth centers”. I carry all the same medical equipment with me to home births that is available at the birth center.
Jen
Cindy L.
I’m thankful I live in a time where i can ‘google’ things and read posts and comments like this. Its all thanks to women like you and Sarah (and all the other women who commented). A big THANK YOU to all of you for giving me inspiration and hope. Hope that I would love do to a home birth or birthing center birth, but that even if I have a higher risk pregnancy that a hospital CAN be a positive experience.
I hope however that my husband will be in support of all I want to do (or not do) and that he will stand up for me, as we are not planning on getting pregnant for a bit still. I also hope i can find a midwife or birthing center in my small rural area. This is all a new thing for even me, I just started looking into things and researching a few months ago. So i can imagine that my husband might have some concerns and i would bet he has never thought about going anywhere other than a hospital for having a baby. But knowing my personality, he can probly guess that I want an alternative experience.
Anyway, I just wanted to express my deep gratitude to all the women who shared their stories that I can learn from.
Real quick, someone please tell me what a DD and DS is? I saw those terms in Cindy’s comment and dont know what they stand for.
Audrey
Dear Daughter and Dear Son I believe. DH = Dear Husband too.
cindy L.
Oh boy. i guess you’ll get TONS of responses to this one.
My 1st birth was a disaster in the hospital–a c-section diverted only due to the diligence of 2 midwives on duty, who suggested I lie on MY SIDE (wow, a DR. couldn’t think of that?) to let my daughter move more easily through my pelvis. That experience solidified my resolve to use a midwife for the next one. The labor time was cut in half. I’d love to say I was pain free and smiling (but sadly my labors got longer instead of shorter each time!), my recovery time was instantaneous, even with some minor hemmoraging, that the midwife was able to stop by using her hands. I don’t want to know what they would’ve done to me in the hospital!
Went back a 2nd and 3rd time to the birth center. The head midwife was awesome and the care was fantastic. I could choose how to sit, stand, walk, move or not, eat, drink, whatever. My husband could lie in the double bed with me! The care was constant but not invasive. The hospital was right down the road if it was needed.. My 3rd child had to go to the hospital and stayed for 5 days. It was awful. Nothing that was caused by the midwives, just because of her size. I too stayed there and watched her heel get pricked again and again.
I wish I could turn back time and know all I do now. I got all my children vaccinated as infants. The three youngest got chicken pox vaccine. I was a working mother at the time and thought it’d be more convenient for me to not miss work. I did take a stand on how many they would do at one time, and I think partly due to that, they are healthy today. I would only let them do 2 at a time. The pediatricians I used were very flexible. I wish they had told us not to use them however. All in all my children are very healthy; I think it’s because we have never eaten a lot of processed food. I didn’t let my children eat packaged foods too much and I always had them eat fresh fruit and veggies. To this day, we only see the Dr. about once a year for sick visits.
My 5th child was an emergency c-section so of course I went to the hospital. I was a week overdue, almost 44, and had gestational diabetes. They weren’t taking any chances. I kept him in my room so they couldn’t pollute him with sugar water. I don’t know what kind of tests they ran–I felt like I was in some weird sci-fi tv show. Every 10 minutes a new person came in the room and said, hi, I’m so and so, and I’m here to do xyz. I wasn’t going to leave my son alone for a minute. It caused an awful flasback to DD#3 being in an isolette in the nicu and being hooked up to tubes and being on massive doses of antibiotic (to clear up meconium aspirated during birth). She’s had allergic dermatitis her entire life–no surprise there. She also had a problem swallowing and chewing and other fine motor issues, as well as delayed speech, which none of my other 4 children had. As a matter of fact, 3 of 5 were early talkers, with only my 2nd child having a slight speech delay (due to birth order, I believe) but who also turned out to have some other neurological problems, so we don’t know for sure. Happily though, that child is a senior in college and an honors student, with a 3.9 gpa for the last 3 yrs, and maintaining a 4.0 through high school. Even my in-the-hospital-for-a-week baby is an A student. She’s just more quiet than the other 4 🙂 I did things very differently with DS (baby #5). I cloth diapered, I breast fed him till almost 2 1/2, he didn’t eat any processed foods or drink any juice. It was fun to finally be able to be a natural mom with my last pregnancy!
So don’t worry about little minor things happening at a natural birth, ladies. Things happen at hospitals too, and they escalate them to such a degree that there’s no going back many times! God gave us the ability to birth children. We have to rely on Him through these times and educate ourselves. Hospitals are in the business of making money. They might act really friendly, but it’s not out of charity!
An end note here: that awesome birthcenter had to STOP birthing babies. It was in a high malpractice state and they couldn’t afford the premiums anymore. So after years of building up a business and remodeling with state of the art equipment designed for comfort, they had to go back to just an ob-gyn care center. While pregnant with my 5th child, we lived in a state where you couldn’t even have a freestanding birthing center. You HAD to go to the hospital. Did you know that in the UK it’s ILLEGAL to have a home birth! There’s a good documentary about it. You can get arrested if you’re reported. Unbelievable. We live in a state now where it’s very difficult to have a homebirth because of how the law is written for credentials of midwives.
So speak up, be informed, and don’t let others think for you!
Melissa
In the UK – Do you mean United Kingdom? Or is it an abbreviation for a state in the US? Because in England it is most definitely NOT illegal to have a home birth!!
Brenda Hojonski
I agree with all your reasons! After a few of my friends had horrible experiences giving birth in hospitals, I started looking into birthing alternatives. A friend had fabulous births at a birthing center, but I didn’t want to travel 1 and 1/2 hours to the site. I settled on home birth with a fabulous midwife. Thankfully, after 2 successful homebirths, I was able to have an unassisted birth when the midwife was still an hour and 1/2 away driving in an ice storm!
The best births are the calm and peaceful ones where you can connect with your body and discover birthing a baby can be a spiritual experience: no matter where the birth is.
Thanks for your lovely article!
Kacie
I had pre-eclampsia develop while in labor with both of my children, and started out at a birth center for baby #2 but went to the hospital while in labor. Actually, while pre-pushing. It was interesting. Anyway, if you do have a hospital birth, it’s great to show up when you are almost done! Less time for them to mess with you :).
Hospital births are great for women and babies who truly need them. I think my kids needed to be born where they were because of my complications.
For future births, hopefully I won’t have pre-e. I’m trying to clean up my diet and improve my health in case I can undo whatever is going on in my body that’s causing this. Any ideas from anyone would be welcome!
sara r.
My first birth was technically a hospital birth, but only because we barely made it there. At the time my insurance WOULD NOT cover a homebirth, so I did my research, convinced myself that I would labor at home, and that’s what I did. Barely knew that I was in labor, most of the time. My daughter was born 5 hours after my first contraction, and 15 minutes after we got to the hospital. Having now witnessed doula births there, I can only surmise that my birth went that fast because I was NOT THERE. Honestly, I don’t even know how ANY babies are born in the hospital. Between the wires and 20 (thousand) questions, who has time for birthing babies?! lol
This time, there is a new birth center in town, and I lost my job right after I got pregnant. Fortunately, Medicaid DOES pay for the birth center (more for a birth center than homebirth), and since my husband is more comfortable going to the birthcenter, we will be having the baby there, provided that we make it there. If things go really fast, the midwife will be coming to us. What OB can promise that?!
I totally agree with the list. Of course there are some good hospitals, and there are some not-so-great birthing centers, but in general, having a baby in a hospital is fraught with obstacles and can easily become a disaster. Birthing centers are much more calm and facilitate an easier birth for everyone- mom and partner. I think it goes without saying that some women need to be in the hospital, but the majority do not, and for them, birth centers should be readily available and encouraged.
Melissa Bayer via Facebook
the first intervention in the birthing process occurs when one leaves their safe and comfortable home. i gave birth at home a month ago after having a very bad outcome to our hospital birth two years ago. we couldn’t be happier this time with the outcome of our home birth to our 10 lb baby boy!
Lizanne Harris (@lizzismacks)
Good reAd RT @realfoodmedia: 21 Reasons to Have Your Baby at a Birthcenter http://t.co/p44fJ70t