Choosing between your options for your Birthplace:
10 Questions Expectant Parents Should Ask
We
recommend that before choosing a birth place,
expectant parents take a tour and ask these
questions to learn more about the policies and
beliefs at that birthplace. [For contact information
to register for tours at Seattle area hospitals and
birth centers, click
here.]
The document below, “Ten Questions to Ask,” is c.
2000 by the Coalition for Improving Maternity
Services (CIMS). To find out more about CIMS, see
www.motherfriendly.org. Inside of the document,
you will notice several links to more information
about that topic. Please be aware that the
referenced websites are written by people from
varied educational backgrounds. The information on
these sites is not intended as a substitute for
medical advice from licensed healthcare
professionals who are familiar with your specific
health issues.
Having
a Baby? Ten Questions to Ask
Have
you decided how to have your baby? First, you should
learn as much as you can about all your choices. There
are many different ways of caring for a mother and her
baby during labor and birth. Birthing care that is
better and healthier for mothers and babies is called
"mother-friendly." Some birth places or settings are
more mother-friendly than others. A group of experts in
birthing care came up with this list of 10 things to
look for and ask about. Medical research supports all of
these things. These are also the best ways to be
mother-friendly.
When
you are deciding where to have your baby, you'll
probably be
choosing from different places such as: a birth
center, hospital, or home birth service.
Here's what you should expect, and ask for, in your
birth experience. Be sure to find out how the people you
talk with handle these ten issues about caring for you
and your baby. You may want to ask the questions below
to help you learn more.
1. Ask, "Who can be with me during labor and birth?"
Mother-friendly birth centers, hospitals, and home birth
services will let a birthing mother decide whom she
wants to have with her during the birth. This includes
fathers, partners, children, other family members, or
friends.
They
will also let a birthing mother have with her a person
who has special training in helping women cope with
labor and birth. This person is called a
doula or labor support person. She never leaves the
birthing mother alone. She encourages her, comforts her,
and helps her understand what's happening to her.
They
will have
midwives as part of their staff so that a birthing
mother can have a midwife with her
if she wants to. (choosing
a caregiver)
2. Ask, "What happens during a normal labor and birth in
your setting?"
If
they give mother-friendly care, they will tell you how
they handle every part of the birthing process. For
example, how often do they give the mother a
drug to speed up the birth? Or do they let labor and
birth usually happen
on its own timing?
They
will also tell you how often they do certain procedures.
For example, they will have a record of the percentage
of C-sections (Cesarean births) they do every year. If
the number is too high, you'll want to consider
having your baby in another place or with another doctor
or midwife.
Here
are some numbers we recommend you ask about.
They
should not
try to start labor for more than 1 in 10 women
(10%).
They
should not do an
episiotomy (ee-pee-zee-AH-tummy)
on more than 1 in 5 women (20%). They should be trying
to bring that number down. (An episiotomy is a cut in
the opening to the vagina to make it larger for birth.
It is not necessary most of the time.)
They
should not do
C-sections on more than 1 in 10 women (10%) if it's
a community hospital. The rate should be 15% or less in
hospitals which care for many high-risk mothers and
babies.
A
C-section is a major operation in which a doctor cuts
through the mother's stomach into her womb and removes
the baby through the opening. Mothers who have had a
C-section
can often have future babies normally.
Look for a birth place in which 6
out of 10 women (60%) or more of the mothers who have
had C-sections go on to have their other babies
through the birth canal.
3. Ask, "How do you allow for differences in culture and
beliefs?"
Mother-friendly birth centers, hospitals, and home birth
services are sensitive to the mother's culture. They
know that mothers and families have differing beliefs,
values, and customs.
For
example, you may have a custom that only women may be
with you during labor and birth. Or perhaps your beliefs
include a religious ritual to be done after birth. There
are many other examples that may be very important to
you. If the place and the people are mother-friendly,
they will support you in doing what you want to do.
Before labor starts tell your doctor or midwife special
things you want.
4. Ask, "Can I walk and move around during labor? What
position do you suggest for birth?"
In
mother-friendly settings, you can walk around and move
about as you choose during labor. You can choose the
positions that are most comfortable and work best
for you during labor and birth. (There may be a medical
reason for you to be in a certain position.)
Mother-friendly settings almost never put a woman flat
on her back with her legs up in stirrups for the birth.
5. Ask, "How do you make sure everything goes smoothly
when my nurse, doctor, midwife, or agency need to work
with each other?"
Ask,
"Can my doctor or midwife come with me if I have to be
moved to another place during labor? Can you help me
find people or agencies in my community who can help me
before and after the baby is born?"
Mother-friendly places and people will have a specific
plan for keeping in touch with the other people who are
caring for you. They will talk to others who give you
birth care. They will help you find people or agencies
in
your community to help you. For example, they may
put you in touch with someone who can help you with
breastfeeding.
6. Ask, "What things do you normally do to a woman in
labor?"
Experts say some methods of care during labor and
birth are better and
healthier for mothers and babies. Medical research shows
us which methods of care are better and healthier.
Mother-friendly settings only use methods that have been
proven to be best by
scientific evidence.
Sometimes birth centers, hospitals, and home birth
services use methods that are not proven to be best for
the mother or the baby. For example, research has shown
it's usually not helpful to
break the bag of waters.
Here
is a list of things we recommend you ask about. They do
not help and may hurt healthy mothers and babies. They
are not proven to be best for the mother or baby and are
not mother-friendly.
They
should not
keep track of the baby's heart rate all the time
with a machine (called an electronic fetal monitor).
Instead it is best to have your nurse or midwife listen
to the baby's heart from time to time.
They
should not
break your bag of waters early in labor.
They
should not use an
IV (a needle put into your vein to give you fluids).
They
should not tell you that you can't
eat or drink during labor.
They
should not shave you.
They
should not give you an enema.
A
birth center, hospital, or home birth service that does
these things for most of the mothers is not
mother-friendly. Remember, these should not be used
without a special medical reason.
7. Ask, "How do you help mothers stay as comfortable as
they can be? Besides drugs, how do you help mothers
relieve the pain of labor?"
The
people who care for you should know how to help you cope
with labor. They should know about ways of dealing with
your pain that don't use drugs. They should suggest such
things as changing your position, relaxing in a warm
bath, having a massage, and using music. These are
called
comfort measures.
Comfort measures help you handle your labor more easily
and help you feel more in control. The people who care
for you will not try to persuade you to use a drug for
pain unless you need it to take care of a special
medical problem.
All drugs affect the baby.
8. Ask, "What if my baby is born early or has special
problems?"
Mother-friendly places and people will encourage mothers
and families to
touch, hold, breastfeed, and care for their babies
as much as they can. They will encourage this even if
your baby is born early or has a medical problem at
birth. (However, there may be a special medical reason
you shouldn't hold and care for your baby.)
9. Ask, "Do you
circumcise baby boys?"
Medical research does not show a need to circumcise baby
boys. It is painful and risky. Mother-friendly birth
places discourage circumcision unless it is for
religious reasons.
10. Ask, "How do you help mothers who want to
breastfeed?"
The
World Health Organization made this list of ways birth
services support breastfeeding.
·
They
tell all pregnant mothers
why and how to breastfeed.
·
They
help you start breastfeeding within 1 hour after your
baby is born.
·
They
show you how to breastfeed. And they show you how to
keep your milk coming in even if you have to be away
from your baby for work or other reasons.
·
Newborns should
have only breast milk. (However, there may be a
medical reason they cannot have it right away.)
·
They
encourage you and the baby to stay together all day and
all night. This is called "rooming-in."
·
They
encourage you to feed your baby whenever he or she wants
to nurse, rather than at certain times.
·
They
should not give pacifiers ("dummies" or "soothers") to
breastfed babies.
·
They
encourage you to join a
group of mothers who breastfeed. They tell you how
to contact a group near you.
·
They
have a written policy on breastfeeding. All the
employees know about and use the ideas in the policy.
·
They teach employees the skills they need to carry
out these steps.
More resources:
More
information about the
questions to ask caregivers, birth places, doulas,
etc. can be found on the website for the Maternity
Center Association. Also, see their article on the
Rights of Childbearing Women.
You
may find that there are no birth options available to
you which meet all of the CIMS recommendations. Here is
some data to help you know what to expect in the “real
world” of US maternity care….
Ideals versus Realities,
a look at how US statistics compare to the CIMS
guidelines.
Ideals versus
Seattle Realities: How Do Seattle Area Hospitals
Measure Up to CIMS guidelines?
How would you know you’d chosen the right birthplace for
you?
This
article addresses the choice of birthplace from a very
logical, left-brain view. But truly, one of the best
ways to know if a birth place is right for you is to
listen to your gut! We birth most easily in the place
that feels safest to us, where we feel nurtured, cared
for, and protected. Tour your possible birth places, and
ask yourself: “Would I feel safe here?” Suzanne Arms
offers a powerful image of how a positive birth
place should feel:
Imagine a place where everyone around you…
Believes in the importance of the natural process
Honors the work you do…. Acts as if birth is sacred…
Speaks with affirming words and acts calmly…
Respects your need to be spontaneous – to eat, drink,
make sounds, move around, cry, shout, laugh…
Keeps you and the baby together at all times.
Helps the father be supportive and fulfill his
potential.
Birth in a sanctuary.