Due to cultural shifts and medical concerns, more women around the country, and especially in the Granite State, are deciding against having their babies in the hospital. The state’s medical community is taking note- some with major concern- and others trying to work out new arrangements to accommodate this trend.
*PRI's radio program The World is doing a series on pregnancy and childbirtharound the world
GUESTS:
- Dr. Tim Fisher - chairman of Surgical Services at Cheshire Medical Center/Dartmouth-Hitchcock Keene and Assistant Clinical Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth. He also works on improving cooperation between home-birth providers and obstetricians in the region.
- Autumn Vergo – NH-certified midwife since 2009 and co-owner of The Birth Cottagein Milford, a freestanding birth center. She is also an adjunct faculty member at the Birthwise Midwifery Schoolin Bridgton, Maine.
- Dr. Oge Young– obstetrician at Concord Hospital and former president of the New Hampshire Medical Society. He has been practicing in the Concord area for over thirty years.
LINKS:
- CDC numbers on trends in out-of-hospital births
- a controversial new study supports claims about home birth safety
- a competing study found evidence of increasing home birth mortalities
- a reporton the newest CDC data, including graphs and charts
- infographicon home birth in the U.S.
No birth experience is more positive than having a healthy child, regardless of type/location of delivery - Dr. Young http://t.co/tO0NjZwnKv
— The Exchange (@NHPRExchange) April 30, 2014
Midwives turn expectant mothers away for a variety of risk factors, including obesity and diabetes - @MidwifeAutumn. http://t.co/tO0NjZwnKv
— The Exchange (@NHPRExchange) April 30, 2014
Vaginal birth in hospital: $9-18K, c-section up to $30K. In NH, home delivery $4-6K (including pre-/post-delivery). http://t.co/tO0NjZwnKv
— The Exchange (@NHPRExchange) April 30, 2014
Incredibly high rate of c-sections: combination of pressure from doctors and preference of mothers - Dr Oge Young. http://t.co/tO0NjZwnKv
— The Exchange (@NHPRExchange) April 30, 2014
In many countries, it's safer to give birth than here: women who have home births want more control over their experience - @MidwifeAutumn
— The Exchange (@NHPRExchange) April 30, 2014
Percent of home births in the country: tiny, but growing. http://t.co/tO0NjZwnKv
— The Exchange (@NHPRExchange) April 30, 2014