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Home Birth

Simply put, when home birth is lost or driven underground, essential knowledge about women's capacities in birth is lost as well. This includes knowledge held by caregivers and women themselves. Without home birth, the medicalization of birth increases as ignorance spreads about what women's bodies are designed for. The author's experience starting a midwifery service in 1970 showed women's bodies can give birth safely and without high intervention rates, as the first cesarean was not needed until birth #324. Home birth has encouraged beneficial changes to hospital practices and expanded midwifery care options for women. Techniques developed through home birth, like various positions and water use, would likely not have been adopted without the "laboratory"
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100% found this document useful (3 votes)
161 views3 pages

Home Birth

Simply put, when home birth is lost or driven underground, essential knowledge about women's capacities in birth is lost as well. This includes knowledge held by caregivers and women themselves. Without home birth, the medicalization of birth increases as ignorance spreads about what women's bodies are designed for. The author's experience starting a midwifery service in 1970 showed women's bodies can give birth safely and without high intervention rates, as the first cesarean was not needed until birth #324. Home birth has encouraged beneficial changes to hospital practices and expanded midwifery care options for women. Techniques developed through home birth, like various positions and water use, would likely not have been adopted without the "laboratory"
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Home Birth—Why It's Necessary

By Ina May Gaskin, CPM


Originally published by Ina May Gaskin Productions, 2007-01-14

Simply put, when there is no home birth in a society, or when home birth is driven completely
underground, essential knowledge of women’s capacities in birth is lost to the people of that society
—to professional caregivers, as well as to the women of childbearing age themselves. The
disappearance of knowledge once commonly held paves the way for over-medicalization of birth and
the risks which this poses. Nothing in medical literature today communicates the idea that women’s
bodies are well designed for birth. Ignorance of the capacities of women’s bodies can flourish and
quickly spread into popular culture when the medical profession is unable to distinguish between
ancient wisdom and superstitious belief. To illustrate, I would cite a National Geographic article (1)
which states that, “…we [humans] can give birth to babies with big brains, but only through great
pain and risk.” The writer, depending upon the work of two U.S. anthropologists, explains that the
fact that our species walks upright causes inevitable pain and risk during birth, forgetting how easily
we can go to our hands and knees if need be.

I would have had no way to know how well healthy women’s bodies can work in labor and birth had
I not experienced a rediscovery of women’s capacities in birth, along with several hundred other
people, as we established a midwifery service in our newly founded community in 1970. Most people
would have predicted that my diving headlong into attending home births for friends and then
training a group of midwives to work with me would have ended in disaster, given that I came into
midwifery only with the training afforded by two degrees in English literature. What happened
instead is that I received timely and essential help from a few generous, wise physicians, and our
service was able to help the first 186 women give birth vaginally (without instruments or other
medical interventions) before our first cesarean was necessary. It was not until birth #324 that the
second became necessary. All of this was accomplished without negative consequences to mothers
or babies.

This degree of success is hard for many physicians to believe, because it runs counter to what they
have been taught. For many decades, physicians have been taught that the female pelvis is often
too small to permit the safe passage of a term baby through it. Still, over the last three and a half
decades, more than 2400 births have been attended within our midwifery service, with our cesarean
and instrumental delivery rates combined still below 2 percent, in sharp contrast to the U.S.
cesarean rate, which is now nearly 30 percent and climbing.

The publication of our early data in my first book, Spiritual Midwifery, in 1975, helped to encourage
the natural childbirth movement that began in North America during the late 1960s. (2) This
movement caused U.S. hospitals to radically reassess their maternity care policies during the 1970s
and 1980s, leading them, for the first time, to allow family members to be present at births; to allow
women, for the first time, to choose midwives as birth attendants; and to change—again for the first
time, their policy of mandatory episiotomy. The natural childbirth movement, which was greatly
inspired by home birth pioneers, also had the effect of drastically reducing the incidence of forceps
deliveries, which had previously been used in more than 40 percent of U.S. births.

Midwifery care blossomed in the U.S. because of the home birth movement, as women who didn’t
themselves want home births but who did want care that did not involve routine and unnecessary
medical interventions and practices, such as pubic shaving, enemas, being forced to remain still
while lying supine during labor (the painful position possible) and often mandatory pain medication,
wanted to be able to choose the midwifery model of care in the hospitals where they would give
birth. Women themselves began to force these changes by opting for midwifery care and by
insisting upon doula care. All of these transformations demonstrated both to laboring women and to
their caregivers that women are fully capable of giving birth without the mandatory use of several
interventions once considered by U.S. obstetricians to be not only important but essential to the
health of mother or baby.

I have not yet mentioned the long list of techniques and practices common to home birth midwifery,
which have made their way into progressive hospital maternity care practice. Among these are the
use of water tubs for alleviation of pain during labor, the all-fours position (sometimes called the
Gaskin maneuver) to resolve the serious complication of shoulder dystocia (3-5), upright positions
for labor and birth, the safety of allowing almost all women to enter labor without induction, the use
of nipple stimulation to release the body’s natural oxytocin to augment labor (6,7) and the possibility
of sleeping, eating and drinking during labor. It is no exaggeration to say that none of these
techniques would have been adopted into hospital practice, had it not been for their having first
been developed and tested in the “laboratory” of home birth practice. Medical research is expensive
and thus rarely focuses on preventive measures or those which don’t rely upon pharmaceutical or
technological products.

Another extremely important concept that arises from home birth practice is the recognition of what
I call “sphincter law.” (8) This concept describes the common phenomenon, which occurs often in
women’s labors, in which stress sometimes causes the cervix, once dilated in labor, to suddenly
close, or for labor to stop. Having first observed this phenomenon in the early years of my practice,
I found that other midwifery colleagues working in and out of hospitals and many labor and delivery
nurses were also familiar with it. We found that such cases could safely resolve themselves, without
medical intervention, by waiting for labor to resume in less stressful circumstances. Looking deeper
into medical books written during the period when home birth was the norm, I found many 19th
century authors who had also documented this physiological phenomenon, which is dependent upon
an imbalance of maternal hormones during labor which can take place when the woman feels
greatly stressed during the birth process. If current medical knowledge included these concepts
which it once did, fewer women would be subjected to the risks of induction drugs, the use of which
has increased sharply over the last fifteen years—not always with good results. (9)

Of course, this is not to say that women should be required to have home births. However, the
option to give birth in the place of choice should be open to those women who desire it, as long as
their physical condition permits it as a safe choice. The body of knowledge available to all maternity
caregivers depends upon a full range of choices being available to childbearing women.

Notes

1. Ackerman J. The downside of upright. National Geographic July 2006, 126-145.

2. Gaskin IM. Spiritual Midwifery (1975) Summertown, TN: The Book Publishing Company.

3. Meenan A and Gaskin IM, et al. A new (old) maneuver for the management of shoulder dystocia,
The Journal of Family Practice, 1991: 32:625-29.

4. Bruner J and Gaskin IM, et al. All-fours maneuver for reducing shoulder dystocia, The Journal of
Reproductive Medicine, 1998; 43:439-43.

5. Gabbe SG, Niebyl JR, and Simpson JL. Obstetrics: Normal & Problem Pregnancies, 4th ed. New
York: Churchill Livingstone, 2002.
6. Curtis P. A comparison of breast stimulation and intravenous oxytocin for the augmentation of
labor, Birth, June 1999; 26:115-122.

7. Curtis P. Breast Stimulation to Augment Labor: History, Mystery, and Culture. Birth, June 1999;
26: 123-6.

8. Gaskin, Ina May. Understanding birth and Sphincter Law, British Journal of Midwifery, Volume 12,
Number 9, September 2004.
9. Wagner M. Born in the USA: How a Broken Maternity System Must Be Fixed to Put Women and
Children First (2005) Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.

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