Hello! It is my goal to have a completely natural childbirth (I'm a FTM). As of now, I have an OB that I love and am set to deliver at a hospital near me. It is a nice facility but I have heard many rumors that it is not a very natural birth friendly atmosphere and I should expect a "factory birth." This upsets me, obviously!
There is another hospital about 35-45 minutes away which I believe have whirlpool tubs in their birthing suites. I hear they are much more natural birth friendly and even offer hypnobirthing classes (something I'm very interested in). The distance is the biggest concern of mine here.
Then there is my favorite option.. the birthing center. This is very close to the nearest hospital to me and has beautiful birthing suites equipped with amazing birth tubs and has such a serene atmosphere. Obviously my biggest concern is what if something happens and I'm not in an immediate medical facility that could meet my needs? I want a no-intervention birth but it still frightens me to think that if I needed ANY interventions, I would HAVE to be transferred to the hospital.
I will be touring the birth center today and plan on touring the other hospital in the near future. I just wanted to see if anyone has had similar decision making they've had to do.
So my question to you ladies is, how did you decide on what type of facility to deliver in? How important was it to you to deliver in a birth center vs. hospital setting? TIA!
Re: How did you decide where to deliver?
Thank you so much for your input. I'm very excited about the possibility of delivering at a birth center as opposed to a hospital. I hope that once I actually visit it today I will have a lot of my questions answered and feel better about making that decision.
Midwives are trained in normal labor, they can tell if your labor isn't progressing the way it should, and they will know when it's time to transfer if you need to go. Part of freestanding birth center rules is that they are x distance from a hospital, so women can be transferred in a timely manner.
DS2 - Oct 2010 (my VBAC baby!)
I would choose the birth center. It will likely be a much more comfortable atmosphere, and since there will be less other woman birthing there you'll reduce your potential exposure to pathogens and birth centers usually have a more consistent staff so you will receive more individualized care.
When you tour you can ask them about their transfer rates. Most have <1% emergency transfer rate, non emergency transfer rates will be higher (6-8% usually), but they most commonly occur when the laboring woman decides she wants pain medication beyond the scope of what the birth center can provide or due to an excessively long labor (think 36+hours) where progression has slowed or ceased despite natural interventions to aid or restart progression.
I delivered my first at the hospital, my second at home, and will be having another home birth in August.
Home Birthing-Breastfeeding-Cloth Diapering-Baby Wearing-CoSleeping-Delayed/Selective Vaccination Mama to Charlie (5yrs) and Madeline (21mos)
For me, it was a choice between home or hospital- there's only one hospital in my city and no birth centres. I chose home.
Clearly I'm comfortable with an out-of-hospital birth, but in your situation I would choose the birth centre. It's closer than the other hospital, and the "bad" hospital is there in case of emergency. There are very few true you-need-a-c-section-right-this-moment emergencies- if something was going wrong, your midwives would be able to get you to the hospital in enough time to have a surgical birth. I would prefer the low-intervention mindset of the birth centre. But, if you find yourself leaning towards a hospital birth for your own peace of mind, 35 minutes isn't that far when you get right down to it- I personally would choose the birth-friendly hospital over the high-intervention hospital closer to home.
I personally feel that, when other options are available, and in a low-risk pregnancy, I would not want to birth in a hospital. But that's just my opinion, you have to decide for yourself what you are comfortable with.
My choice was basically made for me. I wanted something my insurance would cover and that left me with an OB/MW practice that delivers at a hosptial. I saw the MWs and had a med-free birth with zero interventions (not even a hep lock/IV).
If you love your OB and he/she can deliver at any one of the options you listed, I would go with the birth center. If you do need to be transferred to a hospital it sounds like one is close by that you will be fine.
Good luck with whatever you decide!
I switched from an OB that would deliver in a hospital to a BC with MW's at 25 weeks. I wasn't comfortable with the way they (ob's) were responding to my questions. Plus, I took a baby basics class at the hospital and I just had the shivers thinking about birthing my child there.
DH was highly concerned at first about transfering to the center. The orientation session I think really put his mind at ease. I think you'll eventually come to find out that birthing at the center isn't that scary afterall.
The main reasons I chose to move my care to the center.... I felt more like an expecting mom rather than a number or just another patient. I hated that at my OB office they make it seem like something is wrong with you. If its not now then there will eventually be. KWIM?
I felt like with my OB I would have to fight for the things that I wanted (no interventions, a relaxed atmosphere, laboring in the tub, skin to skin, letting the cord pulsate, delayed shots and eye goop, no pressure to circ., not removing the baby from my sight, ect) All of these things I wanted are standard practice at the BC. Makes my birth plan pretty dang easy.
You stated that if you need ANY intervention you will HAVE to be transfered. That may not be the case. MW's have some meds just like the OB's do. It is actually standard practice at the BC to have a little PIT right after birth the stop hemmorage and get the placenta out with no issues. I am fine with this for all else I get in return.
GL with your decision making!!
I am lucky that there are a number of hospitals close to where we live. One has an excellent reputation for natural birth support (no its unless indicated, tubs, eating allowed) so I chose a midwifery practice at the hospital and had the birth I had hoped and planned.
http://oi62.tinypic.com/2w73hq9.jpg
If I were you, I believe I'd probably pick the birth center.
We had two hospital options...similar to yours (although, not that the other was considered "factory birth"...just, they're the more high risk of the two, higher c-section rate (largely in part b/c they handle all local high risk), and their midwifery program was newer and not as established as the other). I picked the one that was more NB friendly, less high risk, no NICU, longer and well established midwifery program, 12% c-section rate. Was very happy with my hospital birth, although I would still love a home birth, or even birth center birth next time if I had those options (at a reasonable $$).
GL to you.