Is a home birth right for you?
Home birth offers you the chance to have more
control over your labour in a familiar environment but is it safe? We take a look at what's involved...
Home birth - the facts
Most of us choose to go to hospital to have our baby without even considering the option of a home birth. Yet the NHS claims it is committed to supporting home births
(although this stance may differ across the UK), and research shows that for the minority of women
- less than three per cent - who currently go for this option, the familiarity of a home environment results in the need for less intervention or pain-relieving drugs.
Studies also show that for women who have had a low-risk pregnancy, a planned home birth is as safe as a hospital birth. And, according to the National Childbirth Trust's home birth coordinator, Angela Horn, women tend to cope with labour best in the home environment rather than at hospital.
"In hospital, the odds of a natural birth are stacked against you - you are in an 8ft by 8ft room with a bed in the middle and it's not so easy to keep mobile," says Angela. Dashing off to hospital can also trigger the 'flight and fright' hormones, which slow labour down, resulting in more intervention. "At home you can potter around, you know where you are and nowhere is out of bounds. You are on your own territory and the midwives are your guests. You are absolutely in control."
Melanie Every, a senior midwife at the Royal College of Midwives advises women to talk to other people - such as friends who have had children, doctors, midwives and support groups like the NCT - about the pros and cons of a home versus hospital birth. Melanie then suggests that you relate the findings to your personal circumstances - looking at any pregnancy complications and your home situation, such as how much support you'll get from your partner, before making a decision.
"It used to be questioned whether first-time mums should plan a home birth, because until they'd had a normal delivery, it was uncertain how well their labour would progress," Melanie says. "But the majority are normal births. First-time labours do tend to be longer and can require more pain relief, and sometimes planned home births are transferred to hospital for an epidural."
A home birth also keeps you away from the hustle and bustle of hospitals. As Melanie points out, "Hospitals are busy places and there are other babies besides your own."
Home vs hospital - the pros and cons
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