Just finished watching this programme.
I have never been entirely happy about home births, always feeling that i would like to have maximum medical care on the spot if baby needed it.
Four of my 6 grandchildren arrived after obstructed labour (one DD had pre-eclampsia too) and needed help (one c-section, two ventouse, one forceps). One of these deliveries was a planned home birth with an independent midwife and DD had to be rushed to hospital in an ambulance for a forceps delivery - baby was distressed and it was all touch and go. Her previous labour had the same problems (she was in hospital that time) and I do not think she should have been considered for a home birth with her history.
I suppose I get slightly irritated by people thinking hospital = bad, home = good. It really is not as simple as that. I feel for all those midwifes and doctors who work so hard to save lives and make the birth experience as good as possible - they must get fed up with people denigrating what they do. We are so lucky to have these services.
The last delivery in this programme was a vivid illustration of the problems that can arise at home - I would rather have my baby in a safe place than worry about my own comfort.
Two of the women featured had had forceps births first time round and assumed that having a home birth would avoid that - a naive assumption I think. First babies are often more difficult to deliver, regardless of where you are.
What do others thnink?
“We start school too early in the UK!”
) and that they were my 5th and 6th pregnancies (3rd baby died in utero ) I was told that I was too high a risk. After some negotiation we agreed that I would have 'Domino' care; i.e all ante-natal treatment at home and my midwife would accompany to hospital and deliver baby and I would then be discharged appx 6 hours after birth.