Showing posts with label Licensed Midwives. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Licensed Midwives. Show all posts

The Risks of a Postterm Pregnancy

Home birth midwives dismiss many risks in pregnancy as being "variations of normal." They use this term to ease the mind of concerned parents, acting as though simply because a complication occurs in nature, it is harmless.


Unfortunately, most of the complications that home birth midwives dismiss as "variations of normal" carry real risk that increase the chances of harm to the baby or mother. And ignoring the risk does not make it go away, as many home birth mothers have learned the hard way.

Some of the risks most commonly dismissed by home birth midwives are the risks associated with going past your due date. "Babies come when they're ready," they say. "Babies know when to be born."

But if this is true, why are any babies born prematurely? Prematurity can result in serious long-term complications for baby, months-long NICU stays, and death. If those babies didn't know when to be born, how can a home birth midwife be so sure that *your* baby knows when to be born? Just like preterm birth, postterm birth can result in serious complications and sometimes death.

Postterm Death Rates

The different "terms" of pregnancy are defined as: preterm (before 37 weeks), early term (from 37 weeks to 38 weeks and 6 days), full term (from 39 weeks to 40 weeks and 6 days), late term (from 41 weeks to 41 weeks and 6 days), and postterm (42 weeks and beyond):

"Definition of Term Pregnancy"

At the end of pregnancy, there is a balance between babies being born too early and babies being born too late. Too early, and their organs might not be ready yet. Too late, and the chances of stillbirths, cord accidents, shoulder dystocia, meconium aspiration, and placental failure increase.

The chart below shows what those risks look like balanced against each other.

The risk of babies dying after they're born birth is higher before 37 weeks, decreases and is it its lowest point between 39 and 40 weeks, and increases from then on. The risk of babies dying before they're born (being stillborn) increases from 37 weeks on, increasing exponentially after 40 weeks. The following chart shows those trends, with deaths of babies after birth in blue, stillborn deaths in red, and the combined risk of the two in yellow:


"Risk of Stillbirth and Infant Death Stratified by Gestational Age"

As you can see, the risk of death from both complications after birth and from stillbirth rises after 40 weeks and just keeps getting higher.

The study that this table is from, Risk of Stillbirth and Infant Death Stratified by Gestational Age, shows that the risk of stillbirth is more than twice as high at 42 weeks than 40 weeks, and only keeps increasing from there. Medscape summarizes the findings of multiple studies as "Perinatal mortality (defined as stillbirths plus early neonatal deaths) at 42 weeks of gestation is twice that at 40 weeks (4-7 vs 2-3 per 1,000 deliveries, respectively) and increases 4-fold at 43 weeks and 5- to 7-fold at 44 weeks."

What are the risks of going postterm?

So why does the risk of death begin to increase so much after the 40th week of pregnancy?

In a nutshell: Your baby's organs are 100% ripe and ready to go by 39-40 weeks. There is no physical benefit to your baby for waiting any longer; there is only more risk.

There are only two things that can happen post-dates, and both are potentially bad. Either the placenta stays strong, or it doesn't.

If the placenta stays fully adequate, the baby keeps getting bigger and bigger, which is going to be a problem when labor finally starts. Complications for the baby can include "prolonged labor, difficulty passing through the birth canal, and birth trauma (eg, fractured bones or nerve injury) related to difficulty in delivering the shoulders (shoulder dystocia)." Risks to the mother "are related to the larger size of postterm fetuses, and include difficulties during labor, an increase in injury to the perineum (including the vagina, labia, and rectum), and an increased rate of cesarean birth with its associated risks of bleeding, infection, and injury to surrounding organs."

If the placenta starts to fail, then the baby gets weaker and becomes more stressed the longer things go on. The chance of oligohydramnios (low amniotic fluid levels) increases, raising the risk of umbilical cord compression (which cuts of the baby's source of oxygen). Babies are also more likely to pass meconium (baby poo) in the womb and inhale it, which can cause serious breathing problems and death.

The risks of postterm pregnancy are real

Clara Edith

Heather O., the author of the blog The Destiny Manifest, has written a heartbreaking account of how her daughter Clara died from postterm pregnancy complications. In a post called She Was Still Born, Heather writes,

"I reached the 40 week mark on June 14th. I was thrilled to have made it to my due date, feeling a little arrogant about how the doctors had said I would “never carry a baby to full term”, but also feeling ready for our baby girl to make her appearance. We had read all of the research that shows that 40 weeks is just the average length of a normal pregnancy — anything from 38 to 42 weeks is considered in the normal range, and I know of several women who have had their babies at 43 and 44 weeks. We weren’t worried.

At 41 weeks, I was still 4cm and baby girl was at 0 station. We discussed induction but decided against it. I wanted a vaginal birth after cesarean very badly, and pitocin is generally contraindicated in a VBAC, particularly when the mom has a “special scar” like I have.

By this point I was very uncomfortable and ready to not be pregnant...David and I had a long soul-searching conversation over the course of a couple days and decided that, since baby girl was still fine, with a great heart rate and passing every kick count, we’d give it until 42 weeks and then reconsider the hospital induction. We felt very good about this decision, having weighed all of our options.

On the afternoon of Thursday, June 28th, the day that I hit 42 weeks, we made the decision that if I was not in “real labor” by the next night...we would go into the hospital for a medical induction. We didn’t make this decision based on any worry about the baby’s health, as she was still kicking quite exuberantly in her very tight living quarters. We made the decision because I was uncomfortable and oh-so-ready to meet our baby.

I woke up on Friday morning to contractions, but this time they felt different...I told David that I was pretty sure these weren’t going to stop. They felt more real than any of the other times...The contractions slowed down that night but never stopped completely. The next day was much like the one before, painful contractions but nothing I couldn’t handle.

I woke up on Sunday in real pain. It didn’t feel like the labor I’d been having, and it didn’t feel like the way countless books and birth stories and friends have described labor. It was pain and it was harsh...I told David that something felt wrong, that it hurt too much and I needed to go to the hospital NOW.

The doctor came in and began the ultrasound. After a couple more minutes, David and I looked at each other and the realization that there was a problem began to dawn. I said, “Can you not find her heartbeat?” and the doctor said “No, here is her rib cage and there is no heartbeat there.”

Time seemed to slow to a crawl. I felt cold, lost in some surreal nightmare. David ran to the bathroom and collapsed to the floor, sobbing. The nurses and tech disappeared from our room. The doctor said “I’m so sorry.” David asked if he could possibly be wrong, that maybe he made a mistake. The doctor said that there are no guarantees in life and that there was a chance he was wrong. I asked “how quickly can you get her out?” and he answered “with a cesarean, we can get her out right now.” I said, “then do it, get her out now.”

Over the next 15 minutes, I signed a consent form, was shaved and prepped for surgery, and had my blood typed...I was crying, but still believed absolutely that they were wrong. I would hear her cries any minute. She might need some help, maybe she’d need to go to the NICU, but she would be fine.

The smell of infection filled the room when our doctor opened my uterus. David stood and watched as the doctor pulled our daughter from my body...My husband looked down at me and shook his head slowly. I began to sob in earnest and the anesthesiologist, with tears running down his own face, gave me “something for anxiety.” The nurse called David over and handed him our beautiful daughter, Clara Edith. He brought her to me and I touched her cheek, still warm from my body. I wanted to hold her so badly, and I was assured that they would take pictures of her right then and bring her to me as soon as I got out of surgery.

It took almost an hour and a half after Clara was born before the doctors were done cleaning out all of the infection in my uterus...I was taken back down the hall of crying and healthy babies to a room at the end, where my husband and I waited for our lifeless daughter to be brought to us. An hour after the surgery, a nurse brought in a cart with a white basket draped in a hospital blanket. She asked if I wanted to hold her and I said that I did. She laid my baby girl in my arms and told us to take as long as we needed.

...What if we had decided to medically induce at 40 weeks? What if we had decided 41 weeks was our limit? What if we had gone on to the hospital as soon as those contractions started on the Friday before she was born?

The doctor said she had been gone between 1 and 3 days...She died sometime between Friday evening and Saturday afternoon. The doctor’s theory is that my amniotic fluid level dropped drastically and she passed and ingested meconium, which poisoned her and ended her life."

I encourage you to read Heather's full account; there's a lot that I couldn't include here.

Daxton

Daxton Green is a baby who died shortly after being born at the Carolina Community Maternity Center (a freestanding birth center) on January 20, 2015.

In an inquest following his death, his death was ruled a homicide.

The Charlotte Observer explains:

"The jury had four options in ruling the manner of death – undetermined, natural, homicide and accidental."

"Homicide in this particular case is not a legal definition; it’s a description of the manner of death,” Gast said after Thursday’s verdict. "[The jury decided] there was enough information in the testimony today and the documents provided to them that...there was a responsible party for the death of Daxton.”

Daxton's mother's pregnancy was being overseen by midwives at the birth center, who, as she got closer to her due date, moved her due date so that she could still deliver at the birth center instead of a hospital.

Daxton's father testified that he and his wife "had no issues during prenatal care, but they started getting worried about risking out due to approaching 42 weeks gestation. Christine [the midwife] told them they could switch to using the ultrasound due date instead of the date established by “last menstrual period” to get an extra week. She did not discuss any risk factors of approaching 42 weeks gestation, only that the rules stipulated that it wasn’t allowed to go beyond that point. Thus, M.G.’s due date was moved from January 5th to January 12th."

So what happened on January 20th?

At the inquest,

"The midwives all told the same story: the baby’s heartbeat was always just fine, and they put the mother on oxygen only to treat her lightheadedness and help her collect herself. The amniotic fluid was clear until the baby’s head was born and shoulders released, at which point heavily meconium-stained fluid was revealed. They attempted to resuscitate him and called 911. The baby was declared dead shortly after arriving at the hospital."

"The medical witnesses (specifically the maternal-fetal medicine specialist, the pathologist, and the perinatologist) were all very clear that the midwives’ story did not make sense to them. They testified, based on their examination or on the records that they reviewed, that Daxton was completely overwhelmed by meconium, completely, inside and out. No one thought it was feasible that the midwives could have seen clear fluid. They indicated that the midwife should not have moved the due date, did not adequately monitor the baby during labor, and did not do a proper resuscitation. They indicated that oxygen should never be used for the purpose that the midwives stated, but that it could be used during repeated deep decelerations that should cause great concern for the baby’s wellbeing. The perinatologist made it clear, as the director of neonatal care at a well-known local children’s hospital, babies do not die like this in the hospital. This death would have been prevented in a hospital setting."

Gavin Michael

Gavin Michael's full story is already here on this blog. You can read it here: Gavin Michael.

Gavin Michael's mother Danielle was planning to have a home birth with the certified professional midwife Christy Collins. At 42 weeks, Danielle had a biophysical profile to check on the baby. The test showed that she had no amniotic fluid. Instead of telling her to go immediately to the hospital, her midwife told her that the baby "looked terrific and everything was fine," and to go home and drink water.

After she told them to go home, Danielle's midwife crowd-sourced for information from other midwives on Facebook. Shockingly, the other home birth midwives seemed as relaxed about the risks as she was.

After the baby was found to have a low heart rate the next day, Danielle and her husband went to the hospital and Gavin Michael was delivered by cesarean section, but it was too late. Since he had no amniotic fluid, Gavin had nothing to swallow or breathe but meconium, and it killed him. The doctors tried incredibly hard to revive him and worked on him for 47 minutes after he was born, but it was just too late.

Unbelievably, the midwife responsible for Gavin Michael's death posted this poem on her facebook page just four days after he died from post-dates complications:


The full poem reads:


I repeat - Gavin Michael died directly as a result of post-dates pregnancy complications. He died because the pregnancy went too long. And just 4 days after he died, his midwife posted this poem on her facebook page.

The risks of postterm pregnancy are real, and should not be dismissed by home birth midwives.

MANA's "Best Evidence" Shows Homebirth is Unsafe


Families thinking about home birth are often told, either by their midwives or by the blogs and websites that advocate for home birth, that "Birth at home is as safe or safer than the hospital." It is not. Every study on American home birth has shown it to have a significantly higher death rate than the hospital.

"But what about the studies on MANA's website?" some ask. That's a good question. On their website, the Midwives Alliance of North America has a section called "Research" in which they have six subsections (A-F) of studies which they say prove the safety of home birth.

Leigh Fransen, former CPM, LM, and part-owner of a birth center and author of the blog Honest Midwife, has gone through and helpfully summarized all of these studies.

After she finally read all of these studies after years of practicing as a midwife, what the data showed shocked her and eventually led her to leave the profession:

"The hours I had spent combing over all of MANA’s best evidence led me to this conclusion: nonhospital birth might be as safe as hospital birth, but likely only in health systems in which midwives are hospital-trained and well-integrated, and where exclusion criteria are strictly observed to permit only the lowest risk women to proceed. Nonhospital birth in the United States as currently practiced is responsible for lower numbers of interventions (such as cesarean section and medical pain relief) but a substantially higher risk of death or injury to the baby. 

Unbelievably, our 'own' evidence, upon close inspection, was almost unanimously against us."

You can read Leigh's summaries of all of the studies from the MANA website here:

Doing My Research
Section I: Meta-analyses and Systematic Reviews
Section II: RCTs and Section III: Cohort and Population Based Studies
Section III: Cohort/Population Studies Continued
Section III: Cohort/Population Studies (Re-Continued)
Section IV: International Observational Studies
Section V: Descriptive Studies
The MANA Study
The Other Side
My Days as a Midwife Close

In her post The Best Evidence MANA Does Not Want You To See, she writes:

"In my paper High Risk, I reviewed all the literature that the Midwives Alliance of North America (MANA) claims forms the “best evidence” for the safety of home birth. I found that most of the studies were either not applicable to the United States, did not address issues of safety, or actually demonstrated the opposite of what MANA claimed.

If MANA’s cherry-picked data paints a not-so-happy picture, wait until you check out what happens when you look outside of what MANA wants you to see. The literature on nonhospital birth in the United States is downright frightening. Despite what many midwives claim, these studies look at midwife-attended births, not accidental or unattended home births.

If you have had a nonhospital birth like I have, it is natural and normal to feel defensive about the safety of it. After all, to accept that you put your child at a substantial and unnecessary risk doesn’t feel good, even if you know that you made your decision out of love and a genuine desire to make a gentle, safe choice for yourself and your child. Sometimes knowing the truth hurts. I have accepted that my baby was one of the many lucky ones; I invite you to consider joining me in that realization."

Malpractice Insurance


When looking for a safe care provider for your birth, it is very important to find one that carries malpractice insurance.

Many home birth midwives do not carry malpractice insurance, reassuring their clients that they don't need it because "malpractice insurance only protects doctors so that they can keep practicing when they do something wrong."

In truth, malpractice insurance does not protect health care providers who make mistakes. It protects the families who the health care provider injures. Birth injuries in particular can be very costly and require expensive life-long care. If a family chooses a health care provider who carries malpractice insurance, and something goes wrong because of the health care provider, malpractice insurance will allow the family to be able to get the money they need to take care of the injury. If it's a hospital-based doctor or midwife who made the mistake, malpractice insurance will not protect them from the professional repercussions of their actions. Hospital-based care providers are overseen by boards of professionals who thoroughly review their actions; malpractice insurance doesn't protect them in any way from losing their hospital privileges or their license.

On the other hand, if a family chooses a birth center or home birth midwife who does not carry malpractice insurance, and something goes wrong that the midwife should have prevented, the family will have no venues for financial compensation. They will have to pay for the (potentially life-long) costs of the injury themselves. And the home birth midwife will have no professional repercussions, as she has nothing to stop her from taking on new clients without telling them of her past negative outcomes.

Many home birth midwives without malpractice insurance cannot be sued if they have a negative outcome, because very few lawyers will take on a lawsuit against them if they don't carry malpractice insurance. There just isn't enough money in the midwife's bank account to make the lawsuit worth it to the lawyer. And if a lawsuit is successfully brought and won against them, they can just declare bankruptcy, use a new name and continue practicing. One birth center in Michigan did just that.

In a report comparing different state midwifery laws, "Do State Midwifery Laws Matter?", the data shows that requiring midwives to carry malpractice insurance cut the rate of newborn deaths in half. Women and children benefit from midwives carrying malpractice insurance - and they benefit a lot.

If your midwife does not carry insurance because the cost will cut into her profits, she has weighed the pros and cons of not carrying malpractice insurance, and decided that the benefits to her outweigh the risks to you.

The Qualifications of US Home Birth Midwives

In trying to understand why the risks of home birth are so elevated compared to hospital birth, it's important to understand the "qualifications" of home birth midwives.

There are several different types of midwives in the United States and if you're not familiar with all of them their titles can sound similar and confusing. CNM, CPM, CM, DEM, LM...what's the difference? As Danielle Repp explains in her series "American Midwives": 

"There are two midwifery certifying bodies in the USA: American Midwifery Certification Board (AMCB) and North American Registry of Midwives (NARM). The AMCB is considered the Gold Standard for midwifery certification and is the certifying body for Certified Nurse Midwives (CNMs) and Certified Midwives (CMs); NARM is the certifying body for Certified Professional Midwives (CPMs). Licensed Midwives (LMs) also fall under NARM as it is the NARM entrance exam they take. Specific requirements for LMs may vary by state in order to take the exam."

"So in short, midwives in the USA basically fall into one of these three categories:
1. AMCB certified
2. NARM certified
3. Uncertified"

She continues:
 
"1. Certified Nurse Midwife (CNM)"

"Certified Nurse Midwives (CNMs) are some of the most highly skilled and educated midwives in the world. The Certified Nurse Midwife is one of the only types of midwives in the world that requires a nursing degree. The CNM also holds a master’s degree as the minimum level of educational requirement (some have doctoral degrees). CNMs must complete their education through an ACME-accredited midwifery program (ACME = Accreditation Commission for Midwifery Education). Once completed, they can apply to take the AMCB certification exam."

"Certified Nurse Midwives are licensed and have prescriptive authority in all 50 states (and other territories of the USA). The educational and clinical skills training of the CNM not only includes pregnancy and birth care but also primary care for women throughout life, reproduction, infertility, newborn care, andent of sexually transmitted diseases."

"2. Certified Midwife (CM)"

"The Certified Midwife (CM) credential has existed since 1994. The CM is the direct-entry version of the CNM. While CMs do not need to have a nursing degree, they must take all of the nursing school pre-requisites (such as anatomy, physiology, microbiology, etc) and must receive a bachelor’s degree and master’s degree. The CM’s educational and clinical skills training is similar to the CNMs, as it again not only includes pregnancy and birth care but also primary care for women throughout life, reproduction, infertility, newborn care, and management of sexually transmitted diseases."

"3. Certified Professional Midwife (CPM)"

"The Certified Professional Midwife credential ... was developed as a direct-entry route to become an out-of-hospital midwife. CPMs are not authorized to work in a hospital setting."

"Certified Professional Midwives do not have any degree requirements. The only educational requirement is to have a high school diploma, which was not a requirement until September 1, 2012."

"The Portfolio Evaluation Process (PEP) is a popular route to become a CPM. It is an apprenticeship where the student midwife follows and learns from a preceptor midwife. After attending 40 births (and the prenatal exams leading up to it), the student midwife can qualify to take the NARM exam. Anyone with a desire to become a midwife can seek out a preceptor. Half of CPMs have earned their credential through the PEP route."

"Another route to become a CPM is to graduate from a Midwifery Education Accreditation Council (MEAC) school. There are nine MEAC schools in the USA, some of which award certifications, some diplomas and some degrees."

"CPMs ...do not have prescriptive authority in any states (in certain states, CPMs are able to obtain certain medications, such as Pitocin, Cytotec, antibiotics, etc but CPMs cannot write prescriptions). CPMs also would not qualify to practice midwifery in other developed countries due to the lack of formal education requirements; the CPM requirements also do not meet the International Confederation of Midwives (ICM) standards."

The above was all from Danielle Repp's series American Midwives, part 1, part 2, and part 3; emphasis mine.

Due to the variation in types of training accepted to become a CPM, some CPMs might have enough education to meet the ICM minimum standards. However, the CPM credential itself does not require it, and ACOG estimates that "possibly as many as two-thirds of CPMs do not meet the ICM standards."

I want to repeat - Certified Professional Midwives - the kind of midwives that attend the majority of the home births in the United States - do not have any educational requirements other than a high school degree. And if they became a CPM before 2012, they don't even need that. They don't need to take anatomy, or physiology, or immunology, or even basic college biology.

And do you know what's even worse? In some states, midwives do not have to have any qualifications at all to practice. None. The state where I spent my college years - Utah - has voluntary licensure, which means that if a midwife simply decides that she'd rather not be licensed by the state, she has no educational requirements, no limits on her scope of practice, and no accountability for her actions. This satirical website points out the weaknesses in such a system.

Here are a couple charts that explain the difference between the midwives who work at doctors offices and in hospitals (CNMs) and the majority of home birth midwives (CPMs, LMs, lay midwives, etc.):


via
via


Now, if you think you'll be safe at home birth if you choose a CNM instead of a CPM, think again. Researchers in 2009 found that home birth with a CNM had twice as many babies die than hospital birth with a CNM. An even more recent study published in 2016 found that babies born to CNMs and CPMs at home birth died three to four times more often than babies born at the hospital, with no statistically significant difference between home births with CNMs or CPMs. Even if your midwife is a CNM instead of a CPM, you still won't be able to tell at home if your baby is being deprived of oxygen, you won't have an operating room if it becomes urgently needed, and you won't have a neonatal resuscitation team with all of the equipment that might be needed to save your baby.

More excellent articles that explain the disparity between US home birth midwives and US hospital midwives and the home birth midwives in other countries can be found here:

The hypothetical situations you can imagine when you think about home birth midwives' lack of education and regulation - like, "If I have an emergency during labor at home, will my midwife know what to do? Will she have the skills and training to save my baby?" - clearly actually happen at home, as we can see from the numbers. With home birth midwives, three times as many babies die. With home birth midwives, seventeen times as many babies have brain injuries. These are the numbers that result from the faulty regulation and extremely low educational requirements required of US home birth midwives.

The Coalition for Safer Home Birth

In response to the increased death rates at home birth and the lack of regulation and accountability of home birth midwives, an citizen-led organization called the Coalition for Safer Home Birth has formed. The Coalition is made up of home birth families, doctors, midwives, and advocates who wish to make home birth safer in America.

https://www.change.org/p/state-legislators-protect-mothers-babies-make-home-birth-safer

To draw our lawmakers' attention to the laws that would most improve the safety of home birth in the United States, the Coalition for Home Birth has started a petition on Change.org.

The petition endorses the following regulations for midwives:

1. Require a License
2. AMCB Certification
3. Malpractice Insurance
4. Low-risk Scope of Practice
5. Report Outcomes to the Public
6. Integrated System of Care

You can sign it here: Change.org: Protect Mothers & Babies - Make Home Birth Safer

We need to improve our home birth system! Please read and sign the petition, and use it as a guide for pushing for a better system in your state.

Honest Midwife


Earlier this year, a former CPM midwife spoke out. She started a new blog called "Honest Midwife" to pull back the curtain and expose some of the unethical and illegal practices of the CPM world.

Her name is Leigh Fransen, and she attended a midwifery school accredited by the state of Florida. After graduating she moved to South Carolina and started a successful freestanding birth center in partnership with three other midwives. She left the practice in 2013. After she left, the birth center had three deaths within two years. She wrote of the experience:

"As I drove home, I gripped the steering wheel tightly, my heart racing in my chest. I GOT OUT. It was messy and confusing and ugly, but I was out of there for good. I was relieved, but I wasn’t ready to be honest with the world about why."

"That was January 2013. In April 2013, I heard the first rumors of a baby’s death soon after her birth at the center. In September 2013, news of a second death was splashed across local newspapers. And in January 2015, a third death was reported. My thoughts and emotions ran rampant. One moment, I would arrogantly congratulate myself: No deaths on my watch, and three on theirs, who’s the best midwife now? Another moment, I would wonder at my favored status in the universe, that God had spared me from all the horror, and just in time. And in my most honest moments, I knew the truth of it: I had gotten incredibly, ridiculously lucky. And those three mothers who sat at home with empty arms, they simply had not."

Her full account is breathtaking, and I encourage you to read it in its entirety.

In her account, she describes finally "doing her research" after years of telling parents that home birth was safe.

"I began in familiar territory, the website of the Midwives Alliance of North America (MANA.org). On this site there is a button titled “Research,” and it leads to an extensive collection of the studies that MANA has determined builds the case that nonhospital birth with a midwife is safe...I spent the next several hours using my university library (and helpful librarians) to track down every one of these 24 studies and print them out, filling a large 3-ring binder with my efforts."

"Shades of guilt danced in the back of my head: shouldn’t I have done this years ago? Perhaps before I decided to actually give birth to my own child in a bathtub in a residential neighborhood in Miami? Possibly during my years as a student of midwifery? Maybe before I had assured scores of women that “research showed” giving birth at my birth center was as safe as any hospital? I cleared my head to focus on the task at hand. The research was all here in front of me now. I sat down with my giant binder of studies, a cup of coffee, and a handful of pens and highlighters. I had a long day ahead of me. I began at the beginning of MANA’s list."

She writes about reading each study, one by one, and again, I highly encourage you to read her analysis.  What did she find?

"The hours I had spent combing over all of MANA’s best evidence led me to this conclusion: nonhospital birth might be as safe as hospital birth, but likely only in health systems in which midwives are hospital-trained and well-integrated, and where exclusion criteria are strictly observed to permit only the lowest risk women to proceed. Nonhospital birth in the United States as currently practiced is responsible for lower numbers of interventions (such as cesarean section and medical pain relief) but a substantially higher risk of death or injury to the baby."

"Unbelievably, our 'own' evidence, upon close inspection, was almost unanimously against us."

As damning as this is, it is not the worst thing that Leigh Fransen reveals in her account of CPM midwives. The most stunning indictment of CPMs comes as Leigh describes her first-hand experiences at her midwifery school and in the field as a fully-practicing CPM:

"When, as a student midwife, I first participated in nonhospital births, I witnessed some things that made me uncomfortable. At my school, the head midwife would sometimes do illegal vacuum-assisted deliveries. The first time I saw one done I didn’t realize it was illegal, but when I started talking about it freely, I was quickly quieted by the more senior students. “We call it ‘the fruit,’” they said, a reference to the vacuum’s brand name, Kiwi. I rationalized that these other students and midwives would not be using “the fruit” if it was really harmful, so the law must be an unnecessary one. Soon, I was recruited to help usher family members out of the room “so the mother can rest,” as a cover for the vacuum use; I would then lock the door and stand guard. If I was instructed to cover the mother’s face with a cold washcloth “to help her relax,” I made sure her eyes were covered so not even she could see the vacuum being applied. I rationalized that surely she would have given us permission to do this to help her get her baby out without transporting, but that it wasn’t smart to ask permission to perform an illegal procedure. Toward the end of my apprenticeship, I was the one holding the vacuum, applying it to the baby’s head, exerting the carefully angled pressure to help pull the baby down. I rationalized that now I would know how to get a baby out, if I were ever in a situation where there were no available hospitals."

"I did not originally plan to attend a school where I would learn to perform dangerous, illegal procedures; I became complicit through a chain reaction of participation and justification. "The fruit" was only one of many "exceptions" I learned to make; many of these exceptions I carried with me to my later practice. Illicit use of medications, cavalier usage of toxic herbs, induction techniques, pretending not to see a cesarean scar, fudging dates, doctoring charts, “accidental” breech deliveries, cheating blood pressure readings, lying to doctors, ignoring borderline test results, pretending to know answers while furtively Googling, waiting just a little bit longer for baby’s heart tones to improve, purposely underestimating the staining of amniotic fluid, misrepresenting our personal statistics and the statistical realities of our “profession”… all of these practices are endemic to direct-entry midwifery in the United States. I know because I did most of them. I was present (and silent) as others did them. I heard the stories in “peer review.” Not every midwife does all of them; very, very few, if any, do none. It all starts with one small step, and we justify along the way, until we are lost in the woods with no moral compass left to guide us."

To read Leigh Fransen's full account, click here: High Risk: Truth, Lies, and Birth
To read Leigh's account in blog form, click here: Honest Midwife 
.