Today the Center for Disease Control and Prevention released some much anticipated data regarding home birth from 1990 to 2006.
Inside the released data, it showed an increasing trend in out of hospital births. Home births rose about 5% from 1990 to 2005 and were steady in 2006. About two thirds of these births were at homes and about another third were in birth centers. Which I believe has come from more education on the safety of home birth, as well as the increased interest in women who do not wish to be put through the hospital birthing system, or are looking to VBAC in an area with no hospitals currently permitting the hot button procedure.
What this study also showed was an increase in Midwife attended home birth, showing that women are planning these births and not just accidentally birthing at home, or not making it to the hospital in time. The number of midwife attended home births increased from 43% in 1990 to 61%.
What Robin pointed out on Pregnancy.about.com is that people will try and blame or say these trends are due to the popularity of the film The Business of Being Born, or the Big Push for Midwives campaign but these were unavailable during this time. The Business of Being Born was not released until 2007.
I find these statistics encouraging because women are becoming more educated on their options, and truly are being informed consumers.
MacDorman M, Menacker F, Declercq E. Trends and characteristics of home and other out-of-hospital births in the United States, 1990-2006. National vital statistics reports; vol 58 no 11. Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Health Statistics. 2010.
My daughter has given birth twice at home using the warm water pool and attended by a midwife. Both births were non-stressful and she did not cry out in pain. She is due in April with her 3rd birth at home. The two boys will stay with a neighbor during the birth.
When you say “the number of midwife attended home births increased from 43%…” is that a percentage of all home births? All out-of-hospital births?
That percentage is the out of hospital births.
Thanks for sharing!
Is there any other data given, or is it purely tracking numbers of births, period? Any info on outcomes, demographics?
Do you have a link to the report?