But doesn't that come back to your original premise (was it yours?....correct me if I'm wrong) that women are responsible and capable of making their own choices and if they choose a home birth or a c-section or anything in between we can't assume that 1) it's necessarily unsafe for them 2) they are "uneducated" and not aware of what they're doing or being "tricked" or "forced" into it. Is it plausible that highly educated women, in their right state of mind may choose home birth and that it is a legitimate option (even a healthier option) for some some women?
That wasn?t me. Think it was someone else on another post. I don?t disagree entirely with that position but I also think that it?s the duty of practitioners and advocates of all kinds of birth options to put as complete and clear a picture out there as they can.
So my comment was about how practitioners present the facts and that they might keep in mind that while they are based in North America, their views online and in books are being read and referenced by people around the world so if they are addressing the North American situation alone, they need to say so explicitly. Further, when quoting global statistics ? these are rarely related to home births which, as you said, would come across unfavourably in global statistics but to other kinds of risk related to medicalised births ? the impression conveyed is that the rest of what they are saying is relevant to women globally who live in similar conditions. At the most, the qualification added would be something like ?access to good nutrition, medical care? etc. which women in urban areas in developed countries would also have access to.
They may be writing for people in Western developed nations but I don?t think this is clear to women who do not live in these nations but who live in very similar (but not the same) circumstances in developing nations. I know of two cases where people who lived a long time in US moved to India and attempted a home birth, with access to the best medical care. One abandoned it (a good thing because she ended up needed an emergency c-sec after a very long labour), but the other ended in the death of the baby. They had had a home birth in the US before and put in place everything that was similar, including being literally five minutes away from the best hospital in the city. It could just be a fluke, but I feel that it could also have something to do with not being in the US, just as I think that even in the West, where you live when you do the home birth makes a difference ? such as how fast an ambulance can get to you in case you need it. Somehow I never see that stressed ? the importance of the back-up plan, maybe to play down the fear factor.
This is just a small quibble about how information is presented and applies to both sides of the debate.
I must add that I do agree with most things on the original poster (and I know home birth was not one of them) you put up. And I am also all for providing midwives in rural areas of developing nations with the best of modern medicine though I also believe that these women deserve hospitals in their areas and the chance to use them.







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