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Why We Chose Homebirth
Safety
- A woman has already been exposed to all the germs in her own home. She has
also passed along these antibodies to her unborn baby. Mom and baby, however,
have not been exposed to everything in the hospital, where all the sick
germs are, so the risk of infection is much higher for both. Continual vaginal
exams provide further opportunity for germs to make their way into Mom's body,
as do interventive procdures, such as IV's.
- Many hospitals still require that a woman lie on her back to give birth, for
the convenience of the staff and the use of their equipment. This position does
not allow the baby's head (or other presenting part) to press against the cervix
and cause it to dilate properly, which can lead to "failure to progress", as well
as unnecessary pain. It causes the weight of the uterus and baby to compress a
major artery, causing hypoxia (lack of oxygen) in the baby. This position also
keeps the baby's weight against the perineum, making tears more likely.
- Most hospitals will not allow a laboring woman to eat or drink, unnecessarily
causing a naturally long labor to become a problem, because of fatigue and hunger.
This usually results in a cesarean section, which poses additional risks to both
mom and baby. (For example, the maternal death rate for cesarean delivery is 6
times that of vaginal delivery. Cesarean sections are also often responsible for
respiratory difficulties in the newborn.)
- Hospitals are not equipped to handle breech births naturally, because of poor
positioning during labor and lack of training of most obtetricians today. This
makes most hospital breech births automatic cesarean sections (although the
National Institute of Health advises against routine use of cesareans in breech
deliveries). The same is true for twins.
- Labor induction drugs, the supine position, and fetal monitoring, among other
things, can cause fetal distress, necessitating a cesarean section.
- Labor induction drugs cause stronger contractions than natural labor, causing
more women to resort to pain relieving drugs which slow their labor and keep them
from pushing effectively. This can result in a cycle of induction drugs and pain
relieving drugs, as well as causing distress in the baby and fatigue and lack of
satisfaction in the mother.
- Hospital staff usually cut the umbilical cord immediately, depriving the baby
of blood that his body needs and forcing him to breathe entirely on his own before
he's ready. Delaying the cutting of the cord until it has stopped pulsating allows
the baby an easier transition to breathing, as well as allowing the remainder of
his blood to be transferred to his body from the placenta. This, along with
allowing the placenta to deliver naturally, will also prevent the baby's blood
from mixing with the mother's, greatly reducing the chances of Rh incompatibility
becoming a problem.
- In the hospital, the placenta is usually delivered right away following the
birth. This is usually too early for the body to be ready, so doctors routinely
tug the umbilical cord and/or press on the woman's uterus. This can cause the
placenta to tear, and usually causes the placenta to separate from the uterus
before the uterus is ready, which results in loss of more blood than necessary,
and sometimes even life-threatening hemorrhaging. The doctors then "fix" this
by administering drugs. Forcing the placenta to separate before the body is
ready can also cause the baby's blood to mix with the mother's, making Rh
incompatibility an issue.
The well-being of the baby and our right to make decisions concerning her
- In the hospital, babies are born into very brightly-lit rooms with lots of
noise. After being in the dark womb where all sounds are muffled by flesh and
fluids, this is a harsh beginning to life outside mom's body.
- In the hospital, baby is rarely allowed to spend the first little while after
birth peacefully bonding with mom. Instead, he's passed from stranger to stranger,
being handled like merchandise to complete hospital protocol.
- Most hospitals will not allow immediate breastfeeding, as the baby is being
shuttled around from person to person for weighing, measuring, poking, prodding,
and testing.
- Most hospital nurseries routinely give babies pacifiers and/or bottles of
water or sugar water (often against the parents' explicit instructions). This
is detrimental to the establishment of breastfeeding, which is very clearly
healthier for baby and mom than formula-feeding.
- Several other health issues, as mentioned under "Safety"
Emotional Benefits
- Home is the place that mom is familiar with, and therefore is most comfortable.
At home, she doesn't have to worry about the multitude of medical staff watching
her, she can simply be herself and have a baby.
- At the hospital, even normal birth is treated like a disease or an emergency;
it's neither. At home, birth is treated as a natural part of life, only to be
interfered with in rare instances of true emergency.
- At home, the birthing woman can adopt whatever position she chooses, go
wherever she chooses, and eat or drink whenever she's hungry or thirsty.
- At home, the laboring woman's husband can be as uninvolved or as involved as
mom and dad want him to be, without his being in the way of the medical staff,
or being pushed aside.
Spiritual Conviction
- The husband is the head and priest of his family. In the hospital, he is
required to sign his authority over and responsibility for his wife and child
over to another man. This is in clear violation of scriptural principles, as a
woman is to submit to her own husband as to the Lord.
- The Bible makes it clear that a woman's body belongs to her husband and that
the marriage bed is to be kept pure. In the hospital, she is required to bare
herself to whomever it's deemed necessary to, and to allow herself to be touched
by another man's or woman's hands.
- A Christian home is presumed to be free of demonic activity and satanic
footholds. The same cannot be said of the hospital. The last thing Satan wants
is another baby born to a Christian family to be raised to fight against
him. We open ourselves up to satanic attack during childbirth by allowing
ourselves to be in a place where demons have the authority to roam freely, rather
than in our own homes where they have no place.
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