Home Births
Elena and Joyce offer home birth as a birthing option for our moms.
For some families, home is the most relaxing place to labor, and is
a safe place to deliver with our licensed midwives. For these
mothers, prenatal care is still provided at the center, and a home visit
is done toward the end of pregnancy. Then our birthing team simply
brings the equipment needed to your home once you are in labor.
[Click Here for the Study that PROVES Births with
certified Professional Midwives are Safe!]

Homebirth is Safer than Hospital!
Statistics have demonstrated that, for the majority
of women, home birth with the presence of a skilled attendant is a reasonable
and safe option. "The American Public Health Association's policy statement
on Reduction of Unnecessary Cesarean Births encourages the expanded
use of midwives and out of hospital birth settings." Sakala, Carol.
Citing the American Journal of Public Health 80, 225-2, 1990 in Midwifery
Care and
Out-of-Hospital Birth Settings: How Do They Reduce Unnecessary Cesarean
Section Births? Social Science and Medicine 37, 10 (1993c) 1233-50
A Study of 3,257 out-of-hospital births attended by Arizona-licensed
midwives from 1978 to 1985 showed a perinatal mortality rate of 2.2
per 1000 and a neonatal mortality rate of 1.1 per 1000. Sullivan, D.
& Weitz, R., Labor Pains: Modern Midwives and home birth. New Haven,
CT: Yale University Press, 1988, pp. 125-126
These rates are substantially below those for the U.S. as a whole, which
had an infant mortality rate of 10.5 per 1000 in 1987. Another study
compared 1046 planned home births attended by California midwives with
a similar group of 1046 hospital births attended by physicians. The
two groups were matched for mother's age, education, number of children,
risk status, etc. There were no significant differences in perinatal
mortality between the groups. But the midwives achieved lower rates
of fetal distress, postpartum hemorrhage, birth injuries, and the need
for infant resuscitation. While the hospital sample had 30 cases of
birth injuries, including skull fractures, facial palsies, brachial
nerve injuries and severe cephalhematomas, there were no such injuries
at home. The home birth statistics included those couples who began
labor at home, but ultimately needed to be transferred to the hospital.
Mehl, L., Ramiel, J.-R., et al., "Evaluation of outcomes of non-nurse
midwives: Matched comparisons with physicians," Women and Health, 5:17-19,
1980
In the United Kingdom, the 1992 House of Commons Committee on Maternity
Services stated in the Winterton Report that "this committee must draw
the conclusion that the policy of encouraging all women to give birth
in hospitals cannot be justified on the grounds of safety" and further
in the report stated that "There is no convincing or compelling evidence
that hospitals give a better guarantee of safety of the majority of
mothers and babies. It is possible, but not proven, that the opposite
might be true." We realize that, while birth is inherently safe and
that with minimal intervention 85-90% of all births result in a healthy
mother and infant, there are risks associated with birth that include
but are not limited to; maternal or fetal death, neonatal death, maternal
or neonatal morbidity. In order to minimize those risks and avoid any
unnecessary interventions which may disrupt the normal birthing process,
we have chosen to birth at home with a midwife who is skilled in recognizing
circumstances which require referral or assistance from other health
care providers.
Should circumstance arise that would make it unsafe for us to remain
at home, we expect to transport to Pomona Valley Medical Center Hospital
into the care of Dr. Thomas T. Lee, Obstetric-Gynecological Associates,
P.C.. Under no circumstances will we hold you responsible for events
that occur prior to our arrival at PVMC Hospital and we will not hold
you responsible for an outcome that may have been improved with an earlier
admission to the hospital and your care. We recognize that if hospitalization
becomes necessary, interventions in the birth are warranted, but we
expect that you will honor our request that those interventions be kept
to a minimum.


