By MAMAMIA NEWS
Kate* has three children, two of whom were born via caesarean section. When she became pregnant with her fourth child, she went to the Internet in search of more information about the possibility of having her baby at home.
Convinced by endless data and statistics she found online, Kate made the choice to proceed with a home birth. On December 16 2010, she went into labour and at 10.16pm that evening, baby Joseph was born.
He was not breathing. His heart was not beating.
Fairfax newspapers reported last week that the coroner found Joseph’s death could have been prevented if the baby had been delivered in a hospital – under the care of trained doctors and with access to the necessary medical equipment.
An autopsy has revealed that baby Joseph has suffered a hypoxic brain injury during labour and that his mother’s failure to go to a hospital when her contractions began was a contributing factor to his death. Had Kate’s labour taken place in a hospital, the complications involved with baby Joseph would have been detected much earlier.
The coroner, Kim Parkinson said that too often the community was relying on internet research and layman’s analysis of data to make decisions which should only be made on the advice of a doctor. Only a few days earlier Kate had visited the hospital after experiencing heavy bleeding and chose to disregard the obstetrician’s advice that she have a fourth caesarean birth.
The coroner said that Kate appeared unaware of the risks associated with home birthing:
Top Comments
There is also plenty of robust medical information available on the internet, and those hospital-based doctors do make mistakes too.
Only 2 weeks ago, a hospital obstetrician advising me on a risk to my current pregnancy told me the likelihood of occurrence was "5%". I queried his source, as I had done the internet research thing, and when he looked it up the figure was actually a "fivefold increase on the normal occurrence" - more like less than 0.5%... quite different!
Now some risk-averse people would medicate, applying an unproven technique with only a hypothetical benefit and unknown side-effects. But I have chosen to manage the physical risk factors I may be exposed to, and manage my fallbacks by giving birth in a hospital (under the care of a known midwife who is familiar with my case).
If I wasn't more than an hour from hospital on difficult winter roads, I would seriously consider homebirth for this delivery.
This isn't about home vs hospital: it's about client care, and the capacity of medical providers who may work alone but who at times need the support and advice of a bigger team.
Yet another clear example of sensationalist crap in mainstream media. Godspeed mama and family. Sending you love instead of media spin.