BMJ 2005;330:1416 (18 June),
doi:10.1136/bmj.330.7505.1416
http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/330/7505/1416?ehomPaper
Outcomes of planned home births with certified professional
midwives: large prospective study in North America
Kenneth C Johnson, senior epidemiologist1,
Betty-Anne Daviss, project manager2
1 Surveillance and Risk Assessment Division, Centre
for Chronic Disease Prevention and Control, Public Health Agency of
Canada, PL 6702A, Ottawa, ON, Canada K1A OK9, 2 Safe
Motherhood/Newborn Initiative, International Federation of
Gynecology and Obstetrics, Ottawa, Canada
Abstract
Objective To evaluate the safety of home births in North
America
involving direct entry midwives, in jurisdictions
where the
practice is not well integrated into the
healthcare system.
Design Prospective cohort study.
Setting All home births involving certified professional
midwives across the United States (98% of cohort) and
Canada, 2000.
Participants All 5418 women expecting to deliver in 2000
supported by midwives with a common certification and who
planned to deliver at home when labour began.
Main outcome measures Intrapartum and neonatal mortality,
perinatal transfer to hospital care, medical intervention
during labour, breast feeding, and maternal satisfaction.
Results 655 (12.1%) women who intended to deliver at home
when labour began were transferred to hospital. Medical
intervention rates included epidural (4.7%), episiotomy
(2.1%), forceps (1.0%), vacuum extraction (0.6%), and
caesarean section (3.7%); these rates were substantially
lower than for low risk US women having hospital births.
The intrapartum and neonatal mortality among women
considered at low risk at start of labour, excluding deaths
concerning life threatening congenital anomalies, was 1.7
deaths per 1000 planned home births, similar to risks in
other studies of low risk home and hospital births in
North America. No mothers died. No discrepancies were
found for perinatal outcomes independently validated.
Conclusions Planned home birth for low risk women in North
America using certified professional midwives was
associated with lower rates of medical intervention but
similar intrapartum and neonatal mortality to that of low
risk hospital births in the United States.
Introduction
Despite a wealth of evidence supporting planned home birth as
a safe option for women with low risk pregnancies,
1-4
the setting
remains controversial in most high resource
countries. Views
are particularly polarised in the United
States, with interventions
and costs of hospital births
escalating and midwives involved
with home births being
denied the ability to be lead professionals
in hospital,
with admitting and discharge privileges.
5
Although
several Canadian medical societies
6
7 and the American Public
Health Association
8
have adopted policies promoting or acknowledging
the
viability of home births, the American College of Obstetricians
and Gynecologists continues to oppose it.
9
Studies on home birth
have been criticised if they have
been too small to accurately
assess perinatal mortality,
unable to distinguish planned from
unplanned home births
accurately, or retrospective with the
potential of bias
from selective reporting. To tackle these
issues we
carried out a large prospective study of planned home
births. The North American Registry of Midwives provided a rare
opportunity to study the practice of a defined population of
direct entry midwives involved with home birth across the
continent.
We compared perinatal outcomes with those of
studies of low
risk hospital births in the United States.
Methods
The competency based process of the North American Registry
of Midwives provides a certified professional midwife
credential,
primarily for direct entry midwives who
attend home births,
including those educated through
apprenticeship. Our target
population was all women who
engaged the services of a certified
professional midwife
in Canada or the United States as their
primary caregiver
for a birth with an expected date of delivery
in 2000. In
autumn 1999, the North American Registry of Midwives
made
participation in the study mandatory for recertification
and provided an electronic database of the 534 certified
professional
midwives whose credentials were current. We
contacted 502 of
the midwives (94.0%); 32 (6.0%) could
not be located through
email, telephone, post, or local
associations, 82 (15.4%) had
stopped independent
practice, and 11 (2.1%) had retired. We
sent a binder
with forms and instructions for the study to the
409
practising midwives who agreed to participate.
Data collection
For each new client, the midwife listed identifying information
on the registration log form at the start of care; obtained
informed consent, including permission for the client to be
contacted for verification of information after care was
complete; and filled out a detailed data form on the
course of care. Every three months the midwife was
required to send a copy of the updated registration log,
consent forms for new clients, and completed data forms
for women at least six weeks post partum. To confirm that
forms had been received for each registered client, we
linked the entered data to the registration database. We
reviewed the clinical details and circumstances of stillbirths
and intrapartum and neonatal deaths and telephoned the
midwives for confirmation and clarification. To verify
this information we obtained reports from coroners,
autopsies, or hospitals on all but four deaths. For these
four, we obtained peer reviews.
Validation and satisfaction
We contacted a stratified, random 10% sample, of over 500 mothers,
including at least one client for every midwife in the study.
The mothers were asked about the date and place of birth, any
required hospital care, any problems with care, the health
status of themselves and their baby, and 11 questions on
level of satisfaction with their midwifery care.
Data analysis
Our analysis focused on personal details of the clients, reasons
for leaving care prenatally, the rates and reasons for
transfer to hospital during labour and post partum,
medical interventions, health and admission to hospital
of the newborn or mother from birth up to six weeks post
partum, intrapartum and neonatal mortality, and breast
feeding. We compared medical intervention rates for the
planned home births with data from birth certificates for
all 3 360 868 singleton, vertex births at 37 weeks or more
gestation in the United States in 2000, as reported by the
National Center for Health Statistics,10
which acted as a proxy for a comparable low risk group.
We also compared medical intervention rates with the
listening to mothers survey,5
a national survey weighted to be representative of the US
birthing population aged 18-44. Intrapartum and neonatal
death rates were compared with those in other North
American studies of at least 500 births that were either
planned out of hospital or comparable studies of low risk
hospital births.
Results
A total of 409 certified professional midwives from across the
United States and two Canadian provinces registered 7623 women
whose expected date of delivery was in 2000. Eighteen of the
409 midwives (4.4%) and their clients were excluded from the
study because they failed to actively participate and had
decided
not to recertify or left practice. Sixty mothers
(0.8%) declined
participation. The figure provides an
overview of why women
left care before labour and their
intended place of birth at
the start of labour.
Characteristics of the mothers
We focused on the 5418 women who intended to deliver at home
at the start of labour.
Table 1 compares them with all women who gave birth
to singleton, vertex babies of at least 37 weeks or more
gestation in the United States in 2000 according to 13
personal and behavioural variables associated with perinatal
risk. Women who started birth at home were on average older,
of a lower socioeconomic status and higher educational
achievement, and less likely to be African-American or
Hispanic than women having full gestation, vertex,
singleton hospital births in the United States in 2000.
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Table 1
Characteristics of 5418 women planning home births
with certified professional midwives in the United
States, 2000, compared with all singleton, vertex
births at
37
weeks' gestation in the United States, 2000. Values
are percentages unless stated otherwise |
|
Transfers to hospital
Of the 5418 women, 655 (12.1%) were transferred to hospital
intrapartum or post partum.
Table 2 describes the transfers according to timing,
urgency, and reasons for transfer. Five out of every six
women transferred (83.4%) were transferred before
delivery, half (51.2%) for failure to progress, pain
relief, or exhaustion. After delivery, 1.3% of mothers and 0.7%
of newborns were transferred to hospital, most commonly for
maternal haemorrhage (0.6% of total births), retained placenta
(0.5%), or respiratory problems in the newborn (0.6%). The
midwife considered the transfer urgent in 3.4% of
intended home births. Transfers were four times as common
among primiparous women (25.1%) as among multiparous
women (6.3%), but urgent transfers were only twice as
common among primparous women (5.1%) as among multiparous
women (2.6%).
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Table 2
Transfers to hospital among 5418 women intending
home births with a certified professional midwife in
the United States, 2000, according to timing,
urgency, and reasons |
|
Medical interventions
Individual rates of medical intervention for home births were
consistently less than half those in hospital, whether
compared with a relatively low risk group (singleton,
vertex, 37 weeks or more gestation) that will have a
small percentage of higher risk births or the general
population having hospital births (table
3). Compared with the relatively low risk hospital group,
intended home births were associated with lower rates of
electronic fetal monitoring (9.6% versus 84.3%),
episiotomy (2.1% versus 33.0%), caesarean section (3.7%
versus 19.0%), and vacuum extraction (0.6% versus 5.5%).
The caesarean rate for intended home births was 8.3%
among primiparous women and 1.6% among multiparous women.
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Table 3
Intervention rates for 5418 planned home births
attended by certified professional midwives and
hospital births in the United States |
|
Outcomes
No maternal deaths occurred. After we excluded four stillborns
who died before labour but whose mothers still chose home
birth, and three babies with fatal birth defects, five
deaths were intrapartum and six occurred during the
neonatal period (see box). This was a rate of 2.0 deaths
per 1000 intended home births. The intrapartum and
neonatal mortality was 1.7 deaths per 1000 low risk
intended home births after planned breeches and twins
(not considered low risk) were excluded. The results for intrapartum
and neonatal mortality are consistent with most North American
studies of intended births out of hospital11-24
and low risk hospital births (table
4).14
21
22
24-30
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Table 4
Combined intrapartum and neonatal mortality in
studies of planned out of hospital births or low
risk hospital births in North America (at least 500
births) |
|
Breech and multiple births at home are controversial among home
birth practitioners. Among the 80 planned breeches at home
there were two deaths and none among the 13 sets of
twins. In the 694 births (12.8%) in which the baby was
born under water, there was one intrapartum death (birth
at 41 weeks, five days) and one fatal birth defect death.
Apgar scores were reported for 94.5% of babies; 1.3% had Apgar
scores below 7 at five minutes. Immediate neonatal
complications were reported for 226 newborns (4.2% of
intended home births). Half the immediate neonatal
complications concerned respiratory problems, and 130
babies (2.4%) were placed in the neonatal intensive care
unit.
Health in first six weeks post partum
Health problems in the six weeks post partum were reported for
7% of newborns. Among the 5200 (96%) mothers who returned for
the six week postnatal visit, 98.3% of babies and 98.4% of
mothers reported good health, with no residual health
problems. At six weeks post partum, 95.8% of these women
were still breast feeding their babies, 89.7%
exclusively.
Outcome validation and client satisfaction
Among the stratified, random 10% sample of women contacted directly
by study staff to validate birth outcomes, no new transfers
to hospital during or after the birth were reported and no new
stillbirths or neonatal deaths were uncovered. Mothers'
satisfaction with care was high for all 11 measures, with
over 97% reporting that they were extremely or very
satisfied. For a subsequent birth, 89.6% said they would
choose the same midwife, 9.1% another certified
professional midwife, and 1.7% another type of caregiver.
Discussion
Women who intended at the start of labour to have a home birth
with a certified professional midwife had a low rate of
intrapartum
and neonatal mortality, similar to that in
most studies of low
risk hospital births in North
America. A high degree of safety
and maternal
satisfaction were reported, and over 87% of mothers
and
neonates did not require transfer to hospital.
A randomised controlled trial would be the best way to tackle
selection bias of mothers who plan a home birth, but a
randomised controlled trial in North America is
unfeasible given that even in Britain, where home birth
has been an incorporated part of the healthcare system
for some time, and where cooperation is more feasible, a
pilot study failed.31
Prospective cohort studies remain the most comprehensive
instruments available.
Our results for intrapartum and neonatal mortality are consistent
with most other North American studies of intended births out
of hospital and studies of low risk hospital birth (table
4). A meta-analysis2
and the latest research in Britain,3
4
32 Switzerland,33
and the Netherlands34
have reinforced support of home birth. Researchers
reported high overall perinatal mortality in a study of
home birth in Australia,35
qualifying that low risk home births in Australia had
good outcomes but that high risk births gave rise to a
high rate of avoidable death at home.36
Two prospective studies in North America found positive
outcomes for home birth,23
24 but the studies were not of sufficient size to provide
relatively stable perinatal death rates. None of this
evidence, including ours, is consistent with a study in
Washington State based on birth certificates.21
That study reported an increased risk with home birth but
lacked an explicit indication of planned place of birth,
creating the potential inclusion of high risk unplanned,
unattended home births.28
37
Our study has several strengths. Internationally it is one of
the few, and the largest, prospective studies of home birth,
allowing for relatively stable estimates of risk from
intrapartum and neonatal mortality. We accurately
identified births planned at home at the start of labour
and included independent verification of birth outcomes
for a sample of 534 planned home births. We obtained data
from almost 400 midwives from across the continent.
Regardless of methodology, residual confounding of comparisons
between home and hospital births will always be a possibility.
Women choosing home birth (or who would be willing to be
randomised to birth site in a randomised trial) may
differ for unmeasured variables from women choosing
hospital birth. For example, women choosing home birth
may have an advantageous enhanced belief in their ability
to give birth safely with little medical intervention. On
the other hand, women who choose hospital birth may have
a psychological advantage in North America associated with not
having to deal with the social pressure and fears of spouses,
relatives, or friends from their choice of birth place.
Our results may be generalisable to a larger community of direct
entry midwives. The North American Registry of Midwives was
created in 1987 to develop the certified professional midwife
credential—a route for formal certification for midwives
involved in home birth who were not nurse midwives and who
came from diverse educational backgrounds. Thus the women
who chose to become certified professional midwives were
a subset of the larger community of direct entry midwives
in North America whose diverse educational backgrounds
and midwifery practice were similar to certified
professional midwives. From 1993 to 1999, using an
earlier iteration of the data form, we collected largely
retrospective data on a voluntary basis mainly from direct entry
midwives involved with home births approached through the
Midwives Alliance of North America Statistics and
Research Committee and the Canadian Midwives Statistics'
Collaboration. This earlier unpublished data of over 11
000 planned home births showed similar demographics,
rates of intervention, transfers to hospital, and adverse
outcomes.
As with the prospective US national birth centre study19
and the prospective US home birth study,23
the main study limitation was the inability to develop a
workable design from which to collect a national
prospective low risk group of hospital births to compare
morbidity and mortality directly. Forms for vital
statistics do not reliably collect the information on medical
risk factors required to create a retrospective hospital birth
group of precisely comparable low risk,38-40
and hospital discharge summary records for all births are
not nationally accessible for sampling and have some
limitations, being primarily administrative records.
One exception, and an important adjunct to our study, was
Schlenzka's study in California.22
In this PhD thesis, Schlenzka was able to establish a
large defined retrospective cohort of planned home and
hospital births with similar low risk profiles, because
birth and death certificates in California include intended
place of birth and these had been linked to hospital discharge
abstracts for 1989-90 for a caesarean section study. When the
author compared 3385 planned home births with 806 402 low risk
hospital births, he consistently found a non-significantly
lower perinatal mortality in the home birth group. The
results were consistent regardless of liberal or more
restrictive criteria to define low risk, and whether or
not the analysis involved simple standardisation of rates
or extensive adjustment for all potential risk variables
collected.22
An economic analysis found that an uncomplicated vaginal birth
in hospital in the United States cost on average three times
as much as a similar birth at home with a midwife41
in an environment where management of birth has become an
economic, medical, and industrial enterprise.42
Our study of certified professional midwives suggests
that they achieve good outcomes among low risk women
without routine use of expensive hospital interventions.
Our results are consistent with the weight of previous research
on safety of home birth with midwives internationally. This
evidence supports the American Public Health Association's
recommendation8
to increase access to out of hospital maternity care services
with direct entry midwives in the United States. We recommend
that these findings be taken into account when insurers and
governing bodies make decisions about home birth and hospital
privileges with respect to certified professional midwives.
|
Categories of intrapartum and postpartum deaths
(n=14) among 5418 women intending at
start of labour to deliver at home
Intrapartum deaths (n=5)
Term pregnancy, transferred in first stage, cord
prolapse discovered with artificial rupture of
membranes in hospital
Term pregnancy, breech transported in second
stage because of decelerations, delivered
during transport
Term pregnancy, breech, transport
after birth at home
Term pregnancy, 41 weeks five days.
Subgaleal, subdural, subarachnoid haemorrhage. No
fetal heart irregularities detected with
routine monitoring. Apgar scores 1 and 0
Post-term pregnancy at 42 weeks three
days, nuchal cord 6X and a true knot
Neonatal deaths (n=9)
Lethal congenital anomalies (n = 3):
Dwarf and related anomalies
Acrocallosal syndrome
Trisomy 13 Other causes (n = 6):
Term pregnancy, average labour. Apgar
scores 6/2. Transported immediately, died
at
hours of age in hospital. Autopsy said "mild medial
hypertrophy of the pulmonary arterioles which
suggest possible persistent pulmonary
hypertension of a newborn or persistent
fetal circulation...some authorities would argue
this is a SIDS and others disagree based
on the age. Regardless, infant suffered
hypoxia and cardiopulmonary arrest"
Term pregnancy, Apgar scores 9/10.
Suddenly stopped breathing at 15 hours of age. Died
at five days in hospital, sudden infant
death syndrome
Term pregnancy, transport at first
assessment because of decelerations, rupture
of vasa previa before membranes ruptured,
caesarean section, died in hospital two
days after birth
Term pregnancy, Apgar scores 9/10.
Baby died at 26 hours. Sudden infant death syndrome
Post-term pregnancy, 42 weeks two days
age based on clinical data as mother not
aware of last menstrual period and refused
ultrasonography. One deceleration during
second stage, which resolved with position
change. Apgar scores 3/2. Brain damage
associated with anoxia, baby died at 16
days
Term pregnancy. Mother and baby transported
to hospital because mother, not baby, seemed
ill, but both discharged within 24 hours.
Mother, not baby, given antibiotics by physician
a few days after the birth for general
sickness. Baby readmitted from home at 16
days because of nursing problems, died at 19
days of previously undetected Group B
streptococcus
|
|
|
What is already known on this topic Planned
home births for low risk women in high
resource countries where midwifery is
well integrated into the healthcare system are
associated with similar safety to low
risk hospital births
Midwives involved with home births are
not well integrated into the healthcare
system in the United States
Evidence on safety of such home births
is limited
What this study adds
Planned home births with certified
professional midwives in the United States had
similar rates of intrapartum and neonatal
mortality to those of low risk hospital
births
Medical intervention rates for planned
home births were lower than for planned low risk
hospital births
|
|
We thank the North American Registry of Midwives Board for
helping
facilitate the study; Tim Putt for help with
layout of the data
forms; Jennesse Oakhurst, Shannon
Salisbury, and a team of five
others for data entry; Adam
Slade for computer programming support;
Amelia Johnson,
Phaedra Muirhead, Shannon Salisbury, Tanya Stotsky,
Carrie Whelan, and Kim Yates for office support; Kelly Klick
and Sheena Jardin for the satisfaction survey; members of our
advisory council (Eugene Declerq (Boston University School of
Public Health), Susan Hodges (Citizens for Midwifery and
consumer
panel of the Cochrane Collaboration's Pregnancy
and Childbirth
Group), Jonathan Kotch (University of
North Carolina Department
of Maternal and Child Health),,
Patricia Aikins Murphy (University
of Utah College of
Nursing), and Lawrence Oppenheimer (University
of Ottawa
Division of Maternal Fetal Medicine); and the midwives
and mothers who agreed to participate in the study.
Contributors: KCJ and B-AD designed the
study, collected and analysed the data, and prepared the
manuscript. KCJ is guarantor for the paper.
Funding: The Benjamin Spencer Fund
provided core funding for this project. The Foundation
for the Advancement of Midwifery provided additional
funding. Their roles were purely to offset the costs of
doing the research. This work was not done under the
auspices of the Public Health Agency of Canada or the International
Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics and the views
expressed do not necessarily represent those of these
agencies.
Competing interests: None declared.
Ethical approval: Ethical approval was
obtained from an ethics committee created for the North
American Registry of Midwives to review epidemiological
research involving certified professional midwives.
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(Accepted 20 April 2005)

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