| A woman in Iowa was recently referred to a
university hospital during her labor because of possible
complications. There, it was decided that a cesarean section
should be done. After the surgery was completed and the woman
was resting post-operatively in her hospital room, she went into
shock and died. An autopsy showed that during the cesarean
section the surgeon had accidentally nicked the woman's aorta,
the biggest artery in the body, leading to internal hemorrhage,
shock and death. Cesarean section can save the life of the
mother or her baby. Cesarean section can also kill a mother or
her baby. How can this be? Because every single procedure or
technology used during pregnancy and birth carries risks, both
for mother and baby. The decision to use technology is a
judgment call—it may make things either better or worse.
We are living in the age of technology. Ever since we
succeeded in going to the moon, we have believed that technology
can do everything to solve all of our problems. So it should
come as no surprise that doctors and hospitals are using more
and more technology on pregnant and birthing women. Has it
solved all the problems that can arise during birth? Hardly.
Let's look at the recent track record.
Has the recent increasing use of technology during pregnancy
and birth resulted in fewer damaged or dead babies? In the
United States there has been no decrease in the past 30 years in
the number of babies with cerebral palsy. The biggest killer of
newborn babies is a birth weight that is too low, but the number
of too-small babies born has not decreased the past 20 years.
The number of babies who die while still in the womb has not
decreased in more than a decade. While the past 10 years has
seen a slight drop in the number of babies who die during their
first week after birth, the scientific data suggest an increase
in the number of babies who survive the first week but have
permanent brain damage.
Is the increasing use of technology saving the lives of more
pregnant and birthing women? In the United States the scientific
data show no decrease during the past 10 years in the number of
women who die around the time of birth (maternal mortality). In
fact, recent data suggest a frightening increase in the number
of women dying during pregnancy and birth in the United States.
So it may be that the increase in the use of birth technologies
is not only not saving more women's lives but it is also killing
more women. This possibility has a reasonable scientific
explanation: cesarean section and epidural anesthesia have both
been used more and more in this country and we know that both
cesarean section and epidural block can result in death.
We should not be surprised with the recent poor track record
of high-tech birth. For many decades in the middle of the 20th
century the number of babies dying around the time of birth was
decreasing. This was due not to medical advances but mainly to
such social advances as less severe poverty, better nutrition
and better housing. Most important, the decrease in mortality
was due to family planning, resulting in fewer women with many
pregnancies and births. Medical care also was responsible for
some of the decreasing mortality of babies, not because of
high-tech interventions but because of basic medical advances,
such as the discovery of antibiotics and the ability to give
safe blood transfusions. There has never been any scientific
evidence that high-tech interventions such as the routine use of
electronic fetal monitoring during labor decrease the mortality
rate of babies.
What this means is that putting yourself in the hands of a
high-tech doctor and a high-tech hospital does not guarantee you
the safest birth. You must yourself take responsibility for your
own birth, including the decision to have technology used on you
and your baby. Remember, technology is not good or bad. How
technology is used can be good or bad. Airplanes can be used to
carry you to visit your family or can be used to drop bombs on
women and children. How technology is used on you during
pregnancy and birth is of great importance because it can help
you and your baby or harm you and your baby.
How do you go about being pregnant and giving birth in
circumstances where the use of technology is appropriate and
right for you, your baby and your family? The first step is to
get the right health care professional to assist you during the
pregnancy and birth. A key decision is to decide if your primary
maternity care provider is to be a midwife, a family physician
or an obstetrician.
The United States and Canada are the only countries in the
world where highly trained surgeons called obstetricians attend
the majority of normal births. The American obstetrician is to
be pitied. He or she is trying to be all things to all
women—primary maternity care provider for normal, healthy
pregnant and birthing women, specialist in complications of
pregnancy and birth, specialist in women's diseases and highly
skilled surgeon. No other doctor anywhere in the realm of health
care tries to maintain competency at all these levels and in so
many areas because it is totally unreasonable to expect this
from one human being. Can an obstetrician do a six-hour "pelvic
clean out" gynecological surgical procedure on a woman with
extensive cancer, then rush to his or her office and do the best
job of quietly and patiently counseling a pregnant woman about
her sex life? Not likely.
While American obstetricians have worked hard to convince the
public they are the safest people to assist at all births, the
scientific evidence does not support them. For example, a large
scientific study published in 1998 looked at all births in the
United States in one year—more than four million births. Because
doctors really do need to manage the few births that develop
serious complications, the study eliminated complicated births
and looked only at low-risk births. Compared with
physician-attended low-risk births, midwife-attended low risk
births have 33 percent (one-third) fewer deaths among newborn
infants. Furthermore, midwife-attended births have 31 percent
(nearly one-third) fewer babies born too small, which means
fewer retarded and brain-damaged infants.
There is not a single report in the scientific literature
that shows obstetricians to be safer than midwives for low-risk
or normal pregnancy and birth. So if you are among the more than
75 percent of all women with a normal pregnancy, the safest
birth attendant for you is not a doctor but a midwife.
If you are considering a hospital birth with an obstetrician
as your primary birth attendant, ask him or her how much time he
or she will spend with you during your labor. One of the reasons
a midwife is generally a better choice to attend your hospital
birth than an obstetrician is because the midwife is there in
the hospital with you during your labor while the obstetrician
is not. It is an incredible irony that the obstetrician insists
that the woman who is his or her client give birth only in the
hospital, while the obstetrician who should attend her birth is
not in the hospital. If your obstetrician is not with you in the
hospital during labor, then where is your obstetrician?
For 50 years now the United States has had a system of
maternity care in which the woman goes into labor, goes to the
hospital, is admitted by a labor and delivery nurse (L & D
nurse) who examines the woman and calls the obstetrician, who is
either at home or in his or her office (usually seeing normal,
healthy pregnant women). The obstetrician gives orders over the
telephone to the nurse, who then assists the woman during her
labor. The obstetrician may or may not come by the hospital
sometime during the labor to briefly check the woman. But it is
the job of the L & D nurse to monitor the labor and call the
obstetrician when the birth is imminent so that the doctor can
rush in, catch the baby at the last minute and get all the
credit (and money) for "delivering" the baby. If the nurse calls
the obstetrician too soon and the doctor has to hang around the
hospital waiting for the birth, the doctor is angry with the
nurse for wasting his time. But if the nurse calls the
obstetrician too late and the baby is born before the doctor
gets there, the doctor is furious with the nurse.
Why is it important to insist that your obstetrician be with
you during your labor as well as at the birth? In a study of
obstetrical malpractice cases involving permanent brain damage
of the baby, the absence of the obstetrician from the hospital
during the labor played a central role in causing the tragedy in
approximately two-thirds of the cases. This research showed that
telephone conversations during a hospital birth between nurses
at the hospital and the doctor who was not in the hospital gave
rise to misunderstanding or miscommunication that caused adverse
effects for the mother or baby. If you choose an obstetrician as
your primary birth attendant and he/she cannot guarantee that
he/she or another obstetrician will be physically present (not
just on call) during your labor as well as the birth, you are
wasting your money and putting your baby in danger, and you need
to get another birth attendant.
If you doubt this description of hospital birth, ask any of
the more than 25,000 L & D nurses in the United States. These
nurses are highly skilled professionals who do what is really an
impossible job. They must monitor the laboring woman and assist
at the birth, all the while keeping the doctor happy and
covering up for the fact that the doctor is not there most of
the time and in most cases makes a minor contribution to the
birth. The fact that defines and limits these nurses is that
they have no autonomy and can do nothing without doctors'
orders.
Because American obstetricians have always had L & D nurses
to do their bidding, now that midwifery is gradually but
steadily returning in this country obstetricians have developed
a distorted understanding of midwifery. Obstetricians believe
midwives are obstetrical assistants and keep trying to give them
orders. But the practice of midwifery is very different from the
practice of nursing.
Midwives are autonomous professionals who provide primary
maternity care and are analogous to family physicians who
provide primary health care. If the family physician hears a
heart murmur and refers the patient to a specialist
cardiologist, this does not mean the family physician is the
cardiologist's assistant and somehow less competent, but only
that the cardiologist has a different expertise—an expertise for
certain complications—than the family physician has. The
cardiologist makes suggestions for treatment of the family
physician's patient, which the family physician and patient may
or may not choose to follow. The cardiologist and the family
physician are professional equals who collaborate with mutual
respect to provide the best quality care for the patient.
By the same token, a specialist obstetrician does not give
orders to a midwife any more than a cardiologist gives orders to
a family physician. The midwife may refer a woman to an
obstetrician because of a complication, but this does not make
the midwife the obstetrician's assistant. The midwife and
obstetrician then collaborate as professional equals.
Too many obstetricians still don't get it and continue trying
to boss midwives around, hiring and firing them from their
practices, pushing them off hospital staffs and accusing them of
practicing medicine without a license. If you are pregnant,
don't allow yourself to get in the middle of this professional
turf struggle. If you want a midwife to provide your primary
maternity care, find one who has as much autonomy as possible in
her practice. If you are considering having a particular
obstetrician provide your primary maternity care, a good way to
measure that doctor's openness and attitude toward you and women
in general is to inquire what his or her opinion is of
midwifery.
Another reason midwives are safer than doctors is because
midwives use far less unnecessary technology. Because
obstetricians are surgeons, they turn birth into a surgical
procedure. Proof of this is that the birthing woman is treated
as if she is a surgical patient: she is put on her back in a bed
that is really a modified surgical table, often with her legs up
in surgical stirrups. For more than 25 years we have known
scientifically that this is the worst of all possible positions
for a woman giving birth; in this position the baby's head
compresses the woman's main blood vessel that supplies the womb
and the baby and reduces the blood and oxygen going to the baby.
If the woman is in a vertical position (sitting, squatting or
standing), more blood and oxygen flow to the baby, the woman's
bony pelvis opens more to let the baby out and she gives birth
downhill instead of uphill against gravity. One way to find out
if a hospital is practicing modern maternity care or not is
simply to see what position women are put in during birth. If
hospital staff are still putting women on their backs during
birth, they are ignoring all scientific data and still
pretending birth is a surgical procedure.
Between 50 percent and 80 percent of births in most American
hospitals involve one or more surgical procedures, further proof
that obstetricians have turned birth into a surgical event.
Those procedures include drugs to start or speed up labor,
episiotomy (cutting the genitals with surgical scissors to widen
the vaginal opening), placing metal forceps or a vacuum
extractor on the baby's head to pull the baby out (you can
imagine the risks involved in this), and cesarean section to cut
the baby out. In reality, any of these surgical procedures is
necessary in no more than 20 percent of all births. And since
all surgical procedures carry risks, the high frequency of their
unnecessary use in physician-attended births leads to more dead
and damaged babies than would ever occur in midwife-attended
births. Large numbers of research reports document that midwives
use far fewer surgical interventions than doctors. A case in
point is the use of episiotomy. From half to three-quarters of
all women in America birthing their first baby in the hospital
with the assistance of a doctor have this surgical cut done to
their genitals. It is scientifically proven that no more than 20
percent of women will need this cut; the best rate is about 5
percent. Among midwives in independent practice in the United
States (that is, when doctors are not giving midwives orders as
to what to do), between 2 percent and 20 percent of women
undergo episiotomy.
Is the fact important that midwives cut far fewer
episiotomies than doctors cut? Scientific evidence shows that
having an episiotomy means more bleeding, more pain, more
permanent deformity of the vagina, and more painful sexual
intercourse for months, or even years. As well, unnecessary
episiotomy is a form of sexual abuse. Some women's groups in
America are rightly concerned about the practice of female
genital mutilation in parts of Africa. They need to be equally
concerned about the millions of American women who have suffered
female genital mutilation—unnecessary cutting of the genitals at
birth at the hands of doctors.
While midwives trust women's bodies, use such low-tech
assistance as the skilled use of their hands, and understand the
importance of preserving normalcy, doctors, in general, do not
trust women but trust drugs and machines, use high-tech
assistance, and focus on the pursuit of abnormality. So having a
highly trained surgeon obstetrician assist at your birth is
about as sensible as hiring a pediatric surgeon as a baby sitter
for your healthy 2 year old when you go out in the evening. Like
the obstetric surgeon who gives the normal woman a shot to hurry
her labor, the pediatric surgeon baby-sitting your normal child
will focus on medical management: when your robust 2 year old
gets tired and fussy, the pediatric surgeon will give him or her
a shot to hurry the child to sleep. The result? In the one case
you get the medicalization of birth (remember, birth is not an
illness), with a lot of unnecessary risky interventions and very
expensive medical care, and in the other case you get the
medicalization of childhood (being 2 years old is also not an
illness), with unnecessary risky interventions and very
expensive baby-sitting.
When deciding on your primary maternity care provider, it is
important to ask midwives or doctors about their practices: find
out if they prefer to put you on your back during birth and how
often they do episiotomy, forceps or vacuum extraction, and
cesarean section. If they don't know their rates of surgical
interventions or refuse to tell you what their rates are, look
out! Beware of any tendency to patronize you, to suggest that
you cannot possibly understand all this technical stuff, or that
you should just " trust me, I'm the doctor."
An important decision to make is whether to have your birth
at home, a freestanding birth center or a hospital. Overwhelming
scientific evidence shows that the home is a perfectly safe
place to give birth if you are one of the more than 80 percent
of women who have had no serious medical complications during
pregnancy. The evidence indicates that it is important to have a
trained birth attendant for your homebirth, be it non-nurse
midwife, nurse-midwife or doctor. Your place of birth should
also be within 30 minutes of the nearest hospital. The single
most important advantage of homebirth is that the birthing woman
is in control. Another important advantage is that in homebirth
there is far less unnecessary use of technology. For a hospital
to say it can be "homelike" is like the sign in the bakery
window: "We sell home-baked bread."
A freestanding birth center staffed with midwives is also a
perfectly legitimate choice for the great majority of women who
have had no serious complications during their pregnancy. But
don't be fooled by the hospital that advertises its "birth
center." If the birth center is not freestanding—i.e., outside
the hospital—it will still be under the supervision of the
hospital and the doctors, and the birthing woman will not be in
control. Plenty of scientific evidence confirms that a
freestanding birth center with midwives is a safe option. For
example, a study of more than 10,000 women giving birth in more
than 80 freestanding birth centers in the United States showed
birth in these centers to be just as safe as a matched group of
low-risk hospital births.
Be sure to investigate the practices in any hospital you may
consider for your birth. Would you have the freedom to have the
kind of birth you wish? Remember, freedom means being in control
of everything that happens to you. Being given permission to do
this but not that is not freedom. Can you invite anyone you want
to be present at the birth? Some hospitals will limit whom you
can bring. Meanwhile they can—without asking you—bring anyone
they want to your birth, including, for example, a bunch of
doctors in training. Can you come with a written birth plan that
they will respect and honor, or will they have an obvious
attitude about such plans and consider you a "bad patient"? Many
hospitals are competing for patients and will show pregnant
women beautiful "birthing rooms." Remember, what is important is
not a rocking chair and pretty curtains but whether or not you
can be in control.
Always be aware that hospitals are under the absolute control
of doctors and that the rules and regulations are for the
convenience of the staff, not you. Hospitals are designed to
care for sick people, and since a birthing woman is not sick,
much of what goes on in the hospital doesn't fit her needs. One
simple example: most births take from 10 to 20 hours, during
which there is one or more turnover of staff, who are on
eight-hour shifts. While the data show the overwhelming
importance of a woman having the continuous assistance of
someone she knows throughout her labor, during your hospital
birth you are likely to have to cope with one or more staff
changes and lots of strangers coming into your room.
Ask the hospital if women are put on their backs during
birth. Ask for the hospital's rate of episiotomies, forceps
deliveries and cesarean sections. Don't be satisfied with the
usual answer: "It varies by doctor." Don't believe them if they
say they don't have their hospital cesarean-section rate; they
are required in most states to report this rate to the State
Health Department. In New York state a law provides the right to
be given all this information, and an official pamphlet given
out to all newly pregnant women includes a listing of the
cesarean-section rate for every hospital in the state.
Some of you belong to a health plan that may limit your
choice of maternity care provider and place of birth. In this
case you may have to get aggressive to get what you really want.
Don't be afraid to demand what should absolutely be your right
as a family and a birthing woman. Besides, a health plan is a
business that needs to keep its customers happy. If your health
maintenance organization (HMO) doesn't have a midwife and you
want one, demand one. If you want an out-of-hospital birth and
your HMO doesn't provide it, demand it. More and more HMOs now
have midwives because they are discovering midwives are just as
safe as doctors and cost the HMO a lot less. The largest HMO in
New Mexico, for example, has more midwives than obstetricians on
their full-time staff, and around 80 percent of all hospital
births in this HMO are attended only by midwives.
How to Get the Information
When considering whether a given technology is appropriate
for you, it is important that you understand the difference
between facts and value judgments. The probability (chance) that
using the technology will make things better (efficacy) and the
probability (chance) that using the technology will make things
worse (risk) are facts that can be scientifically measured. But
benefit and safety are value judgments about the acceptability
of those chances. To be appropriate, both the benefit and the
safety of technology must be judged by those on whom it is used.
Scientists can measure the efficacy and risks, midwives and
doctors can inform the woman of the data on these two chances
(better or worse) but the person taking the chances (the
patient) is the only one who can legitimately decide whether one
chance outweighs the other. It is thus inappropriate and
dangerous for a doctor or midwife to tell a patient that
something is "safe" when it is not the doctor or midwife taking
the chances. Instead, the role of the doctor and midwife is
limited to suggesting possible interventions and explaining the
chances that the intervention will make you better or worse.
Whenever someone suggests using a technology on you, you must
leave no stone unturned in finding out what your chances are for
getting better or worse. It is the duty of any doctor, midwife
or nurse to provide you with full information on these two
chances. However, you must accept the responsibility for getting
full information because you cannot always rely on your
maternity care provider to volunteer such information. If it is
not forthcoming and complete, you must demand it. Every effort
must be made to get full, honest information. Because your
wishes and the wishes of the doctor may often collide, it is
sometimes difficult to get unbiased information. Too often, the
doctor provides only that part of the information he or she
thinks will make you a more compliant patient who will agree
with whatever the doctor wants and, therefore, suggests. One way
to get unbiased information is to insist on seeing the
scientific data behind any information given you. "Show me the
data" is a powerful strategy for eliciting better information.
Another important way to get more unbiased information is to
demand a second opinion, which can, one hopes, provide a second
source of information.
A powerful shortcut to finding out if a particular technology
is likely to be helpful to you is provided by the six tables at
the end of a book by Enkin et al. titled A Guide to
Effective Care in Pregnancy and Childbirth. All the most
common interventions used during pregnancy and birth are
classified as follows depending on a careful review of the
scientific evidence for each intervention: 1) beneficial, 2)
likely to be beneficial, 3) trade-off between beneficial and
adverse effects, 4) unknown effectiveness, 5) unlikely to be
beneficial, 6) ineffective or harmful. A glance at this last
table is quite informative. You might want to check on how many
of these ineffective or harmful interventions are still in use
in any hospital you are considering.
Information on Prenatal Technologies
The process of getting information on a technology can be
tricky, so a couple of examples will be given to illustrate how
to go about it. While pregnant, you might find it a good idea to
test your skills at getting information on a technology and to
see how willing the midwife, nurse or doctor is to provide full,
unbiased information.
It is likely that a routine ultrasound scan will be suggested
fairly early in your pregnancy. This presents a perfect
opportunity to ask a few questions" "What is the chance the scan
will make things worse? Is such a scan safe?" If the answer is a
flat "Yes, ultrasound scanning during pregnancy is safe," alarm
bells should start going off in your head, because you are not
getting the full information. You must then ask, "Show me the
data on the safety of prenatal ultrasound," in order to check on
what you may be told about the data on the safety of prenatal
ultrasound. As a scientist I can assure you that the only
correct answer to your question is, "We don't know because there
is not sufficient scientific data to prove the safety of
prenatal ultrasound." Some research has shown the possibility
that ultrasound can cause slowed growth of the fetus while still
in the uterus. Other research has shown the possibility that
some children who have been scanned while still in the uterus
may later have mild neurological deficits. We need more study of
both these possibilities. But from a scientific viewpoint, it is
impossible to say today that ultrasound scanning during
pregnancy is perfectly safe.
The next question to ask when ultrasound scanning is proposed
to you is, "What is the chance that a scan will make things
better?" When you are told that one reason for the scan is to
look for defects in the fetus, ask: "What is the chance a defect
will be correctly identified (true positive screening test) and
what is the chance a defect will be incorrectly identified
(false positive screening test)?" If your provider cannot, or
will not, answer this question, watch out! Again, so that you
can check on what you may be told, here is the best scientific
data: If 100 pregnancies are routinely screened with ultrasound
to look for a defective fetus, two out of the 100 will have a
true positive result (i.e., the scan says the fetus is
defective, and it truly is defective), and one out of the 100
will have a false positive result (i.e., the scan says the fetus
is defective, but it is not defective, it is a normal fetus). So
if all women with a positive scan are offered therapeutic
abortion, for every two defective fetuses aborted, one normal
fetus will be aborted. How many women are told this before they
are offered a routine prenatal ultrasound scan?
Your next question when ultrasound is suggested should be,
"Is there a better chance my baby will survive the pregnancy and
birth if an ultrasound scan is done, and what are the data?" The
correct answer is that a large study in the United States of
more than 15,000 regnant women showed no improvement in the
mortality rate of the babies if ultrasound is routinely used
during pregnancy.
One scientist published the following summary of the present
state of the art on routine prenatal ultrasound scanning: "The
casual observer might be forgiven for wondering why the medical
profession is now involved in the wholesale examination of
pregnant patients with machines emanating vastly different
powers of energy which is not proven to be harmless to obtain
information which is not proven to be of any clinical value by
operators who are not certified as competent to perform the
examinations." For all these reasons, the American College of
Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the American College of
Radiology and the U.S. government's Preventive Services Task
Force all recommend against routine ultrasound screening of
low-risk pregnancies. This is the type of unbiased,
scientifically sound information you need to make informed
choices about technology used on you during pregnancy.
Information on Technologies Used During Birth
Because a situation may arise during birth where time
constraints limit the opportunity to get full information on a
technology or procedure being proposed for use on you, it is
wise to look long before your due date at the information on
certain technologies used frequently during birth. Brief mention
already has been made of episiotomy, the surgical cutting of
women's genitals.
Since in American hospitals 20 percent or more of woman do
not give birth but instead the baby is cut out with cesarean
section, you need information on this technology in advance of
your birthing. There is no better example of the surgical
approach to birth than cesarean section, because it is the
ultimate solution of all surgeons—cut it out. Some obstetricians
are so enamored of this technical solution to birth that they
are now promoting it as preferable to the normal way of giving
birth through the vagina.
One recent article in a prominent medical journal seriously
proposed the routine surgical removal, by cesarean section, of
all babies, together with a policy that would require a signed
release from any woman so foolish as to insist on vaginal birth.
Another paper published in an authoritative medical journal
tried to show, using very biased data, that efforts to reduce
cesarean section in the United States below 20 percent would be
dangerous, a proposal that goes against a massive amount of good
scientific data. A third article in a medical journal insisted
women have the right to demand cesarean section birth even when
there is no medical reason for it.
Meanwhile, a recent popular book for the public urges women
in the United States to request a routine cesarean section birth
because they "want to maintain the vaginal tone of a teenager
and their doctors can find a medical explanation that will suit
the insurance company." So a tight vagina for your sexual
partner should be your first concern, and it's okay for your
doctor to lie and cheat the insurance company. The surgical
approach to birth has run amok!
What is the truth, scientifically, about cesarean section?
Compare what you are told with the following scientifically
documented information. Again, while getting information on this
major surgical procedure, the first question is, "How safe is
cesarean section?" Always beware of any attempts to pooh-pooh
the question or downplay the risks. We are talking about major
abdominal surgery that carries major risks. Starting with the
risks to the woman, she has a four to eight times greater chance
of dying from a cesarean section than she does giving birth
through her vagina. Even a routine, scheduled cesarean section
with no medical complication as the reason for the surgery
carries a two times greater risk that the woman will die from
the surgery.
Even if the woman does not die, she is at risk for many
serious complications from the surgery, such as the accidental
cutting of her bladder or other internal organs and a 20 percent
chance she will get an infection as a result of the surgery.
Since the woman often gets a fever with this infection, her
fever necessitates a fever diagnostic work-up of her infant,
with blood tests and even spinal tap of the baby.
Having a cesarean birth also affects the future reproductive
possibilities of the woman, because having a cesarean section
means she has a decreased chance of ever getting pregnant again.
And if she does get pregnant again, she is at higher risk that
her pregnancy will occur outside her womb, a condition that will
never result in a live baby and is life threatening for the
woman. If in her subsequent pregnancies she succeeds in making
it to the end of pregnancy and goes into labor, she is also at
higher risk of two serious complications during the birth, both
of which can threaten her own life and the life of the baby: a
placenta that blocks the outlet for the baby or a placenta that
detaches itself before the baby is born.
While some women might be willing to take risks with their
own body, it would be very hard to find a woman willing to take
risks with the life or health of her baby just for her own
convenience or to avoid labor pain. So the following risks to
the baby born by cesarean section are of great importance. There
is about a 5 percent chance that when the surgeon cuts into the
woman's body during a cesarean section, the knife will
accidentally also cut her baby. Because all the water is not
squeezed out of the baby's lungs as is normally done during a
vaginal birth, more babies born after cesarean section develop
serious respiratory distress syndrome, one of the biggest
killers of newborn babies. Because doctors are not as good as
they would like to be in estimating, even with ultrasound, the
baby's gestational age—i.e., whether the pregnancy has gone long
enough—too often a cesarean section is done too soon, resulting
in a premature birth. Prematurity is a big killer of newborn
babies and also carries a higher risk of brain damage to the
baby. It is difficult to imagine that a woman who has been given
full information on these risks to herself and her baby would
still choose a cesarean section when there is no serious medical
reason for it. Obstetricians have jumped on the "woman's choice"
bandwagon, which in many ways is a good thing except for the
tendency to push women's choice only for things the
obstetricians want to do anyway. For example, for years the
scientific evidence has favored vaginal birth after an earlier
cesarean section (called VBAC) rather than a repeat cesarean
section. Doctors, however, have never really pushed VBAC, but
instead emphasize a repeat cesarean. Pushing women to have the
right to choose major surgery for which there is no medical
indication is ridiculous as well as dangerous. It has been
established legally and ethically that patients have the right
to refuse treatment even when medically indicated, but patients
have never had the right to choose medical or surgical treatment
that is not indicated. Doctors are under no obligation to do
unjustified major surgery. Women's "choice" is clearly limited
to medically valid options.
There has been an epidemic of unnecessary cesarean section
births because doctors like a quick, surgical solution for
birth. Now another birth technology—epidural block for labor
pain— is seeing a rapid expansion of epidemic proportions
because doctors are selling it to women as hard as they can.
(Epidural block for cesarean section is another matter, as it is
the preferred anesthesia for this major surgery.) A new
subspecialty of doctors—obstetric anesthesiologists—is built
entirely on the economic foundation of epidural block for normal
labor pain. They need lots of birthing women to choose this form
of pain relief if these doctors are to make a grand living.
(Their professional journal contains advertisements for
purchasing private jets.) These new specialists go to prenatal
classes to sell epidural block and prowl the halls of hospital
maternity wards, popping in on women in labor to sell their
epidural block. Their hard sell includes telling women that
epidural block is "safe." How safe is it really?
Twenty-three percent, or nearly one in four women, given an
epidural block will develop a complication. One undesirable
complication is death—epidural block for relief of normal labor
pain results in a three times higher mortality rate for the
woman than labor without epidural block. One out of every 500
epidural blocks results in temporary neurological problems, such
as paralysis in the woman; and in one out of every half-million
epidural blocks, this neurological damage to the woman is
permanent.
These extremely serious risks of epidural block are not so
common, but several less serious, but still significant, risks
are much more common. Fifteen percent to 20 percent of all women
given epidural block develop fever that results in the
undesirable necessity of administering diagnostic tests and
antibiotic treatment to the baby. Fifteen percent to thirty-five
percent of all women given epidural block cannot urinate and
must have a tube inserted into their bladder. Thirty percent to
40 percent of all women given epidural block have severe
backache for hours or days after birth, and 20 percent still
have severe backache one year later. So they have traded pain
relief during a few hours of labor for severe back pain for a
year or more! Because labor pain is an essential component of
the normal mechanisms of the body for the progress of labor and
since the epidural block eliminates this necessary pain,
epidurals also eliminate the normal mechanisms for the progress
of labor. So it is to be expected that considerable research
documents a longer labor if the woman is given epidural block.
As normal labor is no longer possible with epidural block, there
is four times greater use of forceps or vacuum extraction and at
least twice as much cesarean section after epidural block. These
surgical interventions, of course, carry their own risks both
for woman and baby. So the woman choosing epidural block trades
less labor pain for a longer labor and, if a cesarean section is
done, more pain for several days after the birth, as well as
increased risks for both herself and her baby.
Thus, epidural block presents many serious risks for the
woman. Are there risks for her baby? Since it is unlikely any
woman would choose a form of pain relief that puts her baby at
risk, women are not told that in 8 percent to 12 percent of
labors in which the woman is given epidural block, severe fetal
hypoxia (lack of oxygen to the unborn baby) is shown on the
electronic fetal monitor. The American College of Obstetricians
and Gynecologists, after acknowledging the frequency at which
birthing babies suffer hypoxia after the woman is given an
epidural block, recommends that all women given epidural block
have continuous electronic fetal monitoring so that fetal
hypoxia can be identified.
Does this lack of oxygen have any permanent effect on the
baby? Research has found that 1-month-old babies whose mothers
were given epidural block during labor may have neurological
test results that suggest possible minor brain damage. While
this is a finding not yet completely confirmed scientifically,
it is a possibility that is certainly worrisome and should be
told to women offered epidural block. Epidural block carries
another risk that is found in many of the interventions and
technologies used during birth: the "cascade effect." This means
that the use of one intervention leads to the use of another
intervention, and the use of that intervention leads to the use
of yet another intervention, and so on. If, for example, a woman
is given a drug to start labor or to make labor proceed faster,
this leads to more painful contractions. This in turn leads to
the offer of pain relief, usually with epidural block, which, as
we have seen, leads to an increased use of forceps or vacuum
extraction, which leads to episiotomy or to cesarean section,
which leads to fever in the mother, which leads to tests and
treatments for the baby.
There are other cascades of interventions during labor. For
example, routine electronic fetal monitoring leads to more
cesarean sections, which lead to babies with respiratory
distress syndrome or prematurity, which leads to putting these
babies into newborn intensive care units. Every one of these
interventions carries risks for mother and baby! It is easy to
see how the high-tech approach to birth actually creates many
new problems. Rather than change their habits, however, doctors
conclude that birth is quite risky, when in reality doctors have
caused it to be risky. This is one important reason why
homebirths, freestanding birth center births and having your own
midwife as the primary maternity caregiver are all associated
with fewer risky interventions and, therefore, safer care.
No honest doctor would ever suggest that drugs given for pain
are without risks. But in their pursuit of relieving a laboring
mother's pain, doctors inevitably resort to prescribing drugs,
when in fact, there are many non-pharmacological ways to relieve
pain. For example, scientific research has proven a number of
drug-free techniques to be effective in relieving the pain of
normal labor, including: the continuous presence during labor of
a midwife, a doula or a loved one; sitting in a tub of warm
water or standing in a shower; freedom to move about and assume
any position; massage; acupuncture; reflexology. None of these
techniques involves any risk to the woman or her baby, and they
are often promoted by midwives, but rarely promoted by doctors.
Other harmful technologies aside from those already mentioned
are frequently used during birth, such as the use of drugs to
start or speed up labor, forceps or vacuum extraction, and
cutting of genitals (episiotomy); but space does not permit a
review of all of them. In my book you will find information on
how to get the most reliable data on specific technologies
likely to be used during pregnancy and birth.
To understand why so much unnecessary technology is used
during pregnancy and birth, it is necessary to understand how
technology comes to be used. We must first ask, Is the use of a
new technology preceded by careful scientific evaluation, then
followed by official approval for use and requirements for
education of doctors in its use? Sadly, the truth lies in
another direction. An example of a recent birth technology now
rapidly spreading in the United States will illustrate the
reality.
Several years ago a drug with the generic name misoprostol
(called Cytotec by the drug company that manufactures it) was
approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as a
prescription drug to be used for certain ailments of the
stomach. It is known that one of its side effects is severe
cramps or contractions of the uterus, and for this reason the
label says it should never be used on pregnant women.
Obstetricians, however, discovered that given orally or
vaginally, Cytotec, because of its side effect of violent
uterine cramping, can induce (start) or accelerate labor.
So without any prior testing of Cytotec for labor induction,
obstetricians began to use it on their birthing women. Doctors
on the Internet began to describe their experience with this new
way of inducing labor. One doctor wrote, "I must say I have
heard some great things about Cytotec myself. Just be careful.
The stuff turns the cervix to complete mushie." A few studies
have appeared in obstetric journals, but all the studies are too
small to give adequate scientific evidence about this use of the
drug. These studies did show some risks, such as a tendency for
the fetus's heart to start racing, as well as other signs of
fetal distress, and the explosion or rupture of the uterus in a
few women. A review of the scientific evidence by a highly
prestigious scientific body says that because of the lack of
sufficient scientific evaluation and the reports of serious side
effects, the use of Cytotec for labor induction "cannot be
recommended for routine use at this stage."
The fact that Cytotec is not approved by the FDA for labor
induction, is not approved for this use by the drug manufacturer
(who still states on the label that it is not to be given to
pregnant women), is not endorsed by either the American College
of Obstetricians and Gynecologists or midwifery organizations,
and is not approved by scientists for routine use has had no
apparent effect on the enthusiasm with which doctors are
starting to use it. And there is nothing to stop doctors from
using Cytotec for this "off label" purpose, because although the
FDA must approve a drug before it goes on the market, once it is
on the market for a specified purpose, any doctor can use it in
any dose for any purpose on any patient.
After one obstetrician in South Dakota proudly told me over
lunch that he was the first doctor in his community to use
Cytotec for labor induction and now urges other doctors to use
it, he justified his actions: "We will wait forever for the
bureaucrats at the FDA in Washington, D.C., to approve drugs, so
we must try them out ourselves if we want progress." When asked,
he admitted he doesn't tell the women to whom he is giving
Cytotec that the drug is not approved for this purpose, nor does
he ask for informed consent. He scoffed at my suggestion that he
is experimenting on women without their knowledge, much less
their consent. The Oregon State Health Department told me their
records show Cytotec to be the most common way of inducing labor
in that state, and it is used on thousands of laboring women.
The use of Cytotec on birthing women has spread like wildfire
for a very simple reason, told to me by many doctors: its use
brings back the possibility of "daylight obstetrics"—that is,
women brought to the hospital first thing in the morning and
induced with Cytotec will give birth by late afternoon and the
doctor can be home for dinner. How many women will have their
uterus ruptured before a court case finally applies the brakes
to this practice? I personally welcome learning of cases where
Cytotec induction was used without fully informed consent and
there was subsequent uterine rupture, cervical laceration or
other serious complications.
The unsystematic, untested way in which Cytotec for labor
induction was introduced and disseminated is typical for the
technologies used during pregnancy and birth. Ultrasound
scanning during pregnancy and electronic fetal monitoring during
labor are further examples of uncontrolled introduction and
dissemination of untested technologies. There is a big gap
between what we know to be the best scientific maternity care
practices and what is actually practiced. As a result, there is
no consumer protection except litigation. Doctors blame lawyers
and women for the fact that more than 70 percent of American
obstetricians have been sued one or more times, but litigation
is the only way a woman and her family can protect themselves
against malpractice.
Many of the motivations behind the use of technologies by
doctors are non-medical. Several examples, all supported by
scientific study, will illustrate this fact. Studies of birth
certificates show that birth is more common Monday through
Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The only explanation that can be given
is that doctors and hospitals use the induction of labor for
their own convenience. More shocking is data that show emergency
cesarean section to occur most commonly on weekdays during the
daytime. Deciding to declare a labor an emergency situation
requiring emergency surgery is influenced by the convenience of
the staff.
Another non-medical factor that motivates the use of
technology is money. Data from several states in the United
States show cesarean section to be least common among women on
Medicaid and most common among private patients in private
hospitals. One would think the opposite, assuming that poor
women have poor health and need more interventions. But doctors
and hospitals make bigger profits if technology is used in cases
where the patients or their insurance can afford to pay.
Commercial interests also play a role—manufacturers of drugs and
technologies have a variety of ways to influence doctors to use
their drugs and machines, including bestowing a wide range of
gifts and perks.
Doctors' fear of litigation is another non-medical motivation
for using technology. Doctors are afraid both of having to go to
court and of having to pay higher malpractice insurance
premiums. Two prime examples of the unnecessary use of
technology due to doctors' fear of litigation are routine
electronic fetal monitoring during normal labor and cesarean
section with little or no medical justification. A fundamental
principle of medical practice is that whatever the doctor does
must be, first and foremost, for the benefit of the patient, not
the benefit of the doctor. But picking up a scalpel and cutting
open a woman's body for a cesarean section because of fear of
going to court or paying high insurance premiums is not the
practice of medicine but the practice of fear and greed.
Many obstetricians have an unfortunate tendency to promise
women a perfect baby if the women will make use of the doctor's
expertise and the hospital's technology. But if you play God,
you will be blamed for any natural disasters that ensue. A
family with a dead or damaged baby or mother does not sue
because some lawyer talks them into it, but because they feel
deceived and are stonewalled by doctors and hospitals when
trying to get full information on what happened. If you don't
believe you will be stonewalled while trying to get information
on what happened at a birth, try to get information on the 350
to 1,000 women who die every year in the United States around
the time of birth (maternal mortality). Although individual
states have regulations that require such deaths to be reported,
no one, including you, me or scientists wanting to study why
these women die, can get access to information on these maternal
deaths. We do know that at least half these deaths are not
reported, that black women have a four times greater risk of
maternal death, that nearly all these women die in the hospital
rather than at home, and that with adequate medical attention
many, if not most, of these women need not have died. That last
fact is why the doctors' fear of litigation builds the stone
wall.
Another reason for the overuse of technology is the mistaken
belief by many doctors that technology is science and the use of
technology is the practice of scientific medicine. They confuse
technological advances with progress. Scientific medicine is
practice based on the best scientific evidence, not practice
that uses technology. Practicing doctors are not scientists.
Scientists must believe they don't know, while practicing
doctors must believe they do know.
In other highly industrialized countries where midwives far
outnumber obstetricians, the midwifery approach brings both an
essential counterbalance to the high tech approach of
obstetricians and a brake to unnecessary technology. For
example, while the United States has 35,000 obstetricians and
about 5,000 midwives, Great Britain has 32,000 midwives and less
than 1,000 obstetricians. The midwives promote the far greater
use of less invasive, less risky, low-tech approaches. In
America no such counterbalance exists because organized
obstetrics fights to keep midwives under their absolute control.
So we find far higher rates of high-tech, unnecessary use of
technology in U.S. maternity care than, for example, any country
in Western Europe, even though the United States loses far more
babies and women around the time of birth. Because of its
obstetric-intensive maternity care, the United States spends
twice as much per capita on maternity care than any of the other
countries with lower mortality rates for women and babies around
the time of birth. The financial waste of scientifically
unfounded high tech obstetric maternity care in the United
States is enormous. By changing to a far more modern, more
scientifically based maternity care with 75 percent of the
births attended by midwives, the elimination of routine
electronic fetal monitoring and a cesarean section rate in
compliance with the recommendations of the federal government,
the United States could save $13 billion to $20 billion a year.
As a taxpayer and consumer of maternity care, you need to be
aware of this waste.
We see there are many reasons for the unnecessary overuse of
technology during pregnancy and birth, most reasons connected to
doctors. As a practicing physician for more than years, I have
had long experience within the profession and can bring an
important point of view to your understanding of doctors. We
doctors are not evil people. Most doctors are hard working,
caring professionals doing the best they know how to do. But it
is essential to remember two fundamental facts about doctors.
First, we doctors operate within a system that strongly
influences what we do. Today's obstetricians are not the ones
who decided a century ago to do away with midwifery in America.
Almost without exception, they buy into the present system that
insists obstetricians are the preferred providers of primary
maternity care, even in the face of scientific data to the
contrary.
The second fact about doctors is that they are human in every
respect, not gods, and should not be put on a pedestal. If it is
OK to bash your automobile mechanic who has done a bad job, then
it is equally OK to bash a doctor you suspect of malpractice.
Doctors should be as accountable to the public as any other
group that serves the public. And to understand why doctors do
what they do, you must accept their humanness and vulnerability
to inappropriate influences. In 1992 the average take-home
income of U.S. obstetricians was $250,000 a year, and today it
is even higher. The present scientifically unjustified monopoly
of maternity care by obstetricians in the United States is
richly rewarding the obstetricians, and you can be sure they
will fight to maintain the status quo, keeping out any
competition such as midwives and out-of-hospital birth. This is
why, as a consumer of maternity care, you must beware what you
are told by doctors and hospitals and take full responsibility
for ensuring you get the kind of pregnancy and birth experience
best suited to your needs and no one else's.
How do you get the maternity care best suited to you and your
family with the appropriate use of technology? You can take the
following steps:
- Choose the right primary maternity care provider. Talk
to the midwives and doctors available to you. Ask lots of
questions before deciding whom to use. Get data on their
practices. If they resist giving you the data, watch out.
Examine their faces closely as you tell them you want a
birth that is empowering. Are they patronizing and
condescending in their approach and resentful of your
questions, or do they encourage you to take responsibility
for your own pregnancy and birth? Don't be afraid to change
providers if after a few visits you don't like how they are
caring (or not caring) for you.
- Choose the right place to give birth. Some women need to
give birth at home. Remember, this is a perfectly safe
choice for most of you. If someone says it is not safe for
you, get a second opinion. Other women prefer a free
standing birth center staffed by midwives. Remember, this
also is a perfectly safe choice for most of you. Yet other
women will feel better in a hospital. That's OK too as long
as you see to it that you get as much choice as possible in
what will happen to you in the hospital. Whether the
hospital has midwives on its staff or welcomes midwives
coming in with birthing women tells you a lot about that
hospital. Visit the hospitals or birth centers and ask lots
of questions about their practices, remembering the
important thing is not the interior decorating but your
freedom and control. Don't let anyone scare you into a
choice not truly your own.
- Choose the kind of birth you want. Make a birth plan.
Find other birth plans to get ideas. Find out what kinds of
options are available. Do you want the first part of your
labor to happen at home (a proven way to reduce the use of
unnecessary interventions) and if so, how will you be
monitored before going to the birth center or hospital? Whom
do you want and not want to be there with you during your
labor and birth? Decide what interventions you will or will
not accept and put this in your plan. For example, make sure
you do not get pubic shaving or enema during labor, both
humiliating and both unnecessary. Find out which pain relief
you want after you get all the information on the pros and
cons of the various drug and non-drug possibilities. Under
which circumstances will you accept or not accept: being
given drugs to start or accelerate labor, having your
genitals cut (episiotomy), having your baby taken from you
after birth? Use scientific evidence as the basis for your
decisions, not what doctors and hospitals call "community
standards," which means "this is how we all do it here"—a
dangerous approach to practice based on the principle that
if everyone does it, it's OK for me to do it. Say "show me
the data" again and again. Read up, using a critical eye.
Protect yourself and your baby by rejecting out of hand any
suggestion that you should put blind faith in what you are
told or read.
- Ensure that your wishes are carried out. Document your
wishes in a written birth plan. Give a copy of your birth
plan to your caregivers and to the birth center or hospital
well before your expected due date, assuring them they will
be held accountable for following the plan and your wishes.
If your plan elicits any kind of negative reaction, you have
the wrong caregiver and/or wrong hospital. Bring the plan
with you to the hospital at the time of birth. Doctors and
hospitals are not used to having anyone tell them what they
can and can't do, most especially patients. For this reason,
it is essential that you have a support person with you in
the hospital: your partner, your midwife, another family
member, a friend, a doula. This support person must be ready
and able to advocate strongly in your interest, especially
when all your energy is consumed by labor and birth. Your
support person must be familiar with your plan and exactly
what it specifies and why. You and your support person must
know what your rights are while you are in the hospital and
effective ways to deal with hospital staff. A homebirth
midwife I know who sometimes accompanies a client to the
hospital when a transfer is required, takes two things with
her to the hospital: a book that summarizes the scientific
evidence on interventions used during birth so that if
hospital staff object to what she suggests, she can whip out
the book and show the data; and a door stop so that no one
can come into the room where her client is laboring unless
she and the woman give permission. This is bringing some
degree of patient control into the hospital.
- Document what happens. The small, hand-held video camera
is a powerful instrument with which to document just what
happened during your birth. Be sure to film any encounters
with hospital staff. It is a wonderful way to both remember
the experience and make a record for future purposes if
necessary. Believe it or not, some hospitals now forbid
using video cameras during the labor or birth. This is
scary, suggesting they are more concerned with their own
protection from malpractice than in your own memories of
this family event. It also suggests they have something to
hide. If your birth results in difficulties or a bad outcome
either for the woman or the baby, then once again you must
accept responsibility for finding out what happened. Demand
information from caregivers and the hospital, tape recording
each encounter. Fortunately you now have the right to a copy
of all your medical records. Get them. Find someone who can
help you interpret them. If you do not get satisfaction with
your inquiry, go to the local health authorities with your
tape recorder. If you still are stonewalled, sadly you may
have no recourse but to sue. We live in a litigious society
because the courts are the only place it is possible for
individuals to get answers from the powerful in our society,
be they large corporations, hospitals or powerful
professional groups such as doctors. Never forget you have
the basic right to freedom of choice and freedom of
information about one of the most important events in your
life and the life of your family—the birth of your baby.
- TABS (Trauma And Birth Stress originating from New
Zealand) offers a new Web site:
www.tabs.org.nz. This
website has been created to provide information for PTSD
sufferers, expectant mothers and their partners, family
members, support people, caregivers and health professionals
on Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.
- Enkin, M. et al. (1995).
A Guide to Effective Care in Pregnancy and Childbirth.
Oxford, England: Oxford University Press.
A classic book in this field. Brings together the best
scientific evidence for every intervention in pregnancy and
birth. Tables in the back rank interventions from proven
benefit to proven ineffective or harmful. Used widely by
maternity care providers in many countries. Good to take
with you to the hospital.
- Goer, H. (1995).
Obstetric Myths Versus Research Realities:
A Guide to the Medical Literature. Westpoint, CT:
Bergin & Garvey.
An excellent book reviewing the scientific basis (or lack of
scientific basis) of all obstetric interventions used during
pregnancy and birth. Easy for non-medical readers to
understand.
- Olsen, O. (1997, March). Meta-analysis of the Safety of
Home Birth. Birth; 24(1)4-13.
Outstanding scientific analysis of research on safety of
homebirth. Contains 80 references from scientific
literature. Concludes: "Home birth is an acceptable
alternative to hospital confinement for selected pregnant
women, and leads to reduced medical interventions."
- Wagner, M. (1994).
Pursuing the Birth Machine: The
Search for Appropriate Birth Technology. Sydney &
London ACE Graphics. Available in U.S. and Canada from ICEA
Bookstore, telephone 1-800-624-4934.
A book describing what is behind inappropriate use of birth
technology. Includes detailed discussion of individual
technologies with scientific review and more than 500
scientific references. Easy for non-medical readers to
understand.
- Wagner, M. (November 1998). Midwifery in the
industrialized world. Journal of Society of
Obstetricians and Gynecologists of Canada; 20(13):
1225-1234.
A journal article summarizing the scientific evidence
regarding the practice of midwifery. In order to educate
doctors reading this obstetric journal, it also describes
the appropriate role of midwives.
- Wagner, M. (spring 1999). Misoprostol (Cytotec) for
labor induction: A cautionary tale. Midwifery Today;
49: 31-33.
A more thorough review than was possible in this article of
the way in which Cytotec for labor induction has come into
widespread use without adequate scientific evidence or
approval by the FDA and without patient knowledge or
consent.
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