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I have received a number of inquiries in connection with my offer (in the Midwives and Infant Deaths thread) to provide references to scientific literature showing that midwife-attended births are less risky than doctor-attended births.
I am not personally knowledgeable in this field, but I was the instigator of a (regrettably contentious) thread on "Home vs. Hospital" in the early days of sci.med.midwifery where references to this literature were posted.
The official sci.med.midwifery archives no longer go back that far, but I found the relevant information by browsing the "Home vs. Hospital" thread of sci.med.midwiferry on DejaNews.
Here are the excerpts I thought were relevant. I have given the e-mail addresses of the posters so you can search for the full postings on DejaNews if you want.
Israel Gale - gale@hpc.pko.dec.com
NanC RN The Public Citizen's Research Group [(202) 588-7734] published two books
that both contain many references to the safety, cost savings, and satisfaction
of care provided by Nurse-Midwives. One of these is: "Encouraging the Use
of Nurse-Midwives: A Report for Policy Makers" this one . . . has been
successfully presented to many legislators and hospital administrators
for use in convincing them of the benefits, safety, etc. of CNM's. The
second one is: "Delivering a Better Childbirth Experience: A Consumers
Guide to Nurse-Midwifery"- this one is meant primarily for those considering
a CNM for care.
Patrice Bobier There is an excellent article in the BIRTH Journal, 22:2, June 1995
entitled Midwifery Care and Medical Complications: the Role of Risk Screening
that analyzes data from birth certificates for 147,293 midwife-attended
births, breaking it down to home, hospital, CNM or other midwife.
diorio@netaxis.com (Sharon DiOrio)
Kitzinger, Sheila, Homebirth: "The Essential Guide To Giving Birth Outside
Of The Hospital," (1991) Dorling Kindersley p. 43
The Netherlands 1986 Perinatal Mortality Rate By Birth Attendant And
Place
Statistics of perinatal mortality rates according to risk score of mother
Perinatal mortality rate per 1,000 births Risk Hospital General Practitioner
Unit/Home Very Low 8.0 3.9 Low 17.9 5.2 Moderate 32.2 3.8 High 53.2 15.5
Very High 162.6 133.3 # of Births 11,000 5,200
Tew M. (1981) "Effects of scientific obstetrics on perinatal mortality,"
Health and Social Services Journal, 91, 444-446
armidwife@aol.com (AR midwife)
The study Tew did showed that the same practitioner had better stats
at home than at the hospital.
Sgulie@ix.netcom.com
Rather a large number of studies have been done on this. To date, the
studies show, without exception, a lower rate of mortality and morbidity
for mothers and infants in all risk categories with home birth.
armidwife@aol.com (AR midwife)
There are lots of studies comparing the statistics of the different
birth attendants. LOTS OF THEM. I would post the bibliography if you are
interested, but it is very long. The really best study is a book by Marjorie
Tew entitled Safer Childbirth?
Here in Arkansas the OBs have a 8.3/1000 infant mortality while the
CNMs have a 6.8 and the LDEMs have a 4.0.
Julia Bertschinger I note that Deb Phillips, LDEM responded to you and recommended Tew's
1990 book Safer Childbirth? I second that recommendation. Given your interest
in comparing the safety of midwife-attended births in hospital with midwife-attended
births in homes, I also recommend a 1991 article by Tew and Damstra-Wijmenga
(discussed below).
Research statistician Tew, a member of the British Royal Society of
Medicine's Forum on Maternity and the Newborn, found that the British maternity
system is run by obstetricians who "withhold and pervert knowledge in order
to maintain public ignorance and delusion." [Tew M. Safer childbirth? A
critical history of maternity care. London: Chapman and Hall 1990.]
Tew also found that British obstetricians have for decades engaged in,
"the false use of statistics to support a system that was actually harming
its intended beneficiaries." [1990]
In 1991, British research statistician Tew teamed up with Dutch physician
Sonya Damstra-Wijmenga, M.D. to publish statistics demonstrating that independent,
non-nurse Dutch midwives, practicing in homes and hospitals, were associated
with 10 times fewer perinatal deaths than Dutch obstetricians. Tew and
Damstra-Wijmenga noted that high risk patient selection bias could only
account for a small part of the obstetricians' ten-fold greater perinatal
mortality rate.
Wrote Tew and Damstra-Wijmenga: "Though unlikely, excess risk might
conceivably have been high enough to account for threefold or, at a stretch
a fourfold discrepancy between obstetricians' and midwives' perinatal mortality
rates; it could not have been nearly high enough to account for the ten
fold discrepancy actually experienced...[The obstetricians'] higher perinatal
mortality rates at all identified grades of predicted risk...support the...hypothesis...that
obstetricians' care actually provokes and adds to the dangers." [Tew M,
Damstra-Wijmenga SMI. Safest birth attendants: recent Dutch evidence. Midwifery
1991;7:55-65. SMI Damstra-Wijmenga, M.D., van Ketwich Verschuurlaan 5,
9721SB Groningen, HOLLAND; Marjorie Tew, 121 Bramcote Ln, Wollaton, Nottingham
NG8 2NJ ENGLAND]
In part as a result of Tew and Damstra-Wijmenga's work, a Select Committee
of the British government was formed to survey the world literature regarding
maternity care. The Select Committee discovered (and reported in 1992)
that women have been getting biased information:
"[A] 'medical model of care' should no longer drive the maternity service
and women should be given unbiased information...including the option,
previously denied to them, of having their babies at home..." [House of
Commons Select Health Committee, Second Report 1992. Quoted in Department
of Health (Britain). Changing Childbirth HMSO Publications Centre, P.O.
Box 276, London, SW8 5DT.]
In a recent telephone conversation with Sheila Kitzinger of Great Britain,
Ms. Kitzinger noted that the Cochrane Center is finding that Tew and Damstra-Wijmenga
"compared apples and oranges." In other words, according to Ms. Kitzinger,
the Cochrane Center has determined that one cannot conclude from Tew and
Damstra-Wijmenga's 1991 study that homebirth is safer than hospital birth.
I noted in reply to Ms. Kitzinger that if Dutch midwives are routinely
offering sacroiliac motion - and if Dutch obstetricians are not - it doesn't
matter, from the perspective of sacroiliac motion, whether the findings
of Tew and Damstra-Wijmenga indicate that homebirth per se is safer. Some
factor (or factors) caused babies to die 10X more frequently under obstetric
care. Routine obstetric use of semi-recumbency (jamming tailbones up to
an inch into fetal skulls) may be causing more than "asymptomatic" brain
bleeds. . . . [detailed discussion of the hazards and politics of the semi-sitting
birth position follows]
armidwife@aol.com (AR midwife)
The best study which is the one Marjorie Tew did shows the stats for
the same midwives delivering in the hospital or at home. The study covers
the socio-economic variance that would seem to affect birth outcomes. And
Marjorie was not trying to prove home birth safer. She is a professor of
epidemiology who made an assignment to her class to study the mortality
statistics and was so amazed to see home birth come up as the safer modality
that she published those stats. In the Netherlands they report births more
accurately and with more detail as to place of origin and thus the study
is a good representation of the effects of location of birth.
mue@gsf.de (Bernhard Muenzer):
A woman choosing a home delivery usually does so because she feels more
secure at home than in a hospital - and vice versa. Forcing a woman to
give birth in a surrounding where she does not feel comfortable (or should
I say "at home" ;-) will make it harder for her to relax and increase the
risk of prolonged labour or other complications.
One solution to this problem might be the comparison not of two samples
women choosing different places to give birth, but of two countries.
One might be Holland with a home birth rate of over 30%, and the other
one might be Germany, which has a low home birth rate, but requires a midwife
to be present at each birth.
But again, there are some statistical problems with this approach.
From Sharon's numbers it seems that in Holland a birth can be attended
by an obstetrician, a general practitioner or a midwife, while in Germany
only a midwife is allowed to attend a birth alone. Sharon's table shows
that the choice of practitioner seems to influence the perinatal mortality
significantly, so this might add another bias to the data.
Another problem is that "perinatal mortality" is not as well-defined
as it appears. It may be that a child of 500 g that died shortly after
a birth is registered in the statistics under perinatal mortality, but
in another country (or in another year), children with a weight below 2000
g might be only counted as abortus.
In Germany, this weight limit has been lowered from 2000 g to 500 g
lately. This takes into account the progress in neonatology and allows
parents to officially name and bury their small stillborn babies. However,
this legal change suddenly gave an increase in the official perinatal mortality
rate.
Furthermore, different countries may have different time limits as to
when a death is still counted as perinatal mortality and when it is counted
as infant mortality. A study comparing data from two countries must find
a way to eliminate this kind of error.
The reason I am elaborating on these points is that a study of the kind
I described has been published in Germany about a year ago.
Unfortunately, I did not keep the references for this paper, and I am
not able to locate the discussions that took place in the aftermath of
the publication (I am glad I don't post this on alt.folklore.urban - they'd
flame me to hell for this negligence). It is possible that it can be found
in the November 1994 issue of the "Deutsche Hebammenzeitung" (at least
this issue is missing in my wife's archive).
This study compared Germany to Holland (or possibly Denmark) and came
to the result that Germany had a lower perinatal mortality - due to the
lower rate of home deliveries. However, the author had been caught of having
manipulated the data in a way I hinted at above.
For example, he had chosen to compare different years for both countries.
For Germany, he selected a year when the 2000 g weight limit was still
in effect (which virtually lowered the mortality rate), and compared this
to data using a lower weight limit - which biased the data favourably for
Germany.
There were protests coming from many places, including high officials
at the WHO, and attempts by the same author at fudging other studies were
also exposed. However, I have not heard that the medical journal published
a retraction, and the study (or rather the author's interpretation of the
results) keep appearing in the oddest places, like my mother-in-law's TV
magazine ("Scientists have proved that ...").
never trust a statistic you haven't forged yourself
Todd Gastaldo [gastaldo@gte.net]
Subject: Is safety dangerous? ACNM schizophrenia about homebirth...
. . . After studying homebirth in depth, the British government concluded:
[House of Commons Select Health Committee, Second Report 1992. Quoted
in Department of Health (Britain). Changing Childbirth HMSO Publications
Centre, P.O. Box 276, London, SW8 5DT. Thanks to Trudy Saunders (071-972-2000
ext. 4155), Assistant to Baroness Julia Cumberlidge, Parliamentary Under
Secretary of State for Health, in the office of Virginia Bottomley, Parliamentary
Secretary of State for Health, Wellington House, 133-155 Waterloo Road,
London SE1 8UG.]
In 1995, ACNM devoted an entire issue of the Journal of Nurse-Midwifery
to a home study course on how to do homebirths. [The home study program
on home birth. JNM (Nov/Dec)1995;40(6)entire issue] . . . .
In response to the Nov/Dec 1995 ACNM homebirth home study course, nurse-midwifery
professor Janice Keller Kvale, PhD, CNM of Case Western University stated,
"for too long, home birth has not been an accepted option within North
American health care systems." Dr. Kvale conveniently failed to mention
that CNMs unscientifically/indirectly took part in the obstetricians "homebirth
is child abuse" libel. [Kvale JK. Letter. JNM (May/Jun)1996;41(3):227]
. . . .
. . . Kvale [1996] noted in her letter to JNM, "Too many of the interventions
commonly used in hospital labor and delivery suites are based on tradition
or peer acceptance and not on sound science...Randomized controlled trials
and other research methods are necessary to test ways to make hospital
birth safer and less costly, just as they are needed to test the safety
of [techniques used during -TDG] birth in the home."
Perinatal Mortality
Attendant Place # of Births per 1,000 births
Obstetrician Hospital 83,351 18.9
General Pract. Home 21,653 4.5
Midwives Hospital 34,874 2.1
Midwives Home 44,676 1.0
And if you argue that OBs had to take all the high risk women, here is
another one (British this time) to look at:
The type of study you're asking for is impossible. I'll keep
looking if you're interested though.
One problem with this kind of study is that it is next to impossible to
avoid the problem of self-selected samples. And if you find a way around
this, a lot more problems are waiting ...
[We] must draw the conclusion that the policy of encouraging
all women to give birth in hospitals cannot be justified on grounds of
safety...[I]t is no longer acceptable that the pattern of maternity care
provision should be driven by presumptions about the applicability of a
medical model of care based upon unproven assertions...Hospitals are not
the appropriate place to care for healthy women...We recommend that the
Department of Health vigorously pursue the establishment of best practice
models of team midwifery care...
[A] "medical model of care" should no longer drive the maternity
service and women should be given unbiased information...including the
option, previously denied to them, of having their babies at home...
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