Is home birth safe?

Yes.

The end.

Except, okay, it’s not the end, because every time an article about home birth runs on a parenting website, do you know what the comments say? They say things like, “Well, that’s nice for you, but I would never put my baby at risk just so I could have a special birth experience!”

And then my head explodes. Which is why I hardly read comments on those things any more. Too much mess to clean up.

So let’s talk about this for just a minute.

Is home birth safe? Or are women who choose to birth at home focusing only on their own “birth experience” at the expense of their baby’s health? Are mothers and babies less likely to survive a birth that takes place outside of a hospital?

A large body of literature indicates that giving birth at home is at least as safe as giving birth in a hospital.

A recent study conducted in Canada, for example, investigated the safety of home birth. [Read more about the study at Science & Sensibility, or in USA Today. Read the study in its entirety here.]

The study compared three groups of women: those who planned home births attended by midwives; those who planned hospital births attended by those same midwives; and those who planned hospital births attended by physicians. All of the women in all three groups qualified for planned home births. (That is, they were all healthy, carrying full-term babies, with no complications that would rule out home birth. This was true for the home birth group as well as both hospital birth groups.)

The women giving birth at home had the fewest obstetrical interventions, the lowest rate of maternal mortality (death), and the fewest adverse outcomes (problems such as severe tears, or postpartum hemorrhage). The home birth group also had the lowest rate of fetal mortality (stillbirth or infant death). Babies born at home were least likely to require resuscitation at birth, and least likely to aspirate meconium.

Women who gave birth attended by a midwife in a hospital had the next lowest rate of interventions, adverse outcomes, and maternal and fetal mortality.

The physician-attended hospital birth group had the most interventions, the greatest number of adverse outcomes for mothers and babies, and the highest rate of maternal and fetal mortality—though mortality rates for all groups were very low.

For healthy, low-risk women, home birth attended by a midwife is associated with less complication for mom and baby, and less risk of mom or baby dying. It sounds to me like home birth is safe.

Is home birth for everyone? Am I trying to suggest that everyone should give birth at home? Of course not. Every pregnant woman should be able to decide for herself where she is most comfortable giving birth.

Can every woman give birth at home? Again, no. Some health conditions and pregnancy complications can make home birth an inappropriate choice. (A qualified midwife can help a woman determine whether home birth is among her options.) And we’ve talked before about the fact that some women don’t have access to alternative birth arrangements, including home birth.

But for most women, midwife-attended home birth is a safe option.

There. That’s the end, really. (Well, the end of this blog post anyway.)

What do you think? Safe? Not safe? Do you have concerns about birth settings?

For more on birth and midwifery, check out my resources page.