We can’t control C-section rates if we ignore doctors’ liability concerns

The CDC has just released its annual report on birth statistics, Births: Final Data for 2009. Once again, the C-section rate has risen:

In 2009, the total cesarean delivery rate reached a record high of 32.9 percent of all births, a 2 percent increase from 32.3 percent in 2008. This is the 13th consecutive year in which the cesarean delivery rate has risen …

There are a number of reasons for the continuing rise, but one of the most important is obstetrician liability concerns. I wrote about a spectacular example yesterday, the recent $144 million verdict against a Michigan hospital for neonatal injuries sustained by a large baby due to shoulder dystocia. The cause of action was failure to offer a C-section. Shoulder dystocia cannot be predicted in advance and the scientific evidence is that prophylactic C-section for macrosomia does not improve outcomes. But that didn’t stop the lawyer from arguing or the jury from believing that a prophylactic C-section should have been recommended.

There is simply no way we are going to get a handle on C-section rates if we continue to ignore obstetricians’ concerns about liability. As I first wrote in March 2010, obstetricians have been desperately trying to explain how liability concerns are driving the rising C-section rate, yet they are consistently ignored.

It’s rather surprising since obstetricians perform the C-sections and have much greater insight into their motivations than anyone else. But everyone from insurance company executives to health policy experts to natural childbirth advocates disparage and ignore doctors’ explanations. How do they justify ignoring the very people whose behavior they wish to change?

Law professor Sandra Johnson offers insights into doctors’ concerns and how they are ignored in, of all places, a law review article entitled, Regulating Physician Behavior: Taking Doctors’ “Bad Law” Claims Seriously.

Doctors frequently claim that the very law intended to improve the lot of their patients is instead making the doctors provide poor care. These “bad law” claims are levied against malpractice litigation that makes doctors practice “defensive medicine”; … against antitrust laws that prevent doctors from organizing themselves in ways that would produce more cost-effective and accessible care; and against regulations that impede important medical research. These “bad law” claims assert that the law’s effort to promote patient health and well-being has actually caused significant harm.

And why have these concerns been ignored?

Medicine’s complaints … [have come] to be characterized as the work of a self serving guild, rather than a profession motivated by altruism and armed with expertise, or at least as the work of the recalcitrant “bad apples” who continued to resist improvements that the more enlightened among them embraced. These narratives marginalized physicians’ … claims and diminished them as a source of legitimate information about the effectiveness of reform efforts.

Rather than addressing the substance of doctors’ arguments, experts and lay people have denied that there the complaints are legitimate, ascribing them to greed and self interest. Yet in the case of medical liability, as in other areas of medical “reform,” doctors are often right.

Professor Johnson explains that doctors’ liability concerns are not simply ignored; even when they are directly addressed, they are often dismissed as irrelevant by those who don’t or won’t understand their impact on individual practitioners. She identifies a number of these dismissive behaviors.

All’s not well that ends well

Policy experts and lay people alike often point to the fact that physicians win most malpractice suits as evidence that doctors shouldn’t worry about being sued. But as Prof. Johnson notes:

The enforcement process itself [in this case, the lawsuit] also imposes significant penalties in the course of identifying violators. These penalties are distinct from formal penalties levied after a conclusive finding that a violation has occurred. These “penalties of the process” exert their own deterrent effect. When substantial, they will produce avoidance behaviors on the part of those who might fall within the investigative net even though the likelihood that they will be subject to formal sanctions is nil or close to it.

In other words, the risk of being sued has a deterrent effect, regardless of whether the doctor wins or loses. And who would know better than the doctors themselves?

The deterrence effect of these informal penalties may produce results that actually undermine the goals of the formal legal requirements. Yet, they are all but invisible—they make no appearance in the formal description of the standards and procedures incorporated in the law. The best information available concerning the operation of this shadow system of enforcement comes from the people who experience it, those doctors who claim that there is “bad law” causing them to avoid doing the right thing.

The interminacy of law

Lay people in particular like to claim that if the doctor “does the right thing,” he or she has nothing to worry about. That is startlingly naive view.

… It is hardly ever the case that lawyers can tell doctors: “I assure you that you have nothing to be concerned about … You are safe.” … So, instead, what doctors often hear lawyers say is: “Well, anyone with a filing fee can sue you, but they are not going to win.” This consolation … has to ring hollow to anyone who has been the defendant in any suit, even one that is eventually dismissed. Instead of reassurance, one could understand that this phrase would be heard as confirmation of the unpredictability of the legal hammer.

Asymmetrical legal risk

At times, legal risk is lined up entirely on one side as the doctor looks at the risks of particular decisions… [W]hen we began our work on pain management in 1995, only the doctor who prescribed opioids for his patients in pain faced investigation, sanctions, and liability claims. The doctor who used the less effective medications and neglected their patient’s pain faced no legal risk at all.

The same asymmetrical risk applies to C-sections. An obstetrician who fails to perform a C-section can be accused of negligence if there is anything wrong with the baby. An obstetrician who performs a C-section, even one that is not medical necessary, faces no legal risk at all.

Professor Johnson’s most important message is that it is time to start taking physician liability concerns seriously instead of dismissing such complaints are motivated by greed and self interest:

[We] must accept that well-intentioned regulatory standards and enforcement systems can have negative outcomes as physicians react, and patients suffer as a result. Taking physicians’ “bad law” complaints seriously brings physician behavior to the table as a credible and legitimate factor in evaluating the performance of the law… Taking “bad law” claims seriously appreciates that the behavior-inducing effects of the enforcement effort may thwart the goals of the regulation itself.

The bottom line? If we continue to ignore obstetricians liability concerns, the C-section rate will continue to rise.

Jury awards $144 million for failure to perform a C-section

Geoffrey Fieger, famous for representing Dr. Jack Kervorkian, is now notable for a new reason. He just won one of the largest medical malpractice verdicts in history in an obstetric case. The claim? Failure to perform a C-section, of course.

A Detroit-area newspaper reported:

In what appears to be the largest medical malpractice lawsuit verdict ever awarded in Michigan, a Macomb Township family has been granted $144 million in a case against William Beaumont Hospital of Royal Oak…

Markell was born with cerebral palsy and hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy, and attorneys argued the condition was a result of a traumatic labor and delivery at Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak…

Markell was 10 pounds, 12 ounces when she was born Dec. 1, 1995 …

The birthing process also caused a brain hemorrhage and bruises to Markell’s body…

She suffered a fractured left clavicle during the delivery and “had no respiratory effort,” as well as seizures, according to court documents.

In other words, Markell was a macrosomic baby who suffered a severe shoulder dystocia.

Shoulder dystocia cannot be predicted in advance although the risk rises in babies over 10 pounds. The scientific evidence, often touted by homebirth and NCB advocates, is that prophylactic C-section for macrosomia does not improve outcomes.

But that didn’t stop Fieger from arguing or the jury from believing that in this case a prophylactic C-section should have been recommended:

In the lawsuit, attorneys for the VanSlembrouck family accused the hospital and its physicians of being negligent in many ways, including failure to recommend or offer a cesarean section procedure …

And though we know, as NCB and homebirth advocates are fond of declaiming, that, due to limitations in the existing technology, estimates of fetal weight vary as much as 2 pounds in either direction in the 3rd trimester, that didn’t stop Fieger from arguing or the jury from believing that the hospital could have obtained an accurate fetal weight prior to the onset of labor:

The VanSlembroucks also accused the hospital of providing negligent prenatal care, including a failure to establish a reliable estimation of fetal weight.

This case is an excellent illustration of the pressures on obstetricians.

Yet no less an authority than our friend Jill Arnold, counseling women on how to avoid an “unnecesarean,” decries prophylactic C-sections for macrosomia, going to far as to disparage the “dead baby card.”

… Is this “recommendation” of a c-section based on evidence or is it merely the practice of defensive medicine? The burden of proof is on the doctor wanting to schedule a primary c-section for a non-diabetic woman.

At this juncture, doctors are known to share a personal anecdote about shoulder dystocia in which the baby died or suffered nerve damage during birth to support their recommendation and scare the pregnant woman into compliance. This is also referred to as “playing the dead baby card.” Such events are tragic for all parties involved, including the labor and delivery staff. They are also EXTREMELY rare and unpredictable.

The American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology does not support prophylactic cesarean delivery for suspected fetal macrosomia with estimated weights of less than 5,000 g, stating that ” …it is safe to allow a trial of labor for estimated fetal weight of more than 4,000 g.”

Jill appropriately cites 7 specific studies that recommend against prophylactic C-section for macrosomia.

But it did not matter to this jury that the scientific evidence does not support prophylactic C-section for macrosomia. It did not matter that, due to limitations in existing ultrasound technology, it was literally impossible for doctors to establish a fetal weight any closer than 2 pounds in either direction. All that mattered was what was clear in hindsight: a C-section would have prevented the tragedy that befell this specific child.

Jill Arnold is correct that a C-section for macrosomia is defensive medicine, but as I have argued before, and as this case demonstrates, defensive medicine works. It prevents heartache for patients and it prevents massive judgements for failure to perform a C-section.

Kim Mosny presides over homebirth tragedy

They say that the best defense is a good offense, and perhaps that’s what Kim Mosny, CPM had in mind when she publicly posted the story of a perinatal loss on her Facebook page. Mosny has appeared across the internet proclaiming the safety of homebirth. Perhaps she fears that her association with a tragedy might raise doubts about her claims.

On October 8, 2011…, [the baby] died inutero (while inside the uterus) as a result of a hidden, complete placental abruption (where the placenta shears off the uterine wall). [The baby] was stillborn at 12:19am on October 9, 2011, taken by cesarean section to protect [the] mother’s health…

Clinically, there is no explanation for this rare event other than to acknowledge the biological risk of all pregnant women because they have a placenta attached to their uterus…

Kim wants you to believe that there was no way this could have been prevented.

… Midwives care only for low-risk women, who have healthy life-styles; who do not smoke, drink alcohol, or abuse drugs, and who’s medical status is determined to be healthy, without medical conditions or diseases that would risk them out of care. Thus, there were no other risks that could be determined as causal for this client’s placental abruption. As a result of the abruption, the baby was very quickly deprived of oxygen and he died. He felt no pain. Thankfully, the mother remained stable and did not suffer medical complications herself.

And she wants to be sure that we know that the parents are not blaming her:

Our clients wish to convey their satisfaction with and confidence in their care providers, both the midwives of the Home Birth Midwifery Service … stating the course of their care was thorough and comprehensive. They received excellent care throughout.

Technically speaking, everything that Mosny wrote may be true. However, she left out some critical details that cast a very different light on the tragedy.

1. The patient was 42 weeks and 1 day when this stillbirth happened. While the actual precipitating event that led to the baby’s death may not have been preventable, the death itself may have been preventable. The stillbirth rate rises steadily at the end of pregnancy, and 42 weeks is considered the outermost cut-off for induction and delivery of the baby. Had this patient been induced in the hospital before 42 weeks, the outcome would likely have been a healthy baby.

2. Mosny is silent on whether the patient was in labor at the time of the abruption. She does not claim that the patient experienced decreased movement or sudden onset of pain. Whether the patient was in labor at the time that the abruption occurred is highly relevant.

3. Mosny is silent on when and how the patient was diagnosed and transferred to the hospital. If the transfer was during labor, it took place too late to save this baby’s life. Homebirth advocates are fond of claiming that even when an emergency occurs at homebirth, there is plenty of time to transfer to a hospital. But there are a number of obstetric emergencies, none of which are rare, that must be treated within minutes or the baby will die. One of these is a major placental abruption.

4. The treatment for an abruption that results in a perinatal fatality is vaginal delivery. There are two exceptions: if the patient had a previous C-section and requests a repeat, or in the case of massive bleeding. In this case, the baby was a first child, and, according to Mosny, the bleeding was confined to the area behind the placenta (hidden abruption). Therefore, a C-section in this case was probably the result of obstetric indications unrelated to the baby’s demise, such as cephalo-pelvic disproportion.

As soon as I read Mosny’s Facebook post about the tragedy, I suspected that there was more to this story than she was revealing. In the first place, it is unusual for any provider to publicly announce a stillbirth. Second, it seemed that the purpose of the announcement was to publicly absolve herself of blame. But that begs the question: why would she feel it was important to publicly renounce blame for a stillbirth in the absence of risk factors?

It turned out, however, that there was at least one major risk factor for stillbirth, and that her description of what happened, while technically true, omitted key facts that shed a very different light on the situation.

I contacted Mosny to offer her an opportunity to comment on the specific circumstances surrounding a perinatal death that would justify a public announcement that it was unpreventable. She did not offer any clarification.

Unfortunately, there is a real possibility that this was a classic homebirth tragedy. A patient who should have been risked out from homebirth, who should have been induced earlier, experienced a catastrophic complication, and by the time the patient was transferred to the hospital, the baby was dead.

Oregon homebirth midwives don’t want to obtain informed consent

Isn’t every patient entitled to give informed consent for medical care, with the provider explaining risks and benefits of each available option? Oregon homebirth midwives don’t think so.

New state regulations enacted earlier this year mandated informed consent:

Beginning on June 1, 2011, each LDM [licensed direct entry midwife] must provide risk information as published on the agency’s website www.Oregon.gov/OHLA, and obtain informed consent for the following circumstances:

(a) Out-of-hospital birth;
(b) Vaginal birth after cesarean (VBAC);
(c) Breech;
(d) Multiple gestations; and
(e) Pregnancy exceeding 42 weeks gestation.

It’s now November, yet Oregon homebirth midwives are NOT obtaining informed consent in these high risk situations. That’s a remarkable turn of events for two reasons.

First, it is notable because a specific regulation was required to address the fact that Oregon homebirth midwives were not fulfilling their ethical obligation. Every healthcare provider is ethically and legally required to provide accurate information about the risks of any medical care. Oregon homebirth midwives SHOULD HAVE been providing information about the increased rate of perinatal death at homebirth, and the further increase in risk posed by VBAC, breech, twins, and postdates pregnancy. Oregon homebirth midwives flagrantly disregarded this obligation and Oregon officials felt compelled to make informed consent mandatory for license maintenance.

Second, it is remarkable that Oregon homebirth midwives have still not begun obtaining consent for these high risk situations, arguing repeatedly that they need “more time” to create consent forms. Homebirth midwives petitioned for and were granted an extension until October 15, and as the date drew near, they petitioned to postpone the requirement for informed consent until January 1, 2012. That request was formalized on 9/26/11. A little over a week later, having postponed compliance with the requirement for 6 months, Oregon homebirth midwives petitioned to postpone a further 6 months.

The idea that they needed any extension at all is bizarre. The increased risks posed by VBAC, breech, twins and postdates pregnancy are well known and have been quantified for years. For example, obstetricians have been obtaining informed consent for VBAC for at least 20 years. The Board of Direct Entry Midwifery could easily assemble and print the information in one day.

Moreover, the requirement for informed consent does not depend on provider convenience. Can you imagine a doctor arguing that he didn’t obtain informed consent for gall bladder surgery because he hadn’t had time to prepare a consent form? Can you imagine an oncologist arguing that he didn’t obtain informed consent for a patient to refuse chemotherapy in favor of herbs because he didn’t have time to prepare an consent form? Of course not.

Can you imagine a doctor insisting that he needn’t obtain informed consent for gall bladder surgery for any patient in the next year because that’s now long he would need to prepare a consent form? Can you imagine an oncologist arguing that he needn’t obtain informed consent for any patient in the next year to refuse chemotherapy in favor of herbs because he didn’t have time to prepare an consent form? Of course not.

Yet that’s precisely what Oregon homebirth midwives are arguing:

Amend OAR 338-025-0120 to extend the implementation date for risk information packets by requiring that each LDM provide risk information as published on the agency’s website regarding out-of-hospital birth, malpresentation birth (breech), multiple gestations (twins), vaginal birth after cesarean (VBAC), and births exceeding 42 weeks gestation (post-dates) beginning June 1, 2012.

There is no plausible reason to take a year to amend a consent form, especially since the information has been known for decades and can be accessed in moments on Google. So why are Oregon homebirth midwives arguing for repeated extensions to the informed consent requirement?

It’s simple. They don’t want to obtain informed consent.

If Oregon homebirth midwives are are required to provide patients with accurate information about the real risks of homebirth, and particularly about the increased risk of high risk homebirth, they will have many fewer clients.

The state of Oregon should refuse to grant any further extensions. Informed consent is a requirement for all healthcare providers and there should be no exception for Oregon homebirth midwives.

Homebirth Summit consensus statements: much ado about nothing

Organizers of the Home Birth Consensus Summit are trumpeting the nine statements of common ground that emerged from the meeting. According to the press release:

Although many of the participants represented stakeholders who have long been on opposite sides of the fence when it comes to the practice of delivering at home or in a freestanding birth center, the group was able to reach agreement on core sets of principles and to forge a shared commitment to quality maternity care for women and their babies in all birth settings.

Frankly, it is much ado about nothing.

Here are the statements statements:

  1. We uphold the autonomy of all childbearing women…
  2. We believe that collaboration within an integrated maternity care system is essential for optimal mother-baby outcomes…
  3. We are committed to an equitable maternity care system without disparities in access, delivery of care, or outcomes…
  4. .. [A]ll health professionals who provide maternity care in home and birth center settings have a license that is based on national certification that includes defined competencies and standards for education and practice…
  5. We believe that increased participation by consumers … is essential to improving maternity care…
  6. Effective communication and collaboration across all disciplines caring for mothers and babies are essential for optimal outcomes across all settings…
  7. We are committed to improving the current medical liability system …
  8. We envision a compulsory process for the collection of patient … data on key … outcome measures in all birth settings….
  9. We … affirm the value of physiologic birth … and the value of appropriate interventions based on the best available evidence to achieve optimal outcomes for mothers and babies…

The are so banal as to be nearly meaningless, and everyone agreed with them prior to the Summit. It put me in mind of a summit between two bitterly warring countries that is declared a great success because everyone agrees that … peace is good. There’s nothing substantive here and the most critical issues are not addressed.

I was interviewed by a reporter for Medscape about by impressions of the Summit results:

“On any substantive issues there was no agreement: The idea that women should have autonomy…that there should be some sort of standard,…everyone agreed on that beforehand as no-brainers.”

Dr. Tuteur takes exception to the summit’s wishes “not to examine, debate, or form a consensus statement regarding the evidence published regarding safety or maternal–newborn outcomes of planned home birth.”

“One of the things that I found most disturbing about the summit was that one issue was off the table from the get-go: there would be no discussion of whether home birth is safe, and that’s really the key issue,” …

I commented on the fact that the existing scientific evidence and state and national statistics show that American homebirth has triple the death rate of hospital birth for comparable risk women. The problem is so serious that MANA refuses to release the death rates for homebirth midwives.

“It does not take a rocket scientist to surmise that [the Midwives Alliance of North America’s] own data show that homebirth with an American homebirth midwife is not safe,” Dr. Tuteur noted. “Withholding that information from patients is both unethical and immoral.”

And, of course, I mentioned the inadequacy of the CPM credential:

“One thing that most Americans don’t realize is that American homebirth midwives have a pretend credential they give themselves, called ‘Certified Professional Midwife,’ and any similarity to Certified Nurse Midwife is confusing and deliberate, … There is no possible way that a high school graduate with a mail-order certificate is qualified to take care of anyone,” …

I am no diplomat (that’s no surprise to anyone who reads this blog regularly), so perhaps in the world of diplomacy it is a great achievement to hold a conference and announce you agree on a bunch of things that everyone already knew you agreed upon, while simultaneously refusing to address critical substantive issues. But it seems to me that this Summit was nothing more than a public relations ploy to elevate the status of homebirth midwives, giving the impression that they were “invited to the table” by the expedient of creating the table and issuing all the invitations.

The two principle issues in American homebirth did not produce consensus, and one was off the table from the start. The two critical issues, threshold issues on which everything else is based, are these: American homebirth increases the risk of perinatal death, and the CPM credential does not meet the standards of any other first world country. If homebirth advocates refuse to acknowledge or even discuss these issues, the results of any consensus summit are meaningless.

Joshua’s easily preventable, tragic hospital birth death

Joshua Titcombe

Last week I wrote that the relentless effort by UK midwives in promoting normal birth is killing babies and mothers. At Furness General Hospital in Cumbria 6 babies and 2 mothers have died preventable deaths, including Joshua Titcombe:

Hoa Titcombe, 34, gave birth to Joshua at the end of a normal delivery. But nine days later the baby bled to death after suffering a lung infection which could easily have been treated with antibiotics.

Joshua’s father James contacted me to share more details about Joshua’s birth and needless death. He gave me permission to share with you the presentation he created to ensure that Joshua will be remembered and that his death will serve a purpose, focusing attention on the substandard midwifery care that is the result of midwives protecting their “turf” and refusing to refer complicated cases to obstetricians and pediatricians.

My deepest condolences to James and Hoa. No parent should have to endure what they have suffered.

Joshua and Hoa

Homebirth shows woman at her most powerful? That’s a joke, right?

It would be laughable if it were not so utterly pathetic.

I’m referring to the latest nonsensical mantra circulating in among homebirth advocates: “Homebirth shows woman at her most powerful.

No doubt that comes as an utter shock to the women of Afghanistan and other 3rd world countries who are dying in droves because they have no alternative to homebirths.

No doubt that would have come as an utter shock to the countless generations of women who desperately yearned for political power, economic power, and the opportunity to develop their intellectual gifts. In the view of the patriarchal societies they fought against, giving birth was all the “power” that women needed or should be allowed to have.

No doubt that would have come as an utter shock to Indira Ghandi, Golda Meir, and Margaret Thatcher. All were mothers, yet all sought and obtained substantial political and economic power as leaders of their own nations.

No doubt that would come as an utter shock to women who are diplomats, bankers and professors, like Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, International Monetary Fund leader Christine Lagarde, and Brown University President Ruth Simmons. These women wield real power in the halls of Washington, the banks of the world and the higher education system.

No, homebirth does not show woman at her most powerful. It shows woman at her most gullible and powerless.

Only the gullible could be tricked into believing that a natural bodily function has anything to do with power. Only the most powerless could possibly convince themselves that a bodily function that even a comatose woman can accomplish is a sign of power.

Only the most gullible (due to lack of education in science, statistics, and obstetrics) could believe that something almost all mothers who ever existed have already done (or died trying to do) is a sign of their power.

Only those most gullible (due to ignorance of basic history) would dare to suggest that the traditional excuse for preventing women from gaining and wielding political, economic and intellectual power is actually valid.

Only the most gullible and powerless would believe that reflexive defiance of authority, petulance and resentment are signs of power.

We know what power is and what it isn’t. Power is the ability to control one’s own destiny, not one’s bodily functions. Power is the ability to develop one’s intellectual gifts, not one’s pelvic musculature. Power is the ability to rule over nations, not infants.

There is nothing powerful about giving birth, but there is something unspeakably pathetic about believing that there is.

How many babies died at the hands of Colorado homebirth midwives this year?

It’s that time of year again, late October, when Colorado homebirth midwives release their death statistics as mandated by Colorado law. Before I disclose this year’s death rate, let’s review to put it in perspective.

Two years ago, I wrote about the horrifying death toll of homebirth in Colorado:

… [T]he perinatal death rate of LICENSED homebirth midwives in Colorado, caring for low risk patients, exceeded the perinatal death rate of 6.4/1000 for the entire state (all races, all gestational ages, all birth weights, 2003-2007)! Homebirth was the most dangerous form of planned birth by far.

Karen Robinson, CPM [President of the Colorado Midwives Association] was in denial:

I don’t believe we have a poor perinatal mortality rate, but if solid data shows we do, then I will be at the forefront of the effort to improve our practices and lower the perinatal mortality rate for homebirth in Colorado.

But as I pointed out in my post:

But the death rates for for the year were even even worse. Last year’s results revealed that, licensed Colorado midwives had a perinatal mortality rate at homebirth of 8.6/1000. These numbers are nothing short of horrifying.

Amazingly, last year’s statistics were far worse. Colorado licensed midwives provided care for 799 women. Nine (9) babies died for a homebirth death rate of 11.3/1000! That is nearly DOUBLE the perinatal death rate of 6.3/1000 for the entire state (including all pregnancy complications and premature births).

The data is conveniently broken down by type of death and place of death. For example, there were three intrapartum deaths for an intrapartum death rate of 3.8/1000, more than TEN TIMES HIGHER than the intrapartum death rate commonly experienced in hospitals. There were 4 neonatal deaths for a neonatal death rate of 5/1000. That’s TEN TIMES HIGHER than the national neonatal mortality rate for low risk hospital birth with a CNM. On hundred women were transferred in labor or after delivery for a transfer rate of 12.5%. The neonatal death rate in the transfer group was 50/1000, an appalling neonatal death rate ONE HUNDRED TIMES HIGHER than that expected in a group of low risk women.

What did we learn from these data?

1. Planned homebirth with a licensed midwife in Colorado has a death rate that is extraordinarily high and has risen in every year since statistics were first collected.

2. Colorado homebirth midwives have an intrapartum death rate 10 times higher than expected.

3. Colorado homebirth midwives have a neonatal mortality rate 10 times higher than expected.

4. Colorado homebirth midwives fail to transfer enough patients and fail to transfer them in a timely fashion.

5. One in 20 patients transferred to the hospital by Colorado homebirth midwives ends up with a dead baby.

How many babies died at the hands of Colorado homebirth midwives this year?

Drum roll please …

The death toll of planned homebirths attended by licensed Colorado hoomebirth midwives in the last reported year is so high that the midwives, in violation of Colorado law, refuse to relase them!

Let me repeat that. After 4 years of high, rising, and nothing short of appalling death rates, Colorado homebirth midwives are now refusing to report how many babies are dying at their hands. They published an annual report. as they always do, but they left out the homebirth deaths.

They already had an intrapartum death rate 10 times higher than expected and a neonatal mortality rate 10 times higher than expected. How much higher are they now?

If this tactic sounds familiar, it should. It has happened on the state level; homebirth midwives in Oregon, led by Melissa Cheyney are hiding their death rates. And it is happenening on the national level. The Midwives Alliance of North America (MANA) collected death rates for the years 2001-2008. While they were collecting the statistics, they publicly promised they would be used to demonstrate the safety of homebirth midwives, but once they saw the results, they decided to hide them instead.

How many babies need to die before homebirth advocates acknowledge the obvious: homebirth kills babies, homebirth midwivess (certified professional midwives) are grossly undereducated and grossly undertrained, and homebirth midwives are represented by unethical leadership who are willing to let babies die preventable deaths and then hide the bodies?

Homebirth in the US is not about babies, and it is not about birth. It is about a bunch of high school graduates who couldn’t or wouldn’t get real midwifery training and made up a pretend credential they award to themselves to fool an unsuspecting public.

American professional homebirth advocates are unethical in the worst possible way; they don’t care how many newborn lives are sacrificed, indeed that will go to great lengths to hide how many newborn lives they sacrifice, in an effort to continue collecting fees for appallingly incompetent care. The entire leadership of American homebirth, from the President of MANA on down should be ashamed of themselves.

How do American homebirth midwives handle their mistakes? They bury them — both literally and figuratively.

Promoting normal birth is killing babies and mothers

For years, the Royal College of Midwives in the UK has been on a relentless campaign to promote “normal birth.” We are now seeing the results, and they are nothing short of horrific.

Last month the focus was on Furness General Hospital in Cumbria where 6 babies and 2 mothers have died preventable deaths, including:

* Hoa Titcombe, 34, gave birth to Joshua at the end of a normal delivery. But nine days later the baby bled to death after suffering a lung infection which could easily have been treated with antibiotics.

* Thai-born Nittaya Hendrickson and her unborn son Chester both died at the hospital on July 31, 2008 after the midwife in charge of her labour dismissed her fits as ‘fainting’. Mrs Hendrickson later died of a heart attack, while her son died after suffering brain damage.

* In another case Niran Aukhaj, 29, collapsed and died in April that year. Her unborn baby also died. The mother of one, from Ulverston, had experienced a number of problems during her pregnancy, including high blood pressure. Yet midwives failed to take her blood pressure and a urine sample during a routine check-up just a week before she died.

* Liza Brady, whose son Alex was delivered in September 2008 stillborn at Furness General with the umbilical cord wrapped tightly around his neck. At 11lb 13oz, Alex was exceptionally large, yet midwives refused her request for a Caesarean — despite this having been suggested by a consultant obstetrician whom she saw during her pregnancy. During a long and painful labour, the midwives persistently refused her plea to be seen by a doctor and delayed the delivery even though the machine monitoring the baby’s heart showed he was in distress.

‘A doctor offered to help as he came on duty, but he was shooed away by the midwives who said he wasn’t needed,’ recalls Liza.

Lest anyone is tempted to conclude that this is a problem restricted to a single hospital, today’s newspaper reports demolish such wishful thinking (‘If you don’t hurry up, I’ll cut you’: What one mother was told by midwife at NHS Trust where five died during labour).

The [Care Quality Comission] investigated hospitals run by Barking, Havering and Redbridge University Hospitals NHS Trust in Essex.

Four women and seven newborns are believed to have died in the last 12 months on labour wards at the trust’s hospitals.

Sareena Ali, 27, from Ilford, Essex, died in January this year after staff failed to failed to notice she had suffered a ruptured womb that triggered a cardiac arrest and then later tried to revive her using a disconnected oxygen mask. Her daughter Zainab was born lifeless.

Mrs Ali’s husband Usman Javed, 29, who has since moved back to Pakistan, said she was in ‘unbearable pain’ and his pleas for help were ignored by ‘uncaring, incompetent’ midwives…

Then in April, Violet Stephens, 35, from Brentwood, Essex, died after midwives failed to spot she was suffering from pre-eclampsia, which leads to abnormally high blood pressure.

She waited four days to have an emergency caesarean and then died hours later.

Her baby son Christian was delivered healthy and is now being brought up by her sister …

Obstetrician Prabas Misra of Furness General in Cumbria expressed his concern about the rising death toll among midwife attended patients in a letter to his colleagues (Is an obsession with natural birth putting mothers and babies in danger?):

… [Dr.] Misra wrote of ‘the risk of trying to make every labour and delivery normal and natural, and not thinking laterally (about) possible complications. I am all for having a natural childbirth — but not at any cost’.

Although talking about a specific case, Mr Misra has put his finger on an issue at the root of the problems in obstetrics today: the dangerous myth, promulgated by some midwives, that natural childbirth is not only the kindest form of delivery but also invariably the safest.

For years, the prevailing view among some leading figures in midwifery was that obstetricians were little better than trouble-makers. They were seen as over medicalising the natural process of childbirth, slowing down labour with their foetal heart rate monitors, and so increasing the risk of complications.

As a result of these views, UK midwives embarked on a campaign to promote “normal birth.” But what is normal birth? As I wrote in a post last month:

… [N]ormal birth has nothing to do with normal and nothing to do with birth. The definition of normal birth is simple and straightforward: If a midwife can do it, she calls it normal. If she lacks the skill to provide the needed care, she insists that the birth is not normal even if it results in a healthy mother and a healthy baby. “Normal birth” and “midwives” are interchangeable. In other words, “normal birth” is nothing more than a marketing term.

In other words, “normal birth” is about turf, as explained by a British malpractice attorney:

Gill Edwards, a leading clinical negligence solicitor with the firm Pannone, is in no doubt why these fatal mistakes continue.

‘Too often, we see a desire for autonomy, sometimes verging on arrogance, on the part of some midwives,’ she says.

‘It leads them to ignore National Midwifery Council rules that require them to call on the skills of other health professionals whenever something happens which is outside their sphere of practice…’

‘Some of our worst cases occur because the drive to achieve a “normal” delivery clouds the judgment of midwives about when to call in specialist help from an obstetrician, or for a paediatrician to be present at the birth to assist with resuscitation when there are signs of foetal distress during labour,’ says Ms Edwards.

The promotion of normal birth is more than just a disingenuous ploy to promote midwifery, it is wrong on its face.

The mounting death toll of midwife attended preventable neonatal deaths and preventable maternal deaths demonstrates that efforts to promote normal birth kill babies and mothers. That’s not surprising when you consider that promoting normal birth is fundamentally unethical.

An ethical medical professional recommends whatever is safest for the patient, not whatever is most beneficial for the provider.

Dr. Amy