A freestanding birth center is a facility devoted solely to the care of
pregnant and laboring women. It is not physically attached to a hospital,
although some are hospital-owned.
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Reasons To Choose A Freestanding Birth
Center
The National Association of Childbearing Centers reports
birth centers to be as safe as hospital births-with the added benefit
of a significantly lower rate of cesarean sections. Birth centers,
which generally service low-risk pregnancies, average only 4.4 percent
c-sections, less than half the rate for low-risk women in hospital settings.
In one survey, there were no maternal deaths reported and a neonatal
mortality rate of less than one per 1,000 births, if severe birth defects
are excluded. These rates are almost identical to those of hospitals.
A birthing center
offers you a home-like setting in which to give birth. You will not
see a lot of high-tech machinery around you. You may, instead, see a
Jacuzzi, which can be extremely helpful during labor, a room for your
family to sleep in, or even a kitchen your family can use to prepare
meals during your stay. It is most likely to have been carefully decorated
and arranged to make you and your family feel comfortable and welcome.
Families are
encouraged to take full part in the birth and postpartum care.
You will
not find a lot of people coming and going out of your room, the way
you would in a hospital. The staff will probably be small and familiar
to you. Your privacy will be respected.
You will have just one area for your
stay where you will labor, deliver the baby, and recover. Many hospitals
move women from room to room for the different parts of labor.
The center
you choose may be where you will go for all your pre-natal checkups
and your childbirth education classes. The same center may also offer
parenting workshops or breastfeeding support groups for postpartum, or
sibling classes if you have older children. By the time you arrive for
your baby’s
birth you are likely to feel quite comfortable and familiar with
the environment.
There are still rural settings in this country that are many
miles away from the nearest maternity hospital. It may be that a
midwife-operated birthing center is your closest option.
Most major insurance
carriers do cover the cost of using a birth center.
Reasons Not To Choose A Freestanding Birth Center
You have a pre-existing
medical condition, such as diabetes, epilepsy, anemia or high blood
pressure that makes it advisable to be in a hospital setting right
from the start.
You have been defined as high-risk,
which means that you have a medical condition that necessitates a
hospital birth, such as diabetes, epilepsy, anemia, high blood pressure,
a previous cesarean section, or twin birth. Most birth centers are geared
towards low-risk pregnancies. Some birth centers are willing to deliver
twins and previous c-sections, but not all, so you need to ask.
You have already chosen
a care provider with whom you wish to deliver the baby and they are
not affiliated with a birth center.
You want even more control over your environment
than a birth center can provide. Homebirth may be most appropriate
for you.
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