BMJ (British Medical Journal) 1996;313:1276-1277 (23
November)

Editorials

Home birth
Safe in selected women, and with adequate infrastructure and support
Birth is an event of great importance in family life. Although pregnancy and
delivery are, under healthy conditions, normal social and physiological
processes, childbirth has become hospital centred in most industrialised
countries. The assumption is that hospital based deliveries are safer for mother
and child. Yet the Cumberlege report sees home birth as a real option,1 and the
wishes of women to have home births must be viewed in that light. A randomised
controlled trial would help to resolve the controversy over the relative safety of
home and hospital birth,2 but conditions for a "fair" trial are difficult to achieve.
Such a study would require large numbers because of the low frequency of
adverse events, and the necessary environment of experienced home deliveries
has virtually disappeared. In the absence of a randomised trial, observational
studies are welcome, and this week's BMJ carries four papers reporting on the
safety, professional support, and patient satisfaction of home births.3 4 5 6

The first of these, from the Northern region's perinatal mortality survey, reports
134 perinatal losses in 3466 births outside the hospital,3 about four times the
number of losses in hospital births. At first sight this seems to endorse the view
that hospital is the safest place to deliver. But 97% (131) of these perinatal
deaths at home were recorded in women who were actually booked for a hospital
delivery or had no prearranged plan for delivery. The perinatal outcome in
planned home births was better than for all women giving birth in the region--a
result in line with Swiss and Dutch findings also reported in this week's BMJ.4 5
This supports the safety of home birth provided it is offered to women at low risk
of obstetric complications. Most perinatal deaths occur in women with health or
obstetric problems that existed before or developed during pregnancy, and these
women can be identified and referred before the onset of labour.

Assessing a woman's risk and providing appropriate care is bread and butter to
general practitioners. The key to the consistently good results of home births in
Dutch primary care settings5 7 is meticulous selection of women at low risk of
obstetric complications. This results in equal or better obstetric outcome
compared with hospital birth, and fewer interventions, for a large number of
women in the community.7 Risk assessment is based on a protocol for referral8
(the Kloostermanlist, named after its designer), which is used routinely in the
community7 and serves as the national reference of good practice.

Promotion of home birth is not restricted to Europe: there have also been
initiatives in the United States and Australia.9 10 In our view such initiatives
should be integrated in comprehensive primary care, as the roles of general
practitioner and midwife are not limited to the place of birth--they cover the whole
of pregnancy, delivery, and neonatal care.7 However, some primary care
practitioners may need to be persuaded to provide the option to their patients: the
survey from Britain's Northern region found that general practitioners, and to a
lesser extent midwives, often had reservations about the safety of home birth and
tended to discourage it.

General practitioners and midwives have responsibility for creating the right
circumstances for safe and satisfying home births. This means, firstly, selecting
women who are not at high risk of complications; secondly, establishing an
infrastructure for safe obstetric interventions--such as providing elevated beds
and ensuring adequate hygiene; thirdly, providing support during labour and in
the days after delivery, for which maternity home care assistants are important;
and, finally, allowing access to hospital facilities--this is vital, as serious
complications during labour can never be excluded. Transfer during labour can
be safe,6 7 but safety must not be assumed, and the availability of obstetric care
must be established beforehand. Coordinated planning between primary care
practitioners and obstetricians is crucial, and much will depend on local
conditions: hospital facilities are usually available within 15 minutes in densely
populated Holland, but transfer will take much longer in remote areas of North
America and Australia. Such variation underlines the importance of
comprehensive care for pregnant women. This should focus on patients'
individual needs, based on a proper assessment of risk and local circumstances,
rather than simply accommodating patients' demands.

Professor Department of General Practice, Leiden University, PO Box 2088, 230
CB, Leiden, Netherlands

Professor Department of General Practice and Social Medicine, University of
Nijmegen, PO Box 9101, 6500 HB Nijmegen, Netherlands

Nachiel P Springer, Chris Van Weel




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Department of Health Expert Maternity Group. Changing childbirth. 1. The
Cumberlege report. London: HMSO, 1993.
Education and debate. Should there be a trial of home versus hospital delivery in
the United Kingdom. BMJ 1996;312:753-7. [Free Full Text]
The Northern Region's Perinatal Mortality Survey Coordinating Group. Perinatal
loss in planned and unplanned home birth. BMJ 1996;313:1306-9. [Abstract/Free
Full Text]
Ackermann-Liebrich U, Voegli T, Guenther-Witt K, Kunz I, Zullig M, Schindler C,
et al. Home versus hospital deliveries: a prospective study on matched pairs.
BMJ 1996;313:1313-8. [Abstract/Free Full Text]
Wiegers TA, Keirse MJNC, van der Zee J, Berghs GAH. Outcome of planned
home and planned hospital births in low risk pregnancies in the Netherlands.
BMJ 1996;313:1309-13. [Abstract/Free Full Text]
Davies J, Hey E, Reid W, Young G. Prospective regional study of planned home
birth. BMJ 1996;313:1302-5. [Abstract/Free Full Text]
Springer MP. Quality of obstetric performance of general practitioners [Kwaliteit
van het verloskundig handelen van huisartsen] [thesis]. Leiden: Leiden
University, 1991. (English summary.)
Ziekenfondsraad. Verloskundige indicatielijst 1987: final report of the working
party to adjust the Kloostermanlist (WBK). Amstelveen: Ziekenfondsraad, 1987.
Acheson LS, Harris SE, Zyzanski SJ. Patient selection and outcomes for
out-of-hospital births in one family practice. J Fam Pract 1990;31:128-36.
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Cunningham DJ. Experiences of Australian mothers who gave birth either at
home, or in hospital labour wards. Soc Sci Med 1993;36:475-83.