Sentences with phrase «baby died at home»

To the mother whose baby died at home birth.
I know two women whose babies died at home birth, one of a breech.
This also ignores the fact that MORE babies die at home than in the hospital.
The posters that say «babies die at home, babies die in the hospital» show a remarkable lack of emotional connection for the dead babies and their grieving mothers and fathers etc..
Your wife may be disappointed that you do not approve of homebirth, but that is nothing compared to the lifelong heartache both she and you will endure if your baby dies at home because the emergency treatment he or she needed was too far away to make a difference.

Not exact matches

I don't think it's wise to say that your relative's baby would have died at home too because that certainly may not be the case.
The baby would have died at home.
In other words, most of the babies who die at homebirth in the US could have been saved in the hospital, whereas none of the babies who died at the hospital could have been saved at home.
And worst case scenario 14 out of 15 babies that die at home would have been saved if their mothers had chosen hospital.
It would be one thing to say, «it's ok, I'd rather die an agonizing death with an undelivered fetus after 72 hours of labour than have a c - section and a live baby so why don't you just prescribe me some morphine so I can go home and gather my family» which would be bizarre but at least demonstrate understanding of the consequences.
But it wasn't safer than a hospital birth, at least not if the definition of safety is was your baby more at risk of dying because she was born at home.
Women need to realize that even though yes, numerous babies have been born at home safely — there are numerous others that died.
We have had several home birth babies die in our community over the past year, and looking at the medical records it seems very unlikely that any of them would have died had they been born in a hospital.
Your qualifications and the extent of your research is irrelevant unless you can quote statistically significant examples of babies who died in the hospital that would have survived at home.
But on reflection, it strikes me as perfectly possible that a fair number of the most compromised babies, who would end up ill or disabled (for whatever reason) if born in hospital will simply die if born at home.
Baby readmitted from home at 16 days because of nursing problems, died at 19 days of previously undetected Group B streptococcus
So, yes, babies die in hospital too — but they die at a much higher rate at home.
Babies die in the hospital and they die at home.
«as homebirthers we do have to consider the possibility of baby or mom dying at home, but the risk is very low»
«Yes, as homebirthers we do have to consider the possibility of baby or mom dying at home, but the risk is very low, and much lower than dying from a staph infection from a hospital.»
The point is that, although yes, some women and babies still die in the hospital: First: That number is FAR LOWER than what it was when everyone gave birth at home Second: OBs and medical professionnal are constantly trying to improve their methods and reduce the mortality rate even more.
The critical difference between the babies who die as a result of a hospital birth and those who die as a result of a homebirth is that those who die at home DID N'T HAVE TO Ddie as a result of a hospital birth and those who die as a result of a homebirth is that those who die at home DID N'T HAVE TO Ddie as a result of a homebirth is that those who die at home DID N'T HAVE TO Ddie at home DID N'T HAVE TO DIEDIE!
What you may not know is Janet's baby suffered cardiac arrest during her cherished unassisted water birth and died on March 27th at her home in Australia.
The probability of a baby dying from a home birth is approximately twice the probability of a child dying in a car accident at any point from birth to age 25, and ten times as high as the risk of dying in a car accident between birth and age 10.
And in Canada, where it appears safest of all, several studies have demonstrated that in carefully selected populations, there is no difference between the number of babies who die at home or in the hospital.
Meaning, for every 10,000 births of low risk women, there are 6 - 7 babies that die in the USA during planned, midwife - attended home births that would have lived if the mothers were giving birth at home in the Netherlands.
A baby is 3 to 6 times more likely to die at a home birth than in a hospital.
The sad thing is that just as many women and babies die in the hospital as do at birth centers and during home births.
Grunebaum and colleagues (2013) performed this study by analyzing of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) data and found that babies delivered at home were almost 4 times more likely to die than babies delivered in hospitals.
Let's give a little context to what these numbers mean: for every 10,000 babies born at home in the Netherlands, only 6 - 7 babies will die; for every 10,000 babies born at home in the USA, 17 - 18 babies will die.
So, initially a high risk mom may have a worse labor morbidity chance but in the first 24 hours - her baby would be less likely to die at home than it would in the hospital.
Again, it may be a woman's free right to have her baby at home... but you SHOULD care on some level if exercising HER rights increases the risk of her baby dying.
It is not «biased» to tell women that as a low risk, middle class white woman, if they opt to have their full term, singleton baby at home with a CPM, using MANA's own statistics, their baby is almost 5 times more likely to die than if they give birth in the hospital.
If all babies were initially healthy AND delivered at home, we'd have 8,000 more babies who die before 6 weeks of age.
many babies do die at home.
And yes, babies and mothers have died at home births because unforseen complications arose.
And then people are absolutely free to think and say that that is a stupid and selfish risk to take, and others are free to think that she is a birth hero, and that 1 out of every 500 babies dying a needless death is a small price to pay for the chance to birth at home.
She knows and agrees that both she AND her baby are more likely to die at home?
(early neonatal death means the baby was born alive but died sometime in the first seven days), a baby is three times more likely to die at a home birth in the USA with a mortality rate of 1.71 / 1000 versus only 0.64 / 1000 babies dying in the Netherlands.
A baby born at home with a CPM is 2.4 times more likely to die than baby born with a CNM in a birth center.
This means for every 10,000 babies born to low risk moms at home with a CPM, 7 babies will die that would have lived had the mother been under the care of a CNM at a birth center.
This means for every 10,000 babies born at home with a CPM, 12 babies will die that would have lived had the mother been under the care of a CNM at a birth center.
According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, even FDA - approved cardiorespiratory monitors — the kind doctors prescribe for use at home to detect apnea or abnormally low heart rates — have not been shown to save babies from dying suddenly in their cribs.
That's about twice as many babies that die at home... or an additional 7 babies per 10,000.
When a baby dies suddenly at home, at a daycare, or somewhere besides the hospital, an autopsy may be required and you may not get a say.
hey even pumping is stressful to do when your baby may be dying lets relax lady on the whole at least pump for your baby thing I needed any sleep i could get with what was going on and with a 1 yr old at home getting jealous of me going to the hospital i did not want to be pumping the when I did get to see her in betwen hospital visits with my son she was jealous enough
Discourse generated in this study; «midwives act irresponsibly when attending a women birthing at home», «home birth is a return to times past where mothers and babies died in vast numbers».
In a 2002 study, Seattle pediatrician Jenny W. Pang, MD, MPH, and colleagues from the Washington School of Public Health reported that babies delivered at home have nearly twice the risk of dying shortly after birth as those born in the hospital.
In The Red Book, her touching, provocative, whip - smart romp of a novel where The Big Chill meets Mary McCarthy's The Group, Kogan begins with the Red Book entries for a group of roommates from the class of 1989 who are all headed for their 20th reunion weekend just as the financial and professional walls are crumbling around them: a self - made, childless securities broker, recently pink - slipped, eager to conceive a baby before her fertility window closes; a blue - blood «artist» and former lesbian, married to a writer's - blocked male novelist, living disingenuously and beyond their means off a no - longer - viable trust fund; a former actress, the star of every school production, who has become the stay - at - home wife to a famous Hollywood director; the adopted war orphan, now a foreign correspondent clinging to her dying industry, whose war journalist husband has recently been killed.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z