I hope that those that do are thoroughly
educated by their midwife or doula and are sure that's what they want.
Not exact matches
Today
midwives are more
educated, well - trained, and increasingly supported
by their physician colleagues.
Evidently, they have failed to grasp the central lesson of both studies: homebirth can only be safe when practiced
by highly
educated, highly trained
midwives under rigorously controlled conditions.
BTW all
midwives are formally
educated at universities in accordance with EU regulation (a law) and practice within strict scope of duties which is also regulated
by laws.
Two university
educated, licensed
midwives attend each homebirth and it is backed up
by the main maternity hospital.
Homebirth in the UK for women * who have never had a baby * but whose current pregnancy has no risk factors of any kind and who are being cared for
by highly
educated and highly trained
midwives increases the risk of perinatal death and brain damage.
Uk birthplace study «Homebirth in the UK for women who have had a previous completely uncomplicated pregnancy, whose current pregnancy has no risk factors of any kind, and who are being cared for
by highly
educated and highly trained
midwives may be safe, so long as those
midwives adhere to the very strict criteria in the study.
Inspired
by the home birth of his son (which also included a
midwife and birth doula), he created The Dadvocate in 2014 to help dads (and moms) be
educated and informed about the many decisions and dynamic changes that come with pregnancy and birth, all the while using humor and raw insight to show the birth world and parenthood from a dad's point of view.
If you were lucky to be in a city, you may have been helped
by a licensed
midwife (European cities started
educating and registering
midwives around the fifteenth century); if you were in the rural outback, you may have had an uneducated but experienced
midwife or a female family friend.
They claim to care about women but actively take steps to deny them the information they need to have truly informed consent and work to make them less safe
by not demanding that homebirth
midwives be adequately
educated.
Home birth in the UK and the Netherlands is practiced
by university trained
midwives who are required to be
educated a certain way (no PEP process or distance learning) and licensed.
The author shares that «
midwives are illegal in some states,» and although it might be assumed
by the more
educated reader that the author is referring specifically to non-nurse
midwives, this point certainly isn't clear.
Books like Ina May's Guide to Breastfeeding
by Ina May Gaskin (a famed
midwife) and Great Expectations: The Essential Guide to Breastfeeding
by Marianne Neifert MD are good places to start if you're looking to be thoroughly
educated on the subject.