IS A MIDWIFE-LED BIRTH CENTER RIGHT FOR ME?

You can see listings for midwife-led birth centers in the Chicago-area by choosing “I’M LOOKING FOR A MIDWIFE-LED BIRTH CENTER” in the drop down menu here.

 

The information on this page will help you think through whether a midwife-led birth center is the right setting for you. The more you learn about your options, the better you’ll feel about the choice you finally make. There’s a lot to consider, including the practical and emotional advantages and disadvantages of each setting, the scientific evidence on outcomes, how to find a provider, and what other options you have.

OVERVIEW

If you want to avoid the high-tech, high-intervention approach of many hospitals but don’t feel comfortable with home birth, a midwife-led birth center can offer a middle way. Birth centers support natural birth in a home-like setting. If issues arise during labor, a detailed plan for transfer to a hospital labor & delivery unit will be in place and transfer will be well coordinated.

There are two kinds of midwife-led birth centers: freestanding and in-hospital. There are currently three freestanding birth centers in the Chicago area: The Birth Center at PCC; The Birth Center of Chicago; and the Burr Ridge Birth Center.  You can learn more about these options here. (Be aware that many hospital “birthing centers” are not run by midwives. These may have appealing home-like décor, but the approach to care is likely to be the same as in a typical hospital labor & delivery unit.)

There are many practical and emotional advantages and disadvantages that you’ll want to consider as you decide whether a midwife-led birth center is right for you. (Scroll down to see Considerations.)

A midwife-led birth center is just as safe as a hospital as long as you are low-risk, and you are less likely to have interventions than low-risk women who plan hospital births. (Scroll down to The Research Says to see a summary of the research. You can also go directly to a more in-depth discussion of the evidence by clicking here.)

If you decide you might be interested in a midwife-led birth center, research your options. There are a handful of midwife-led birth centers in the Chicago area. Depending on how far you’re willing to travel, you may have several birth centers to choose from. (Scroll down to see Choosing a Midwife-Led Birth Center.)

And if you decide a midwife-led birth center isn’t quite right for you, you have other good options. (Scroll down to see Alternatives to Consider.)

CONSIDERATIONS

Each birth setting has advantages and disadvantages. Different people will weigh those differently. You need to sort through what matters most to you. Here are some considerations that may help you decide whether a midwife-led birth center is or isn’t right for you.

RIGHT FOR YOU? NOT RIGHT FOR YOU?

PHILOSOPHY OF CARE

Birth center-based midwives generally view low-risk birth as a natural, healthy process that is safest and most satisfying without routine interventions. They expect you to be a partner in your own care. If this philosophy resonates with you, a midwife-led birth center could be a good fit.

If you view birth as being best safeguarded by medical technology and if you are comfortable with the use of routine interventions to actively manage labor and birth, a hospital birth might be a better fit for you.

SURROUNDINGS

Birth centers generally have home-like decor, including kitchen facilities, a lounge area for friends and family, and a place for your partner to sleep.

Even the most home-like birth center will not have the comfort and familiarity of your own home. You will be a guest in a space that is not your own. You will share public spaces (kitchen, lounge, etc.) with other families. Compared to being at home, your family and friends may have limited space to hang out with you during your labor.

FEELINGS

You may feel safer and more relaxed in the home-like setting of a birth center than you would in the more clinical environment of a hospital labor & delivery unit. Feeling relaxed and safe can make birth easier, faster and less painful. If the idea of an out-of-hospital birth just feels right to you, listening to your intuition can be empowering and liberating.

As compared to a freestanding (out-of-hospital birth center), you or your partner may feel safer in a hospital where high-tech support is right at hand without any need to travel. You may feel safer and more relaxed in your own home, knowing that you will not have to drive to the birth center in labor and then drive home again after birth.

MANAGING PAIN

You can move, eat and drink, bathe and choose the position you labor in. That freedom tends to make pain more manageable. Midwife-led birth centers typically offer labor tubs; laboring in water can be an effective way to manage pain. Birth centers generally provide birthing bars, rocking chairs, birth balls or other equipment that can help you labor effectively and manage your pain without medication. Pain medication, such as narcotics and nitrous oxide, may also be available.

If you decide in labor that you want an epidural, you will transfer to a hospital labor & delivery unit. At all Chicago-area birth centers, you will transfer under the continued care of your midwife.

WHO TAKES CARE OF YOU

In Illinois, your birth in a midwife-led birth center will be attended by a certified nurse midwife (CNM). CNMs have extensive training in their field and are experts in normal birth. They are trained in the midwifery model of care, which is personal, holistic and family-centered. CNMs are expert at helping you labor effectively and manage pain without medications. CNMs who practice in midwife-led birth centers have considerable autonomy to practice the midwifery model of care.

Doctors do not routinely attend births at any of the Chicago-area birth centers. If you will feel more comfortable being cared for by a doctor, you should consider a hospital birth.

SUPPORT IN LABOR

A staff midwife will be with you from the time you arrive at the birth center until several hours after your baby is born. Assistant midwives or nurses will likely also care for you, all of whom will be expert in supporting natural childbirth. Most birth centers have liberal policies about who can be with you during your labor and delivery—for instance, family, friends, a doula, etc.

-

POLICIES & ROUTINES

Midwife-led birth centers tend to be very flexible in their rules and routines. You will have freedom to eat and drink, move instinctually in labor, and deliver in the position that feels right to you. Birth center midwives are very patient and will generally allow labor to continue at its own pace as long as mother and baby are doing well and progress is being made.

-

INTERVENTION RATES

You are less likely to have routine interventions—including C-section, induction, episiotomy, and pain medication—than low-risk women who plan a hospital birth. C-section rates for women who plan to birth in a midwife-led birth centers are very low.

-

SAFETY

If you are generally healthy and experiencing a low-risk pregnancy and expect an uncomplicated labor and birth, planning a birth in a midwife-led birth center is just as safe for you as planning a birth with a doctor in the labor & delivery unit of a hospital. (See "The Research Says" below.) If you choose a freestanding birth center (outside of a hospital), you and your baby won’t be exposed to the illnesses found in the hospital.

If you are not low-risk, a birth center may not be as safe for you as the hospital. Birth centers therefore only accept low-risk women.

CONTINUITY OF CARE

If you decide you want pain medication or if your labor becomes complicated, your transfer to a labor & delivery unit will be coordinated by your midwife. Unlike most home birth practitioners, she will have hospital privileges and can continue to care for you in collaboration with hospital doctors.

If your labor is very long, the shift may change and a new midwife may take over your care. If you develop risk factors or complications in pregnancy or labor, your midwife will either collaborate with a doctor to take care of you or your care will be transferred to a doctor in the labor & delivery unit.

GETTING THERE & TRANSFER

If your labor becomes complicated or if you decide you want pain medication, the transfer to a hospital labor & delivery unit is likely to be shorter and more seamless than if you had planned a home birth.

You will have to drive to the birth center once your labor starts. Because there are only a handful of midwife-led birth centers in the Chicago-area, you may have to travel quite a distance. If you decide you want pain medication or your labor becomes complicated, you will have to transfer to a hospital labor & delivery unit.

PRENATAL CARE

Midwives can generally spend longer with you at your prenatal visits than doctors.

Prenatal visits at a midwife-led birth center may not be as long as with home birth providers. Because there are only a few midwife-led birth centers in the Chicago area, you may have to travel quite a distance for your prenatal care.

AFTER DELIVERY

Unless you or your baby have any complications, you will be left undisturbed to bond with your baby after the birth. You will not be separated from your baby even for the newborn wellness exam. You will have support from your midwife and birth center staff to help with breastfeeding and baby care. Staff are expert at helping you breastfeed. Visiting policies for friends and family tend to be very liberal. Depending on the birth center you choose, you may have the option to go home sooner than if you had chosen a hospital birth.

If you like the idea of having a longer postpartum stay, during which you are supported and cared for by staff, you may prefer a hospital birth. At some in-hospital midwife-led birth centers, you will need to move to another part of the hospital a few hours after your baby is born. In that case, your sleep may be interrupted by frequent checkups.

COST

Birth in a midwife-led birth center is less expensive than hospital birth.

Not all health insurance covers midwife-led birth centers. You may have to pay more out of pocket for a birth center than for a hospital birth.

THE RESEARCH SAYS . . .

There is a significant body of research suggesting that outcomes for women who choose midwife-led birth centers are as good as those for low-risk women who choose hospital birth, including rates of perinatal mortality (babies dying around the time of birth).

Women who choose birth centers also have lower rates of interventions, including:

  • cesarean birth
  • induction and augmentation of labor
  • episiotomy
  • epidural

You can learn more about the research here.

CHOOSING A MIDWIFE-LED BIRTH CENTER

Once you decide that you might be interested in having your baby in a midwife-led birth center, plan to meet with staff midwives at a couple of different birth centers. You are looking for providers you trust. This is also a good way to test whether your choice holds up as you begin to learn more.

Here are some prompts you may find helpful before and after your appointments. Pick the ones that seem important to you.

General questions for your provider:

  • What kind of birth do you see the most often?
  • What part of your job do you enjoy the most? What are you best at?
  • What do you think makes pregnancy and birth safer?
  • How likely is it that you would be the one actually attending my birth, and who else might end up being there?
  • How would you handle the situation if you recommended something to me and I ended up choosing a different option?
  • What kind of prenatal testing do you require? Recommend?
  • What do you do if I go past my due date?
  • Will a tub be available and do you ever use it for labor? For birth?
  • What is your cesarean birth rate?
  • What can I expect to pay out of pocket?

Questions specific to midwife-led birth centers:

  • What kind of health conditions would exclude me from giving birth at the birth center?
  • [For freestanding birth centers]: Where would we go for a non-emergency transfer to the hospital? And in an emergency? How long does it take to get there?
  • What kind of arrangement/relationship do you have with the back-up doctors?
  • Will you continue to care for me if I transfer?
  • Who can be with me during labor? How do you feel about doulas?
  • What pain management options will be available to me?
  • How long do families stay at the birth center after birth?
  • Is the birth center accredited by the Commission for the Accreditation of Birth Centers (CABC)?

Questions to ask yourself after an appointment:

  • Did you feel at ease?
  • Did you feel rushed?
  • Did you feel listened to?
  • Were your questions answered?
  • Did the provider ask your permission before touching you?
  • How did your partner feel?

It can take awhile to get to know and trust your provider. If after several months you start to have doubts, don’t hesitate to make a change.

ALTERNATIVES

If you are attracted to midwifery care but you or your partner would feel safer in a hospital, you have two options: either look for a midwife-led birth center that’s located within a hospital, or consider a hospital-based midwife practice. If it’s important to you to labor in familiar surroundings with the people you’ve chosen to be there, you might consider a home birth.

STILL NOT SURE?