We watched a documentary film the other night, and our minds were changed forever. The Business of Being Born had actually been recommended to me by multiple friends and acquaintances, so I was curious to see what all the fuss was about. Dan and I are so glad that we had the opportunity to watch this movie before we set foot in the hospital for labor and delivery in a few weeks. It was a true eye-opener and I feel strongly that every woman who is expecting, as well as every woman who plans on giving birth someday, should watch it.
Produced by Ricki Lake, the documentary explores the contemporary experience of childbirth in the United States and turns a critical eye to the American health care system which emphasizes drugs and costly interventions, often at the expense of the best possible outcome for mothers and their babies. The film has an obvious bias in that it documents several home birth experiences assisted by midwives and shows them in a much more positive light than hospital births in which mothers are riddled with drugs and various forms of intervention. It’s a very clearly anti-hospital perspective, but the documentary does put forth a strong argument with very solid facts and supporting evidence:
The U.S. stands alone in the developed world in its physician-driven birth system — midwives attend over 70% of the births in Europe and Japan, versus 8% in the U.S. While the U.S. spends twice as much money per birth as any other country, it has the second worst newborn death rate and one of the highest maternal mortality rates among developed nations.
The film points out that the medical industry has convinced the majority of American women that they “don’t know how to birth,” creating a culture of fear — hence why women these days are so afraid of birth and the pain associated with it that they will cling to anything that helps diminish that fear, including pain medication and all sorts of intervention. In the past few decades, there has been alarming increase in the number of women who have Caesarean sections, with the most recent statistic showing that C-sections make up a third of of all births in this country. While in some cases, C-sections are necessary due to any of a number of possible complications, the reality is that most of them are unnecessary and could have been prevented. OBs are basically surgeons, and since they are often more knowledgeable about surgery than natural birth, C-sections are an easy way for them to speed up the delivery process and get the mother and baby in and out of the hospital as fast as possible. Litigation concerns also drive doctors to perform C-sections as soon as the slightest complication surfaces. These days in the U.S., childbirth is treated as a medical emergency rather than a natural occurrence.
The above clip from the documentary in particular stuck in my mind: it shows how the use of one drug can lead to another, and yet another… creating an inevitable domino effect. Pitocin is very commonly used to increase the intensity and frequency of contractions. This also means increased pain for the laboring mother, which often leads to her getting an epidural anesthetic to help alleviate the pain. But the epidural often slows labor, leading to a perceived need for more pitocin; this cycle of pitocin and epidural (along with any of a number of other drugs) may well continue until the baby’s blood and oxygen flow is compromised, leading to an emergency C-section. The doctor is then credited with saving the mother and baby, when the domino effect of all these intervention drugs may have been what actually contributed to or caused the emergency.
Overall, I thought it was a very powerful documentary, and it was really well put together, interviewing several women and documenting a number of births. It also gives a brief background of the history of birth in America, and how the medical industry has changed the childbirth experience within the past century. You can see the full trailer below.
On a personal level, Dan and I were really forced to rethink our birth plan after watching this film. After reading all my pregnancy books and listening to the labor and delivery experience from other mothers, I had kind of accepted without question that I would get an epidural and whatever other pain relief medication when it came time to deliver my baby — it just seemed like it was what all women did. I never really thought about all of the adverse consequences that may come about from going along with all of those intervention measures that the hospital throws at you. Isn’t it funny that we as Americans spend so much time researching certain things, such as what latest camera to purchase, but don’t give nearly as much thought and consideration to how we give birth to our children?
For us, it was a real wakeup call and we have decided that we are going to try as much as possible to have a natural birth. But before I go further into the reasoning of why, I want to preface this by saying that I absolutely do not think that not having a natural birth makes a person any less of a woman or a mother than one who does. In the same vein, I know I need to be realistic and be aware that you can go into labor with your heart set on a natural birth, but end up needing medical intervention or even an emergency C-section if a truly severe complication arises. My mother went to Lamaze classes throughout her first pregnancy when I was in her belly, preparing to have a natural birth, but ended up with preeclampsia (high blood pressure during pregnancy) and had to schedule an emergency C-section before my due date even came around. Due to the nature of C-sections performed back then, VBACs (vaginal birth after C-section) were not an option for her and she had to have all three of her subsequent children by scheduled C-sections as well — and she is the best mother I could have ever wished for, and I admire and respect her.
But I can’t help but feel that there is something inherently wrong with the picture when I see expectant mothers talking about how they will absolutely be getting that epidural when it comes time for them to go to the hospital. How can you be so sure that it will be necessary when you aren’t even in labor yet? Are you just planning on getting it because the hospital advises that you should? I feel like when you go into labor requesting all these drugs and medical intervention at the outset, you’re already setting yourself up to fight an uphill battle in terms of having a regular vaginal birth. You’re not even supposed to get an epidural until you are at least 5cm dilated, but not all hospitals abide by this rule and I’ve heard stories of women who had the epidural administered prematurely and they ultimately ended up in the operation room for an emergency C-section. (According to a statistic I read, getting an epidural any time before you are 5cm dilated triples your odds of needing a C-section.) A lot of people forget that C-sections are major surgery, and while hospitals have a lot of experience with them (apparently moreso than with natural births these days), it still poses a danger to both mother and baby and should be avoided in favor of a regular vaginal birth, unless absolutely necessary. Having a C-section also interrupts the release of oxytocin, a hormone that is released in natural childbirth which helps trigger an immediate bond with your baby and also stimulates breastfeeding. As I mentioned above, my mother had a C-section for all four of her children, so in the back of my head, I’ve always been aware that it could be a possibility for when I have a baby — but I’d like to avoid it if at all possible.
Another point that the documentary only briefly mentioned — that Dan and I ended up discussing further in detail afterwards — is that the rise in the use of these intervention drugs coincides with the rise in cases of ADHD and autism in children in the past few decades. There’s no real evidence that shows a direct link between the two yet, so it could be purely coincidental and more due to the fact that more and more women are giving birth when they are older… but we were discussing how we honestly wouldn’t be surprised if in the future, they find that there’s a direct correlation between such disorders and medicated births.
I know that this is starting to sound very anti-medical establishment and I’m making hospitals look like the “bad guys” for pushing interventions on women, but this is not the case. I have a lot of respect for the doctors and nurses that work in the labor & delivery units in hospitals (I know a few myself), and I think it’s amazing how every day they assist in bringing new lives into the world. I’m grateful that we live in a time when we’re equipped with more knowledge and medical advancements than ever to safely deliver babies, and thank goodness for the doctors who know how to administer an intervention when there are emergency situations that necessitate one. While The Business of Being Born seems to push home births, I personally don’t think I could ever do a home birth — I’m too paranoid that something will go wrong, and a home birth is just in general a little too New Age for me. I will likely always rely on a hospital for labor and delivery (although I may consider a birthing center in the future), and it would be silly of me to bash them when I am going to be completely in their care.
I do think it’s important, however, to find a hospital that is respectful and supportive of your birthing plan. Thankfully, the hospital we plan to deliver at is Kaiser Walnut Creek, which has a very progressive midwifery program; Kaiser hospitals in the Bay Area are known in general to set the standard for other Kaiser branches around the country, so we are pretty confident that we are in good hands. The hospital will assign us a midwife when we arrive to deliver, and an OB will only be brought in if there’s a complication or we request it. Kaiser Walnut Creek has a low C-section rate, and are known to be pro-natural birth and I’ve heard that they let you labor and push at your own pace, without trying to rush you with drugs and intervention. It’s such a relief to know that they will respect our hopes to have as natural a birth as possible, so that we won’t have to expend our energy putting up a fight in the eleventh hour.
We were able to conceive this baby without intervention, and she has been growing healthy and strong the past eight months in the womb without intervention, so it only makes sense that the best way for her to come into this world would be without unnatural intervention. Again, I know that there are so many unpredictable and unknown factors that may come into play in the delivery of our child, and although I may dream of a natural birth, I’m not necessarily going to get what I want when the time comes. I know I need to prepare myself for such circumstances, and if it truly comes down to a life-threatening situation for the baby, I will of course gratefully accept medical intervention. But with nearly 33% of women delivering their babies by C-section today (compared to the less than 5% back in 1965), I can’t help but question how many of those were truly unavoidable and how much of the intervention that is pushed onto mothers is really necessary.  I know that labor and delivery will be the most difficult, painful, and challenging experience I’ve encountered yet, but I just want to make sure that we’ve done as much as possible to have our ducks in a row to make it as smooth, healthy, and safe a delivery for both myself and for our daughter.
Kathy
February 24, 2011 @ 9:09 am
You always write such insightful posts! I think that is awesome that you are planning to go natural with your birth and using a midwife. My sister had natural births for all of her kids and she said it is the greatest feeling in the world, like she just climbed Mount Everest!!
Best of luck and whatever happens, I know you will rock that birth! You’re already such an awesome mom!!
Misono
February 25, 2011 @ 9:18 am
Thank you Kathy! That’s so awesome that your sister had all of her babies naturally, and is so inspiring for me to hear. You never know what kind of a curveball nature might throw at you, so I know I have to be prepared that the birth may not go as I want it to and you can only plan so much for it… but I really hope to do my best with it. I hope that I can rock this birth, too! 🙂
Ann Helen
February 24, 2011 @ 1:35 pm
Misono, you’re the second person telling me about this documentary and how it really changed your perspective on giving birth. I should watch it sometime! It is really inspiring to me to see how thoroughly you think about things, and how concerned you are about doing what is best for the baby. Regardless of what you end up doing, I think you’re an amazing mom already! I hope I can be as good a mom as you someday! 🙂
Misono
February 25, 2011 @ 9:23 am
Ann Helen, I think you should watch it — I think you will like it, and learn a lot from it just as I did. 🙂
I’d actually love to hear your perspective sometime on how you feel American births compare to European births, since you have a lot of friends and family who have given birth in Europe, where they are said to use more midwives, less intervention, and have more natural births. Were you surprised or shocked to see how different the birth experience is between America and European countries?
I also heard “Pregnant in America” is another good documentary to watch. It’s next on my list! 🙂
Ashly H.
February 24, 2011 @ 3:47 pm
My mom had all 5 of us naturally (being the nurse she is) and she always waited for a while before going to the hospital after her water broke. 🙂 (she cleaned the house instead) Where as my sister had her first 2 children via epidural and her little girl naturally. Whatever your decision, you’ll be a great mother. I’m terrified of needles so I’m pretty sure I’ll take the pain ahahahaha
Misono
February 25, 2011 @ 9:29 am
That’s awesome that your mom had all five of her children by natural birth! These days, they say that you have to prepare for the worst and be ready to accept intervention, which I think to some degree is true, but hearing that your mom had 100% natural births is really inspiring to me and gives me hope! I know that the true strength of being a mother-to-be lies not so much in the determination to have a natural birth, but to have the ability to roll with whatever nature decides to throw at you and be able to do what is best for the health and wellbeing of yourself and the baby. So if it comes down to needing some emergency intervention, I’m not going to be stubborn and refuse it. But it’s important to remember that hospitals always have an agenda, and I do want to be able to make the judgment call of whether certain drugs they offer me are truly necessary, and be able to fight it if they are not. (I’m terrified of needles as well, and that epidural is a big one! One of the other reasons I’d like to avoid it if at all possible.)
We’ll see how things go! 🙂
beccastewart via Livejournal
February 24, 2011 @ 3:53 pm
Okay, I must watch this.
Does your baby girl have a name yet? Are you sharing?
Misono
February 25, 2011 @ 9:16 am
I really recommend it! As with a lot of documentaries, you should take it with a grain of salt and know that it has a pretty strong bias. But I think it makes some pretty valid, powerful points. There are some things they encourage in the documentary that you might find aren’t for you (i.e. for myself, home birthing), but you can choose to take what you want from it. Even if you end up not agreeing with certain things, you can at least take from it a different perspective on birth. 🙂
As for the baby name, I think we’ve finally decided! Although I think we are going to keep it a secret to people outside our immediate family, just so we can keep an element of surprise for when she’s born. 🙂 And also for that very slight chance that “she” ends up being a boy – our childbirth preparation teacher kept warning us that gender ultrasounds are only 90% correct (albeit those are still pretty good odds), and all these strangers are coming up to me these days and asking me, “You’re having a boy, aren’t you?” It’s freaking me out! (Not that I would be unhappy with a boy – I just have all these baby girl clothes that I’ve accumulated, and the baby would have nothing to wear!)
Brian
February 25, 2011 @ 9:26 am
I’m not going to even attempt to contemplate the notion of giving birth since I’m not equipped to do so.
But movie type documentaries on this issues tend to raise a bit of a red flag for me especially if they are focused around anecdotes and not statistical science.
http://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/?p=64
But what this DOES show is that you’re being the concerned mother that I’m sure all new mothers are. For what it’s worth- while babies are always seen as precious fragile things, they are surprisingly resilient and robust bundles of fun. You and Dan will be fantastic parents.
Misono
February 25, 2011 @ 9:53 am
It’s true that the documentary was pretty one-sided — they showed a number of natural births with midwives with the mothers sharing about how empowered they felt, while they showed mothers who had been drugged up or had to have C-sections talking about how robbed they felt of their birth and how they felt like failures. They follow a single midwife from NYC around, and so it’s definitely not an all-encompassing look at midwifery – there’s only so much you can get from seeing a few birth stories. It’s important to be aware that you need to take everything you see and hear from these documentary movies with a grain of salt, since they do use a lot of human stories and anecdotes rather than science to emotionally engage and win over the viewer.
There are some dismal statistics about birth in the United States, though, and it’s really alarming to me that one in three women are delivering their babies by C-section, whether elective or emergency. As the writer of the article that you post here says, the doctors may truly think a lot of these C-sections are necessary and that they are doing what’s best for the baby and the mother. But I really question the need for so much intervention these days. It may not be fair or appropriate to compare to other the childbirth statistics of other countries, but I think there is definitely something America can learn from the other developed nations are doing much better on the labor and delivery front without nearly as many medicated births.
There are some things that I didn’t agree with in the documentary, such as how much they were pushing home births – I agree with the author of the article that the idea does not suit my personal taste, and I think it’s dangerous. My boss has repeatedly told us a story about her friend who lost a baby during a home birth, and I just think that it’s not worth the loss, trauma, and grief to really be so stubborn in your determination to have as natural a birth as possible. I think in this day and age, you should give birth in a hospital or a birthing center if the facilities are available to you, so that the resources are there to assist with any emergency situations that may arise. If some women are set on home births, more power to them, but I don’t think it is for me.
The birthing is experience is such an unknown, and I feel like no amount of childbirth preparation classes can really 100% prepare us for what is to come, since it can be so unpredictable! But I do really hope for the best outcome for us and for the baby. Thanks so much for the encouragement and for sharing your two cents, Brian! 🙂
Pat
February 27, 2011 @ 2:48 am
Watched this movie after you suggested it. Quite an empowering documentary!
Misono
February 27, 2011 @ 5:18 pm
Yay, I’m glad you watched it! I think it’s good to know all of your options and go into the hospital well-informed. Whatever type of birth you have, you’re going to be such an awesome mommy. ♥
Estella
February 27, 2011 @ 9:02 pm
Super interesting and informative post, Misono! I slightly overheard you talking about this at work a few days ago and just got a chance to read your post. Thanks for sharing your findings, and it’s probably something right up my anti-establishment/re-evaluating-the-standard-norm alley. :))) I hope that your birthing will go as you wish, and that it all goes well! You know I’m not all that good at baby-type stuff, but I really do hope that it all works out for you and your family! <3
Misono
February 28, 2011 @ 8:20 pm
Thank you for your support, Estella! 🙂 I really hope it works out well, too, although I’m trying to be realistic as possible and not go into it with too much expectations of an “ideal” natural birth.
I’ve always sort of been the type to go with the flow and just follow what I’ve been told, but I figured since giving birth to a new life is a pretty big task, I should take it pretty seriously and do enough research to make sure I’m educated and aware so that I won’t have any regrets.
I’ll miss you while I’m on maternity leave, but we’ll still see each other from time to time! 🙂
Tarrin
February 28, 2011 @ 12:36 pm
No matter what happens (because, as we all know, childbirth is pretty unpredictable!) I think you are a total badass for all of the investigation and inquiry you are doing! Pregnancy seems to be such an unsettled time filled with tons of questions and unknowns, so it would be so easy to “keep on keeping on” and not question anything you’re told. I really admire how you have plunged into this process headfirst and are not afraid to explore both sides of some very controversial issues — approaches which suggest to me that you will be a dedicated, adoring mother.
I actually don’t know the source of this quote, but when I read your post, it came to mind:
“You never know how strong you are… until being strong is the only choice you have.”
I hope you remember this when you’re in the thick of labor (you can do eeeet!), and I hope you that know that all of us at Wax, and even Jason and my mom will be cheering you on from afar 🙂
Misono
February 28, 2011 @ 8:25 pm
Thanks Tarrin! Your comments are always so supportive and encouraging, and I feel like talking to you about pregnancy and babies has really opened up my mind — you know so much more than me! You’re the first person that suggested cloth diapering to me, and I wouldn’t have really thought to do more research on it unless you had showed me what cool options there are out there! And you were also one of my friends who had mentioned this documentary, which really opened up our eyes. We’re so glad that we watched it!
You’re absolutely right that childbirth is pretty unpredictable so I just have to be prepared for any type of a situation. I like that quote — so many times during the pregnancy, I’ve hit walls of self-doubt and trepidation about whether I can really handle everything from labor & delivery to life with a newborn… but I don’t have much of a choice at this point! There’s no turning back now, and so I might as well be as prepared as possible, right? 🙂 I think doing as much reading and investigation as I can in these last couple months has been my way of coping and making myself feel a little more prepared for what lies ahead.
Thanks for sharing all of your invaluable knowledge and advice with me so far. You have so much great parenting/baby tips to impart (probably thanks to your awesome mom) – I know you will be 100x more of an amazing mother than me when the time comes. 🙂
Tarrin
February 28, 2011 @ 9:34 pm
Pshaw! You’re the true trailblazer in all of this! And I talk a big game, but for all I know, my first pregnancy will make me curl up in a ball and cry the whole time :-p
Bottom line: I can’t wait till you can give me advice in a couple of years! And baby play group… OMG, can’t wait 🙂
Misono
March 1, 2011 @ 8:09 pm
No, you will be a strong (but of course very loving) mommy! 😀 That will be so fun when we can have play dates! 🙂
bestest
March 2, 2011 @ 2:22 pm
Very interesting post! I agree with alot of what you’ve said– that C-sections are surgeries, which most people seem to forget, and over-used in the States– but I doubt that the rise of epidurals and other birthing drugs has anything to do with the rising incidence of autism. You probably know there was a large attack against child immunizations because people saw that the rise in administration of vaccines in children also correlated with the rising incidence of autism. We now know that that’s baloney (please immunize your child!). It’s much more probable that the rising incidence of autism is more due to the fact that diagnosing autism in children has become much, much better. There wasn’t even an established set of guidelines for child neurologists in diagnosing autism until fairly recently. Heck, we didn’t even know what autism really was until fairly recently, and there’s still so much to learn.
Brain disorders also don’t happen overnight. Behavioral diseases like autism involve a whole miswiring and restructuring of neural circuits during fetal development. Constant exposure to things like mercury during pregnancy can cause this but I don’t think this could really occur in a baby just because it was exposed to a drug for a few hours before birth. Brain development takes quite awhile. But having said that, a drug is a drug and drugs are rarely unaccompanied by side effects. I wouldn’t take or expose myself to a drug unless I had to (even over-the-counter drugs) so if you don’t get an epidural, good for you. But don’t feel like you’re risking your baby to a life of autism/ADHD because you get one, because I’m pretty sure that’s unlikely to happen with what we currently know.
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April 21, 2011 @ 4:47 pm
[…] the Pitocin, despite how much I dreaded the epidural-Pitocin cycle that I’d heard about in The Business of Being Born. I was unable to go back to sleep and just laid there, dazed for the next few hours, and at around […]