Yeah i had community team care, sounds like mine were a lot more supportive than yours! I was given the 70% figure too - you know that's 70% of those who DO transfer are first time mums, NOT 70% of homebirthers transfer. Sounds like they twisted that little statistic to scare you! About 20-40% of homebirthers transfer, the majority do so for analgesia options for a long labour which they don't have access to at home (epidural, pethidine etc. (my midwives had some morphine in my fridge but i didn't use it)). It's only around 8-14% who transfer for obstetric need (distressed baby, abruption etc.). Or at least this was the stats in 2005 when i was PG.
I don't know how i'd plan a breech to be honest. I have about 20 homebirthing friends and one of our more recent births was a catastrophic surprise breech at home and the babe ultimately died (very sad story - baby had no chin-to-chest reflex and got stuck with her chin up behind the pubic bone, and when they got her unstuck (more than 15 mins later) the placenta came right behind her head, and they think it might have detached before she got stuck, so clearly there was something going wrong before that point) and realistically a section at 39 weeks would probably have prevented all that, though to be fair at 39 weeks (and indeed at the outset of labour) she was head down and good to go, so they wouldn't have OFFERED a section. I have another friend who transferred from midwife centre to obs ward to have a section for a surprise breech. I don't know how i'd feel. Rationally i know women can birth breeches but when a baby you know has died of ANYTHING it changes your viewpoint of whatever it was, iykwim.
Sadly for most women the care in a breech case is only as good/experienced as the carer they have, and increasingly in the UK Obs and midwives do not see vaginal breech births and thus it IN FACT becomes more dangerous as the years roll on to attempt one. I'm so glad you could find a midwife who had the knowledge and experience and heart to care for you.
Bx


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I chose that for my first birth and am heading there for my second (any day now would be good, not that I'm over being pregnant at ALL). I loved the fact that in the room were me, my partner, the midwife and then our baby. So simple. I felt really lucky to have this choice, knowing that if needed I could be transferred to the hospital where I would get any specialist care I needed. It worked really well for us.


- people are so brow beaten and terrified by the medical profession that I eventually just gave up trying to explain myself - all I hit up against was peoples judgements and fears. With this baby I think i'll be much more prepared for peoples reactions, and maybe i'll manage to bring a few people around to my p.o.v. - you just never know!!

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