Ethics and professional responsibility: Essential dimensions of planned home birth

Semin Perinatol. 2016 Jun;40(4):222-6. doi: 10.1053/j.semperi.2015.12.010. Epub 2016 Jan 21.

Abstract

Planned home birth is a paradigmatic case study of the importance of ethics and professionalism in contemporary perinatology. In this article we provide a summary of recent analyses of the Centers for Disease Control database on attendants and birth outcomes in the United States. This summary documents the increased risks of neonatal mortality and morbidity of planned home birth as well as bias in Apgar scoring. We then describe the professional responsibility model of obstetric ethics, which is based on the professional medical ethics of two major figures in the history of medical ethics, Drs. John Gregory of Scotland and Thomas Percival of England. This model emphasizes the identification and careful balancing of the perinatologist's ethical obligations to pregnant, fetal, and neonatal patients. This model stands in sharp contrast to one-dimensional maternal-rights-based reductionist model of obstetric ethics, which is based solely on the pregnant woman's rights. We then identify the implications of the professional responsibility model for the perinatologist's role in directive counseling of women who express an interest in or ask about planned home birth. Perinatologists should explain the evidence of the increased, preventable perinatal risks of planned home birth, recommend against it, and recommend planned hospital birth. Perinatologists have the professional responsibility to create and sustain a strong culture of safety committed to a home-birth-like experience in the hospital. By routinely fulfilling these professional responsibilities perinatologists can help to prevent the documented, increased risks planned home birth.

Keywords: Midwife; Planned home birth; Professional responsibility model of obstetric ethics.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Apgar Score
  • Delivery, Obstetric / ethics*
  • Delivery, Obstetric / standards
  • Ethics, Medical
  • Evidence-Based Medicine
  • Female
  • Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
  • Home Childbirth* / adverse effects
  • Home Childbirth* / ethics
  • Home Childbirth* / standards
  • Humans
  • Infant, Newborn
  • Midwifery / ethics*
  • Midwifery / standards
  • Moral Obligations
  • Natural Childbirth* / adverse effects
  • Natural Childbirth* / ethics
  • Natural Childbirth* / standards
  • Patient Safety / standards*
  • Pregnancy
  • Pregnant Women* / psychology
  • Professional Role
  • United States