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Movie Review: The Business of Being Bornsource: Cinematical by Kim Voynar Date: 1/16/08
I have to precede this review by saying up front that the topic of this
film -- the "business" of childbirth, the skyrocketing Cesarean section
rates in the United States, and the impact of managed births and
unnecessary childbirth
interventions on mothers and babies -- is a
topic near and dear to my heart. When I heard a while back that Ricki
Lake was involved in producing a documentary about homebirth and
midwifery, I was immediately intrigued. I recalled hearing through the
natural childbirth circle in Seattle that Lake had had a homebirth with
her second child, after a first birth in a hospital with all of what
many women have come to accept as the "usual" childbirth interventions,
and I was interested that she was now using her ability to reach women
through her talk show to advocate natural childbirth.
So to be
fair about my perspective going into this documentary: I am a mother of
five, and I have had babies in just about every way you can have them:
an induced hospital birth that resulted in a forceps delivery, a
caesarean section, and then three natural births with midwives, two at
home and the last in a hospital after six weeks in the hospital on
bedrest for preterm labor. I think it's safe to say I've had a lot of
experience with childbirth in its various iterations, but those
experiences are, of course, my personal experiences. Nonetheless, the
impact of my natural births in particular has necessarily shaded the
view I'm likely to have of any movie that concerns the topic of natural
birth -- but I also think that anyone watching a film like this is
going to come to it with their particular biases in place. Now you know
mine. Exec producer Lake enlisted director Abby Epstein to help her
make a documentary about childbirth in the United States, and a
documentary on this subject couldn't be more timely. The film presents
some shocking stats about the business of childbirth in the United
States, many of which I was familiar with from my own research on birth
over the past decade. The film starts out by telling us that in every
other developed nation in the world -- including the five with the
lowest infant mortality rates (Japan, Singapore, Sweden, Finland and
Norway) midwives are the primary source of care for 70% of birthing
mothers. The United States stands alone among developed nations, with
only 8% of births attended by midwives.
Epstein does a thorough
job of dissecting the cold, hard facts about the history of modern
childbirth that's led us to a place where nearly one-third of American
births are Cesarean sections, and makes solid case against the OB/GYNs
who primarily view birth as an emergency waiting to happen rather than
a natural process most of the time. If all these interventions, all
this fetal monitoring, induction of labors with pitocin, epidurals and
elective Cesareans are really about ensuring that more births have a
"happy outcome" -- meaning a live, healthy baby and mother -- then why,
Epstein asks, is the mortality rate for infants in the United States
among the worst in the industrialized world, with a death rate of
nearly five babies per 1,000 births?
To get the answers,
Epstein looks to the international community of natural birth
advocates, including OB/GYN researcher Michel Odent, the "godfather" of
natural childbirth, whose research on natural birth and water birth is
well-known and frequently cited in the natural birth community, and Ina
May Gaskin, one of the most well-known midwives in the United States,
and a frequent lecturer on midwifery and home birth. She also talks to
Dr. Marsden Wagner, former director of Women's and Children's Health
for the World Health Organization,and her own OB/GYN, Dr. Jacques
Moritz at Saint Luke's Roosevelt Hospital, who actively supports
Epstein in her journey to seek a natural homebirth (a decision she
reached after she unexpectedly ended up with her pregnancy and birth
playing a key role in the arc of the film); Dr. Moritz becomes
Epstein's midwife's backup in the case of an emergency.
Epstein,
the pregnant women who are her subjects, and the natural childbirth
advocates she interviews raise a plethora of questions, including why
insurance companies often balk at paying for midwifery care, birth
center births and homebirth, when a hospital birth is both
significantly more expensive (in New Hampshire, we learn, a routine
hospital birth with no complications runs $14,000, versus $4,000 for a
normal birth with a midwife -- which includes all prenatal and post
natal care) and statistically far more likely to result in an
undesirable outcome for both mother and baby. If managed births in
hospitals and all these interventions aren't resulting in better
outcomes for mothers and babies and cost so much more to boot, Epstein
asks, what's really going on here with the business of childbirth in
the United States?
She brings out some data that may hide at
least some of the answers: that Cesarean section is the most commonly
performed surgery in the US, to the tune of $14 billion a year (the
Cesarean rate in 1970 was 5.5%, in 2004 it was 29.1 percent, and it's
over 40% at many hospitals). Litigation is key too -- in a 1999 survey,
82% of physicians said they performed a Cesarean section to avoid a
negligence claim, and many midwives and birth centers have had to shut
down because of the soaring cost of malpractice insurance. Convenience
is a factor, too; the film discusses the rising trend in "designer"
births -- planned Cesareans where the doctor performs a tummy-tuck on
mom at the same time, and Dr. Michael Brodman, Chief OB/GYN at New York
City's Mount Sinai Hospital, in an interview for the film, cites a
study that revealed the peak hours for Cesearean section are 4PM and
10PM. It's obvious," Brodman says, " that four in the afternoon is
'It's late in the day, I don't know what's going on here, I want to get
out of here;' and the ten o'clock at night is, 'I don't want to be up
all night.'"
The convenience of doctors over what's best for
mothers and babies is also an issue in the position most hospitals want
women to give birth in -- on her back, with feet up in stirrups -- the
worst possible position for birthing a baby. Medical anthropologist
Robbie Davis-Floyd, interviewed in the film, notes, "Putting a mother
flat on her back literally makes the pelvis smaller, makes it much more
difficult for the woman to use her stomach muscles to push, and
therefore makes it much more likely for an episiotomy to be cut, or for
forceps to be used, or for the vacuum extractor to be used."
Obestetrician Dr. Ronaldo Cortes demonstrates how the woman on the
birthing bed, with her feet up in stirrups, is the preferred position
for most doctors because it's what's easiest for them -- not what's
best for birthing the baby -- and then shows the low stool he uses to
catch babies with the mother in the much more effective squatting
position he prefers to have mothers use.
This film isn't just
boring statistics and interviews with experts, though. Epstein follows
several women in New York City through their pregnancies and
homebirths, and shows what natural births -- including Lake's second
birth, at home in her own bathtub -- really look like. For women,
especially, who have never seen a picture of birth outside the typical
hospital births full of interventions that are shown in movies and
shows like "A Birth Story," seeing what a natural birth really looks
like is a revelation. The film shows what happens when a
midwife-attended birth suddenly needs intervention, too -- Epstein's
own plans for a peaceful home birth are shattered when she goes into
labor early with her baby in breech position, and her back-up OB/GYN
has to deliver her baby, Mattias, with a Cesarean section.
To be
perfectly fair, this is not a film that sets out to give equal weight
to hospital births with interventions; Lake and Epstein are clearly
working from the assumption that women are exposed to plenty of
information from that side of the homebirth versus hospital birth,
midwifery versus OB/GYN discussion, and have set out here to provide
primarily information about natural childbirth. Epstein's own birth is
a bittersweet conclusion to the tale that ultimately serves to
underscore the point of the film -- there was probably nothing that
could have prevented the need for her son to be born by Cesarean
section, but while she's happy that Mattias came out okay in spite of
his early arrival, Epstein admits that the nature of his birth
disrupted both bonding and breastfeeding, and that she feels cheated
out of the birth she'd hoped to have.
The Business of Being Born
currently has a limited theatrical run in New York, Los Angeles, San
Francisco and Seattle, and will be available to women everywhere
through Netflix in February. Check out the film's official website for further information.
Copyright 2007. All Rights Reserved. |
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