Objective: To describe birth and neonatal outcome in women initiating a homebirth and cared for by a caseload midwifery teams with affiliation to a university hospital. Further, to describe the rate, time, and reasons for transfer between home and hospital. Design: A descriptive study using prospectively collected registry data on initiated homebirths. Results: A total of 268 women initiated a homebirth and 192 actually gave birth at home, equal to 1.99% of all births in Aarhus Municipality. The majority of the women who initiated a homebirth experienced a vaginal birth (92%) regardless of birthplace. Approximately 28% of the women were transferred from home to hospital during or after birth and 72% of the women had a homebirth as planned. ...
University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Health.Background: Homebirth is an uncommon event in Aus...
Objective: To describe the lived experience of being a home birth midwife in the Nordic countries. ...
This is a descriptive prospective hospital based study, conducted in the period from June 2003 to F...
Background: In the Netherlands women with low-risk pregnancies are free to choose where to give birt...
Objective: To describe the outcomes of intended home birth in the practices of certified nurse-midwi...
Introduction Women planning a home birth are transferred to hospital in case of complications or el...
A large scale study on maternity care in the Netherlands, describing many facets of midwifery care i...
Objective: to examine the reasons for the variation in home-birth rates between midwifery practices....
Objective: Identification of midwifery-related factors influencing the varied percentage of home bir...
Objective: To report maternal and neonatal outcomes for Australian women planning a publicly funded ...
Ruth Zielinski,1 Kelly Ackerson,2 Lisa Kane Low1,3,4 1School of Nursing, University of Michigan, An...
OBJECTIVE: To examine the percentage of women transferred, reasons for transfer and factors associat...
Objectives: In the Netherlands, approximately one-third of births are planned home births, mostly su...
BACKGROUND: Continuity models of midwifery care are rare in Sweden, despite its well-known positive ...
Objective: To investigate the relation between the intended place of birth (home or hospital) and pe...
University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Health.Background: Homebirth is an uncommon event in Aus...
Objective: To describe the lived experience of being a home birth midwife in the Nordic countries. ...
This is a descriptive prospective hospital based study, conducted in the period from June 2003 to F...
Background: In the Netherlands women with low-risk pregnancies are free to choose where to give birt...
Objective: To describe the outcomes of intended home birth in the practices of certified nurse-midwi...
Introduction Women planning a home birth are transferred to hospital in case of complications or el...
A large scale study on maternity care in the Netherlands, describing many facets of midwifery care i...
Objective: to examine the reasons for the variation in home-birth rates between midwifery practices....
Objective: Identification of midwifery-related factors influencing the varied percentage of home bir...
Objective: To report maternal and neonatal outcomes for Australian women planning a publicly funded ...
Ruth Zielinski,1 Kelly Ackerson,2 Lisa Kane Low1,3,4 1School of Nursing, University of Michigan, An...
OBJECTIVE: To examine the percentage of women transferred, reasons for transfer and factors associat...
Objectives: In the Netherlands, approximately one-third of births are planned home births, mostly su...
BACKGROUND: Continuity models of midwifery care are rare in Sweden, despite its well-known positive ...
Objective: To investigate the relation between the intended place of birth (home or hospital) and pe...
University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Health.Background: Homebirth is an uncommon event in Aus...
Objective: To describe the lived experience of being a home birth midwife in the Nordic countries. ...
This is a descriptive prospective hospital based study, conducted in the period from June 2003 to F...