39 out of 41 people found the following comment useful :- A film about birthing at home; you will be surprised by what you see., 29 July 2007
Author:
shetreat from United States
This movie is terrific. I had my doubts when I learned it was produced
by and starring Ricki Lake, I admit. But it is sensitive, interesting,
intellectual, captivating, and incredibly moving. It was not
manipulative, but by the end, the entire audience was in tears.
The most important thing about this film is that it shows the public
what birth can be, for both the mother and baby. You see several
homebirths, nothing too intimate (unless you consider the incredible
post-birth high that somehow permeates the screen and affects the
viewer, to be too close for comfort). No dilating vaginas or body
fluids, sorry to disappoint. But what it does show is something that
almost no one, especially not doctors (I am one), get to see. A natural
birth with no intervention where things go right. Shocking! In my
medical training, I attended hundreds of births. I probably saw one or
two with no medical intervention in the hospital. My hospital birth was
normal, with no problems, but I had interventions despite having told
my OB (and mentor) that I didn't want any.
It does not idealize birth per se, except by showing how simple birth
can be without medicalization. But the volunteers of this midwife to be
filmed were not excluded if there is a problem; one of the births
requires transfer so you see how that is handled as well.
The film educates people about the history of birth in this country,
how things are done in other countries including Europe, and shows
statistics about birth (there are more than they include in the medical
literature) that will probably surprise a lot of people.
I wouldn't say that the film is about Ricki Lake. She shows up here and
there, and yes, she gives birth, but there are so many women followed
here, and so many experts in birth interviewed.
Dr. Michel Odent is one of them. He is a French OB/Gyn who attends
homebirths. He has done considerable research on birthing, and has
written multiple very intelligent books about it. He brings up the idea
that when a rat or a monkey has an epidural or C/S, they will not bond
with their babies. They will not breastfeed, they will not mother them,
they do not care for them. There will be no natural hypothalamic
oxytocin release, which causes a release of norepinephrine, dopamine,
prolactin, serotonin, that prepares a woman not only to breastfeed but
to bond. The oxytocin release in this situation will never be
replicated, even if the women breastfeeds or does infant massage (which
both do cause oxytocin release but not in the same amounts as if you
start off with this kick-off). As breastfeeding lowers breast cancer
rates in women in a dose related fashion, oxytocin release over time is
associated with a certain calm, lower levels of stress, but actually is
dose-related to lower levels of stroke and heart attack in the mothers.
So it is a long-term benefit of natural birth. This is touched upon in
the film, among many other interesting facts.
It is not surprising to discover that doing things the way women are
created to do them benefits both the mother and baby in so many
different ways. Part of why this movie is so important is that it
challenges the notion that man-made is better than the intricate design
of man from God or evolution or however you want to approach it. Many
people may not subscribe to it when it is stated like that, but in the
food we eat, the we feed our babies, the way we grow our food, the
chemicals we use in the environment, and the way we birth our babies,
we are saying that every single day.
Common sense says that man-made leaves a lot to be desired. Science is
proving this every day, in research about omega-3 requirements in
neurological and other conditions, in breastfeeding and oxytocin
literature preventing cancer/heart attack and stroke, to the benefits
of breastmilk for babies. This movie is a peek into how doing things as
nature intended is BETTER.
I don't feel I am exaggerating when I say that this is one of the most
important films of these times for both men and women. Everyone should
see it. You may not decide to have a homebirth afterwards, but you will
walk out better educated about birth and what is happening in the
hospital when you give birth.
21 out of 25 people found the following comment useful :- Real life experience before your eyes, 17 January 2008
Author:
ericpowers from California
Everyone in America should watch this film, especially fathers and
mothers-to-be.
As a father of two babies delivered by Caesarean section, my real life
experience reflects what this film presents. With a first pregnancy,
men like me might trust a maternity and birthing health care system
that obviously is accepted by everyone we know. As an engineer and
technologist, I am attracted to statistics and procedures, I am
attracted to managed systems and to logical decision-making. And I
understand that giving birth involves a lot of money, and that doctors,
hospitals and health care companies have a burden in how to run a
successful enterprise.
But the American birthing system is missing something very important...
our humanity, our sensitivity, our vulnerability. Ricki Lake and Abby
Epstein reveal the vulnerability of father, mother and child during
pregnancy, how easily we allow a managed system to make decisions in
the name of our well-being. When faced with an overwhelming majority of
our family and friends who know only one way to give birth, in a
hospital, there is little room for anything else.
This film challenges what we assume works, and informs us that there
are alternatives accepted everywhere else in the world but in the
United States. I pray that other mothers and fathers-to-be, for the
sake of their children's' psychological and emotional health, will step
up to the plate, become informed consumers about what is happening, and
consider a traditional birth, at home.
Your first step is to see this film.
9 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :- The Real Finale to Sex and the City!, 18 February 2008
Author:
livecompassion from United States
This film is full of life: humor, elation, disappointment, and the full
range of emotions that the birthing experience provides. It is
inspirational to women and partners and allows them to view different
births including the preparation. These hip, smart and endearing city
women and partners allow the viewers to share an important time of
their life. Giving women more choice in their ideal birthing experience
spares them from being surprised by the reality of hospital births. The
lack of support in the United States for birthing families is
surprising. This film is supportive, courageous and dares to challenge
ignorance in the delivery room.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- Eye-opening documentary, 8 July 2008
Author:
Roland E. Zwick (magneteach@aol.com) from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
According to statistics, the infant mortality rate in the United States
exceeds that of virtually every other nation in the industrialized
world. The U.S. is also the only place in which far more women give
birth in hospitals than at home under the care of a professional
midwife. The documentary "The Business of Being Born" sees a connection
between those two facts.
Executive producer Ricki Lake first conceived of this film after she
delivered her first baby in the hospital and then felt cheated of the
potentially beautiful and meaningful experience a home birth might have
provided. With the aid of director Abby Epstein, Lake has gathered
together a group of women, couples, midwives and physicians who,
through their own personal experiences and/or studies on the matter,
help to provide evidence for her case that, for the large majority of
women, delivering at home is preferable, on both a practical and
spiritual level, to delivering in a hospital. Lake has even allowed
herself to be filmed in the process of giving birth to her second child
at home.
This is an eye-opening and informative movie that admittedly provides
really only one side to the issue. But it makes a pretty convincing
case for that side and certainly gets the audience thinking. First, it
offers a number of startling statistics, the prime one being that
roughly one third of all babies born in America are now delivered
through Caesarian Section, a procedure that is classified as "major
surgery" but which is often treated with casual indifference by both
physicians and patients (the shots of a Caesarian are far more
"gruesome" than any of the shots of actual childbirth we are shown).
The movie also recounts a brief but somewhat disturbing history of
obstetrics practices in the United States during the past century when
many women were put into "twilight sleep" and missed the birthing
experience entirely. The movie also points out that, in a hospital
setting, a "cascade of interventions" often prevents women from having
the ultimate say in how they choose to deliver their babies. But the
majority of the case is made through personal anecdotes from mothers
and midwives concerning their own birthing experiences, as well as by
the recording of many of those actual home births live on camera.
Interestingly, after all the successful home births, the movie ends on
one in which the child arrives prematurely and is in a breach position
and thus must enter the world in a hospital room after all. It's an
indication of the honesty and courage of the filmmakers that they
didn't feel called upon to edit that sequence out of the movie.
Yet, for the most part, the film takes the multi-billion dollar medical
industry to task for being too quick to use drugs and a scalpel in the
birthing experience. The movie also harshly criticizes the insurance
industry for failing to recognize the much greater cost efficiency of
home-birthing and hence refusing to cover it in their policies, thereby
forcing many midwives to simply close up shop.
In many ways, "The Business of Being Born" is fighting something of an
uphill battle in that it appears counterintuitive - especially to a
generation raised on the belief that the medical industry can do
anything - to suggest that a birthing process with a physician and
modern medical equipment on hand could actually be less safe than a
birthing process without them (though the movie is quick to point out
that the midwives are all state-certified and trained to deal with any
unforeseen complications that might arise). Still, for women facing
this decision - as well as for a society that for over a century now
has frowned upon even the thought of natural childbirth - "The Business
of Being Born" may serve as a paradigm-shifting event.
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The Business of Being Born (2008)
39 out of 41 people found the following comment useful :-

A film about birthing at home; you will be surprised by what you see., 29 July 2007
Author: shetreat from United States
This movie is terrific. I had my doubts when I learned it was produced by and starring Ricki Lake, I admit. But it is sensitive, interesting, intellectual, captivating, and incredibly moving. It was not manipulative, but by the end, the entire audience was in tears.
The most important thing about this film is that it shows the public what birth can be, for both the mother and baby. You see several homebirths, nothing too intimate (unless you consider the incredible post-birth high that somehow permeates the screen and affects the viewer, to be too close for comfort). No dilating vaginas or body fluids, sorry to disappoint. But what it does show is something that almost no one, especially not doctors (I am one), get to see. A natural birth with no intervention where things go right. Shocking! In my medical training, I attended hundreds of births. I probably saw one or two with no medical intervention in the hospital. My hospital birth was normal, with no problems, but I had interventions despite having told my OB (and mentor) that I didn't want any.
It does not idealize birth per se, except by showing how simple birth can be without medicalization. But the volunteers of this midwife to be filmed were not excluded if there is a problem; one of the births requires transfer so you see how that is handled as well.
The film educates people about the history of birth in this country, how things are done in other countries including Europe, and shows statistics about birth (there are more than they include in the medical literature) that will probably surprise a lot of people.
I wouldn't say that the film is about Ricki Lake. She shows up here and there, and yes, she gives birth, but there are so many women followed here, and so many experts in birth interviewed.
Dr. Michel Odent is one of them. He is a French OB/Gyn who attends homebirths. He has done considerable research on birthing, and has written multiple very intelligent books about it. He brings up the idea that when a rat or a monkey has an epidural or C/S, they will not bond with their babies. They will not breastfeed, they will not mother them, they do not care for them. There will be no natural hypothalamic oxytocin release, which causes a release of norepinephrine, dopamine, prolactin, serotonin, that prepares a woman not only to breastfeed but to bond. The oxytocin release in this situation will never be replicated, even if the women breastfeeds or does infant massage (which both do cause oxytocin release but not in the same amounts as if you start off with this kick-off). As breastfeeding lowers breast cancer rates in women in a dose related fashion, oxytocin release over time is associated with a certain calm, lower levels of stress, but actually is dose-related to lower levels of stroke and heart attack in the mothers. So it is a long-term benefit of natural birth. This is touched upon in the film, among many other interesting facts.
It is not surprising to discover that doing things the way women are created to do them benefits both the mother and baby in so many different ways. Part of why this movie is so important is that it challenges the notion that man-made is better than the intricate design of man from God or evolution or however you want to approach it. Many people may not subscribe to it when it is stated like that, but in the food we eat, the we feed our babies, the way we grow our food, the chemicals we use in the environment, and the way we birth our babies, we are saying that every single day.
Common sense says that man-made leaves a lot to be desired. Science is proving this every day, in research about omega-3 requirements in neurological and other conditions, in breastfeeding and oxytocin literature preventing cancer/heart attack and stroke, to the benefits of breastmilk for babies. This movie is a peek into how doing things as nature intended is BETTER.
I don't feel I am exaggerating when I say that this is one of the most important films of these times for both men and women. Everyone should see it. You may not decide to have a homebirth afterwards, but you will walk out better educated about birth and what is happening in the hospital when you give birth.
21 out of 25 people found the following comment useful :-

Real life experience before your eyes, 17 January 2008
Author: ericpowers from California
Everyone in America should watch this film, especially fathers and mothers-to-be.
As a father of two babies delivered by Caesarean section, my real life experience reflects what this film presents. With a first pregnancy, men like me might trust a maternity and birthing health care system that obviously is accepted by everyone we know. As an engineer and technologist, I am attracted to statistics and procedures, I am attracted to managed systems and to logical decision-making. And I understand that giving birth involves a lot of money, and that doctors, hospitals and health care companies have a burden in how to run a successful enterprise.
But the American birthing system is missing something very important... our humanity, our sensitivity, our vulnerability. Ricki Lake and Abby Epstein reveal the vulnerability of father, mother and child during pregnancy, how easily we allow a managed system to make decisions in the name of our well-being. When faced with an overwhelming majority of our family and friends who know only one way to give birth, in a hospital, there is little room for anything else.
This film challenges what we assume works, and informs us that there are alternatives accepted everywhere else in the world but in the United States. I pray that other mothers and fathers-to-be, for the sake of their children's' psychological and emotional health, will step up to the plate, become informed consumers about what is happening, and consider a traditional birth, at home.
Your first step is to see this film.
9 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :-

The Real Finale to Sex and the City!, 18 February 2008
Author: livecompassion from United States
This film is full of life: humor, elation, disappointment, and the full range of emotions that the birthing experience provides. It is inspirational to women and partners and allows them to view different births including the preparation. These hip, smart and endearing city women and partners allow the viewers to share an important time of their life. Giving women more choice in their ideal birthing experience spares them from being surprised by the reality of hospital births. The lack of support in the United States for birthing families is surprising. This film is supportive, courageous and dares to challenge ignorance in the delivery room.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

Eye-opening documentary, 8 July 2008
Author: Roland E. Zwick (magneteach@aol.com) from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
According to statistics, the infant mortality rate in the United States exceeds that of virtually every other nation in the industrialized world. The U.S. is also the only place in which far more women give birth in hospitals than at home under the care of a professional midwife. The documentary "The Business of Being Born" sees a connection between those two facts.
Executive producer Ricki Lake first conceived of this film after she delivered her first baby in the hospital and then felt cheated of the potentially beautiful and meaningful experience a home birth might have provided. With the aid of director Abby Epstein, Lake has gathered together a group of women, couples, midwives and physicians who, through their own personal experiences and/or studies on the matter, help to provide evidence for her case that, for the large majority of women, delivering at home is preferable, on both a practical and spiritual level, to delivering in a hospital. Lake has even allowed herself to be filmed in the process of giving birth to her second child at home.
This is an eye-opening and informative movie that admittedly provides really only one side to the issue. But it makes a pretty convincing case for that side and certainly gets the audience thinking. First, it offers a number of startling statistics, the prime one being that roughly one third of all babies born in America are now delivered through Caesarian Section, a procedure that is classified as "major surgery" but which is often treated with casual indifference by both physicians and patients (the shots of a Caesarian are far more "gruesome" than any of the shots of actual childbirth we are shown). The movie also recounts a brief but somewhat disturbing history of obstetrics practices in the United States during the past century when many women were put into "twilight sleep" and missed the birthing experience entirely. The movie also points out that, in a hospital setting, a "cascade of interventions" often prevents women from having the ultimate say in how they choose to deliver their babies. But the majority of the case is made through personal anecdotes from mothers and midwives concerning their own birthing experiences, as well as by the recording of many of those actual home births live on camera. Interestingly, after all the successful home births, the movie ends on one in which the child arrives prematurely and is in a breach position and thus must enter the world in a hospital room after all. It's an indication of the honesty and courage of the filmmakers that they didn't feel called upon to edit that sequence out of the movie.
Yet, for the most part, the film takes the multi-billion dollar medical industry to task for being too quick to use drugs and a scalpel in the birthing experience. The movie also harshly criticizes the insurance industry for failing to recognize the much greater cost efficiency of home-birthing and hence refusing to cover it in their policies, thereby forcing many midwives to simply close up shop.
In many ways, "The Business of Being Born" is fighting something of an uphill battle in that it appears counterintuitive - especially to a generation raised on the belief that the medical industry can do anything - to suggest that a birthing process with a physician and modern medical equipment on hand could actually be less safe than a birthing process without them (though the movie is quick to point out that the midwives are all state-certified and trained to deal with any unforeseen complications that might arise). Still, for women facing this decision - as well as for a society that for over a century now has frowned upon even the thought of natural childbirth - "The Business of Being Born" may serve as a paradigm-shifting event.
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