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Making the Hospital More Like Home

Making the Hospital More Like Home:  
When Homebirth is not an option, how to bring home to the 
hospital 
 
Many of us are lucky enough to have access to Midwifery 
Care, waterbirths or birth centres. However, the reality 
is that many of us do not have any access to a local 
midwife or a birth centre. And some of us have 
complications that preclude us from using those options if 
they do exist.  
 
So how do we make the hospital more like home? There are a 
number of ways to do it and some of them are really fun! 
 
First of all, there are simple tips, like for your to bring 
(and use) your own pillow, blanket, robe and slippers.  
Labor in your own clothes. 
 
Bring your own music. Check beforehand to see if they have 
a CD/Tape player available. If not, bring your own. I’ve 
assisted at a number of births where music and singing 
became large parts of the labor ritual. 
 
Change the room to suit you better. Get aquainted with 
the controls for the bed, and move it up and down to suit 
your needs. Turn off any overhead, florescent lights and 
access as much natural light as possible. If all else 
fails, turn off all the lights except for the bathroom 
light and leave the door ajar. That usually does the trick 
of providing some, but not too much, light. Or try a 
battery-operated “safe” candle to provide a candlelight 
effect (available at www.birthwares.com). 
 
Find the clean linen and grab a spare sheet or two to put 
on the floor so that you may get down on your hands and 
knees or lean over the bed.  
 
Bring your own special items to create your environment for 
the birth. Stuffed animals, ultrasound pictures, photos of 
family or friends, focal points all add to a personal 
atmosphere.  
 
Bring your own lotions, oils, lip balm (scents that you can 
tolerate or unscented) and hair ties.  
 
Bring your own food and drink so that you may have access 
to what you crave, when you want it.  
 
Create a birth plan that reflects your wishes, around the 
atmosphere and environment of the birth. Have open 
communication with your care-givers and support people, so 
that you feel heard.  
 
Those are nice, common sense tips. But my top three are a 
bit more creative. 
 
1) Be affectionate with your partner and support person, if 
you are a demonstrative person. These people have a 
relationship with you. Humanize yourself. You are a 
family and you are about to grow. You love and care for 
one another and have a history. Get that across to the 
medical practitioners by being open and affectionate with 
one another, touching and kissing as you feel the urge. A 
loving environment can have a great effect on the 
atmosphere in a room. Either they warm up to you greatly 
or they stay the heck out of your way. Both can be a 
welcome change. 
 
2) Get in the tub or shower as soon as you can. Stay 
there! Re-create the comfortable environment you had at 
home, especially if you had been enjoying your own tub and 
shower in early labor. Have your partner or support person 
stay with you and pour cups of water over your abdomen or 
back. Or they can just stay and support you. You can be 
alone. Most nurses are reluctant to really bother a naked 
woman in bathtub.  
 
3) Sit facing your partner or support person, knee to knee 
and forehead to forehead. “Create a bubble” that 
encompasses just you two, focus on one-another and “erase” 
the rest of the room. Breathe together and whisper support 
and encouragement to one another. I’ve coached couples 
into this position shortly after their arrival at the 
hospital and the intake exams and am amazed with the change 
it creates in the environment. It brings a respect and 
grace into the room. Nurses or doctors who walk in on that 
scene are immediately more respectful, soft-spoken, and 
polite. And let’s face it, we can all use more of that! 
 
So, even if you have to labor and deliver in a hospital 
environment, use the tips above to control some of the 
“otherworldliness” of the whole experience. This is your 
birth, your body, your family and your baby. This is not 
an everyday experience for you. May it be memorable in a 
wonderful way. Happy Birthing! 
 
Copyright 2005 Sarah Hilbert-West 
 
www.birthwares.com