I received this email from Sarah today and thought that maybe, just maybe, there might be more than one of you out there with the same questions so I’m going to share my limited expertise in this area with all of you.

My husband is also a “perpetual grad student,” and we learned this week we are expecting. We’re thrilled by this blessing! But also nervous… I’ll stop working once the baby arrives. He gets a stipend, but it’s small. Since you’ve navigated these waters, I was hoping you could offer me some advice (I don’t know you, but I love your blog!). I have insurance now with my job, so I’m not sure quite what to do about payment for the birth since my insurance will change right before the baby comes– as in, I’ll be uninsured when I quit my job. I’d like a natural birth, but my husband is worried about an in-home midwife. Even now, going to my usual OBGYN would cost over $5,000 for the birth since I have a high deductible with my insurance. Anyway, could you please give me some guidance? What do you wish you knew when you started on the mommy journey? I’m so happy but also overwhelmed about the financial side of this announcement, and I have no one else to ask.

First of all, CONGRATS!  Yay, baby.  Love the babies.  🙂  And I approve of your decision to stop working when the baby arrives (and not everyone will be supportive – just a head’s up).  There are ways you can save your family money by staying home (namely in the daycare department!) and I’ll show you what I’ve learned in that area in Part Two.  Part One of my response is going to focus on lowering the cost of birth.

First, I would check with your insurance to see if they have a grace period of 30-60, maybe even 90 days after you quit your job.  Some are nice like that.  Then you could still use the insurance for your birth.

Also, look into the possibility of getting on your husband’s school insurance policy.  For my husband’s policy, loss of a job was a good enough reason for a spouse to sign on at any time.

Lastly, there is the option of Medicaid, which covers pregnant women all the way through the post-partum visit.

Besides those options, here are some ways you can reduce the cost of your birthing experience:

  • Either opt out of unnecessary ultrasounds or only have the one halfway through.  These things are EXPENSIVE, as I recently found.  And if you don’t have good insurance coverage, they are one thing that you can eliminate.  Believe it or not, people did survive without ultrasounds back in the day.  Now, if your doctor finds medical reason for an ultrasound, they can help identify problems and save babies lives.  But most of the time, they’re just for photo albums and baby names.
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  • Do consider a homebirth if you live close to a hospital.  My husband shares the same fears that your does, I’m sure, but most of his are in the 20+ minute ride to the hospital that it would be for us.  If we lived 5-10 minutes from one, I’m sure he’d be more easily convinced.  And a lot of that convincing was done by The Business of Being Born, which we watched together.  An in-home birth would only cost a fraction of a hospital birth, since one major reason the cost of hospital birth is so outrageous is because of ridiculous malpractice insurance premiums (thanks, John Edwards…), which most home birth providers do not have.  Of course, hospitals rack up charges in other areas:  they even charged my baby for room and board!  And he slept in my arms and ate from my breast!  🙂
     
    But if your husband just does not have peace about a homebirth, not matter what literature and documentaries you make him sit through, ultimately, I would submit to his authority and try to reduce the cost of a hospital birth in all possible ways.
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  • One of those ways would be to opt out of all pain medications.  Epidurals are pricy!!!  And my best advice for avoiding one of them is to…
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  • Stay home as long as possible.  When you are home, moving around, on your feet, not only are you distracting yourself from the pain, but your exercise and upright positioning is speeding your labor along beautifully.  In a hospital, you would be out of your comfort zone and bored out of your mind.  Most likely, you would be in bed, laying down, from lack of other options and that position would slow labor, making you desperate for relief.  Staying home and avoiding pain medications also lessens your chance of needing a…
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  • C-Section – avoid these!  VERY expensive and a very serious surgery!  When your labor slows in the hospital, the most common solution is an IV with a Pitocin drip attached.  Not only does the extra needle ring up yet another charge, but it raises the baby’s heart rate, and increases your pain level, making you moan for the epidural.  But being numb from the waist down immobilizes you, making your labor last even longer, while your baby stresses out under the extreme chemically-induced contractions.  Which brings us to the point of the bulleted item – C-sections.  BabyStress+LongLabor=C-Section.  Take whatever steps you can to avoid these!
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  • Try to birth in a position that is as upright as possible.  The position that makes the most sense to me is squatting.  The opens the pelvis and reduces the odds that any tearing will take place.  The lack of tearing means one less procedure your doctor will have to perform, and also a faster healing time.  The faster healing time means you can discharge after only 24 hours – one less day of room and board!
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  • Bring your own food. 🙂
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  • If it’s a boy, opt out of circumcision – it’s not medically necessary anymore, and it’s one more procedure to have to pay for.
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  • If you don’t circumcise, or decide to do it Biblically (on the eighth day), you won’t need the Vitamin K shot, which helps with the clotting of blood.  A baby’s vitamin K levels are highest on the eighth day, anyway (above adult levels, actually!).  🙂  Someone planned that right, huh?
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  • Another procedure immediately following birth that you may have the choice to opt out of is the eye ointment.  Unless, of course, you have gonorrhea or chlamydia.  Then you should get it to protect the baby’s eyes from infection.

And those are my humble suggestions.  I’m not even sure exactly  how much money they will save you.  I just tried to go through the birthing experience and cut out things that weren’t as necessary as others.

In Part Two, I’ll go through Bringing Baby Home and the things you could cut out of your shopping list there to try and save even more money.  Hope that helps, Sarah!  (And others!)