The birth of a new baby is a moment that should be preserved for a lifetime. For many parents, this means grabbing the nearest digital camera or cell phone and firing away.
But some medical professionals are wary of the point-and-click, post-delivery urge. As The New York Times reports, some hospitals, worried about the health of the mother and baby as well as the privacy of medical staff, are barring the use cameras in the immediate aftermath of a new birth.
One such hospital, Meritus Medical Center in Hagerstown, Md., has incurred the wrath of new mother Laurie Shifler, who organized a petition objecting to the policy. So far, hundreds of people have signed it.
“It’s my child,” Shifler said. “Who can tell me I can take a picture or not take a picture of my own flesh and blood?”
Hospital officials respond that the rule is in the best interest of all involved.
“Deliveries are complicated,” Dr. William C. Hamilton, chairman of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at Meritus, told the Times. “I’m not a baseball catcher with a mitt, just catching a baby.”
Beyond the safety concerns, there’s also a legal dimension. After a homemade video of a University of Illinois Hospital delivery showed a nurse handling the newborn with excessive force, the facility was sued for its role in the infant’s shoulder problems. The hospital ultimately made a payout of $2.3 million.
Regardless of the reason, concerns about the ubiquity of cameras in delivery rooms are growing. “I have certainly heard this issue discussed more often than I ever have previously,” said Mike Matray, the editor of a Chicago newsletter called Medical Liability Monitor. “And it’s certainly true that some risk managers in hospitals are advising doctors to stop allowing video in the delivery room.”


