Rome Birth Center - Casa Maternità a Testaccio

Rome Birth Center - Casa Maternità a Testaccio Continuity-of-care midwifery services for English-speaking couples living in and around Rome, Italy

Valeria Barchiesi offers English-speaking couples a comprehensive array of midwifery care and services. Typically, these are offered as a continuum of care aligned with gestation and need. However, each service is frequently customized to address each expectant mother’s unique situation, needs and wishes. SERVICES

Complete prenatal care, screening and counselling
Healthy pregnancy monitoring incl

uding doppler
Comprehensive home birth service including water birth
Active birth, breastfeeding & parentcraft services
Home, clinic and hospital labor coaching
Women's reproductive health consultations
Domino scheme: (labor at home, hospital delivery, home follow-up)
24-hour availability for crisis support

Join us for a pediatric chocking session at Nido ➡️ Free for Nido Members!!Info & booking in DM 📩                       ...
26/07/2025

Join us for a pediatric chocking session at Nido ➡️ Free for Nido Members!!

Info & booking in DM 📩


















16/07/2025
16/05/2025
Info & booking 🌸📱 WhatsApp 349 1922450☎️ 06 57300707 - 06 5758648📩 ilnidoroma@gmail.com📍Il Nido - Via Marmorata 169
12/05/2025

Info & booking 🌸
📱 WhatsApp 349 1922450
☎️ 06 57300707 - 06 5758648
📩 ilnidoroma@gmail.com
📍Il Nido - Via Marmorata 169

08/05/2025

IT HAPPENED LAST NIGHT, IN LAUREL, MONTANA

I hesitate to write about some of the more mysterious aspects of birth. I cringe when other midwives publicly speak of birth as “sacred”. I hate it when well-meaning friends introduce me as the “magical midwife”. I prefer a more professional reputation.

You see, for centuries, midwives have been judged and jailed and even burned at the stake, for their involvement in things that could not be explained (mostly childbirth), and even today, the medical mainstream accuses midwives of practicing less-than-scientific methods of care. Because of this, we midwives have perhaps over-compensated in defending our truly professional and educated selves, relying on evidence-based research to support every move we make.

But if a midwife does this work for very long, she will indeed see things happen that surpass all science and statistics, things that reach far beyond her wildest imagination. And if she witnesses these things with openness and a humble heart, she will eventually come to understand … that she really DOESN’T understand birth at all. Nobody does.

Still, she must be careful describing these experiences, lest she be labeled a quack or accused of telling tales. We don’t get burned at the stake anymore, but we get burned in other ways.

So, with a half dozen credentials in my pocket and 36 years of midwifery practice under my belt, I’m stepping out on a limb here, to tell you one of those amazing birth tales.

It happened last night, in Laurel, Montana.

Having attended several previous births for these folks, I’m practically one of the family by now. I’m comfortable in their home, and their kids know me well. Yesterday evening, I arrived to find the mother soaking in her bathtub, with contractions coming on strong. (She loves water birth). Her dilation was seven centimeters, and fetal heart tones were good. I set up for a delivery, and left her and her husband alone, because this is how they like to have their babies.

I was right outside the door, listening and charting and waiting for them to say my name. That moment came, and I stepped into their space and knelt at the side of the tub, ready to catch. Baby’s head immerged. The cord was around the neck, and I slipped it off quickly and asked the mother to push again. A beautiful black-haired boy came out into the water, and I lifted him into his mother’s arms. There was no cry, but his movements were lively and his color was good. He kept his eyes shut. With my stethoscope, I listened to his breath sounds and his heart beat. Everything checked out fine.

As his little knees moved outward, we saw that this was a boy. The other children were waiting in the next room, and when the dad announced the gender, a giant whoop and holler filled their whole house with joy. I was observing the baby closely then. He didn’t respond to all the hullabaloo. Still in his mother’s arms, with his mother still in the tub, his little feet made ripples in the water as we waited for the cord to stop pulsating. It had been a beautiful birth.

I stood back, watching the parents adore their child, teary-eyed and tired. We would cut the cord soon and help the mom get into bed. I kept my eye on the baby too. Although all things measurable were totally perfect, he seemed to still be in another world. I’m not sure what that means exactly, but there must be some other realm where babies live before they live here. Perhaps it is just the womb. Or perhaps it is some other un-mapped reality. But when people move from that reality into our own world, it’s a conscious move, and they each do it at their own pace. Now, I’m not talking about APGAR scoring or length of second stage. No. Those things are measurable, and this kid was doing fine in those categories. But he wasn’t quite here yet. Other midwives have seen this, I’m sure, but we don’t talk about it very much.

Last night’s baby was hanging out in the other world. There was a blue-ish distance behind the tiny slits that were his eyes. His little lips were pressed shut and he was silent. He appeared closed off, somehow. It was like he was way inside of himself … or maybe somewhere way out in the Cosmos. Yet everything I could assess was totally functional. He was here. But he was somewhere else.

I’ve only said this a few times before, but last night I heard myself saying, “Come be with us, little one. It’s a good place here”. Technically, he was several minutes old by then, so it seemed an odd thing for a midwife to say.

That’s when two of his sisters, ages five and six, quietly slipped into the room. I think they knew. They stood near the tub and one of them reached forward to hold the newborn’s tiny hand. She said softly, “I love you, baby”. The other one leaned over and kissed the infant and told him “We waited so long for you”.

IMMEDIATELY, there was a spark! The baby began to wiggle like most babies do. His eyes opened wide and focused, absolutely beaming at those two little girls. Then he moved his head to look around the room and he let out a cry. It was a powerful cry, as if to say, “OK! I’m here now. I’m home. Hello everybody! It’s me!”

We already knew he was healthy and whole. I’d officially assessed everything about him, and even written it down in the chart. Obviously, we all loved this baby boy. But it took those two little girls to convince him to actually come into our world, to join us here, and to become one of us.

So … what was their magic?

Love. Spoken without fear. Spoken outloud. Pure, innocent, unscientific Love. That’s what lit the spark.

OK. Try analyzing THAT. Try identifying the evidence. Try even talking about it without losing some credibility as a professional. You won’t find this stuff in the text books or on Youtube. But it’s all true. Sometimes Love is what brings babies around. Sometimes Love is what brings all of us around. Love is mysterious and sacred and effective.

Now, I need to say that this doesn’t happen at every birth. In fact, I’ve only seen it a few times. But it does happen. I’ve never been bold enough - or silly enough - to write about it before. But today, it seems like a worthy birth tale to tell, because it all happened last night, before my very own eyes.

Go ahead. Burn me at the stake.

~ by Pat Schwaiger, RN, CPM, Mountain Midwives, Billings, MT (artwork by Catie Atkinson)

08/05/2025

I'm writing a paper on the effects of epidurals and the oxytocin system (spoiler, it's not good.) But I'd love to hear some of the good things you have seen or personally experienced from epidurals, especially situations where labour progress has picked up after the epidural or any other benefits. Also, any comments re CSE (epidurals with an initial spinal injection) vs. epidurals? Thanks so much y'all.
NEW. Thanks everyone for your generous sharing. I'm turning off the comments (as best I can) because I need to get back to my study. Best wishes to you all, mamas and those who support them.
PS none of these questions, or your responses, will be used in my thesis.

May first 💪🏻
01/05/2025

May first 💪🏻

Your way to an empowering and satisfyng birth🥰
25/04/2025

Your way to an empowering and satisfyng birth🥰

04/03/2025

🚫Guardare ma non toccare?!

I neonati non vanno messi in culletta termica in stanza con la mamma, i neonati vanno messi a contatto con la mamma o con il papà.
E non per capriccio, ma per garantire una migliore salute.

📸 Monet Nicole - Birthing Stories

Rinascere al Naturale

dettate da



04/03/2025

🔥 • “Families should have the autonomy to birth the way they feel is best for their body, rather than feeling rushed or dictated by external medical guidelines. Listening to one’s gut, particularly in something as primal as childbirth, should be given more importance. This principle extends beyond childbirth to decisions about breastfeeding and personal health, reinforcing the critical role that our instinct plays in navigating life’s most significant moments.” –Pamela Stone, DC, DACCP

Keep reading this article “Hold On, Don’t Push” by Dr. Pamela Stone in the current issue of Pathways. Subscribers can read the current issue online–subscriptions start at just $20/year! Click the link in bio to explore subscriptions and read Issue 84.

For those of you who do understand Italian, this is a short class by Giuditta Bellarosa. A savvy mother of four, she has...
15/02/2025

For those of you who do understand Italian, this is a short class by Giuditta Bellarosa. A savvy mother of four, she has managed to wade through all those baby and school contracted illnesses and keep her kids healthy, without resorting to drugs. Giuditta has a vast experience in curing the whole family with nutrition and natural remedies: a vast low cost repertoire from baby colic to flu to repelling mosquitos. Above all she inspires people with a sense of self reliance in our competence as parents.✨💙

Indirizzo

Rome

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