03/12/2026
Medical charts and birth stories serve very different purposes.
A medical chart focuses on clinical information. Times. Measurements. Interventions. Vital signs. It documents what providers need to track medically and legally.
That information is important.
But it rarely captures what the experience of birth actually felt like.
Birth is more than dilation numbers and timestamps. It’s the atmosphere in the room. The moments when someone needed reassurance. The quiet strength a birthing person shows during a difficult contraction. The small details that make the experience human.
This is where narrative birth notes matter.
As a doula, I document the flow of the birth in a different way. I pay attention to how labor unfolded, how the birthing person moved through it, what kinds of support helped, and the emotional environment in the room.
Many parents experience birth in a blur. Labor can be intense, and memories don’t always hold every detail. Narrative notes help piece together what actually happened — not just medically, but emotionally and physically.
Those notes often become the foundation for the birth stories I write for the families I support. A way to revisit the experience later and see their strength reflected back to them.
Medical charts record the clinical side of birth.
Narrative birth notes remember the human side.