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Childbirth

Share experiences and get support around labour, birth and recovery.

Private birth - how does it work?

15 replies

Nancy66 · 28/08/2009 12:55

If you decide to have your baby privately does that mean that all your maternity care in the lead up to the birth has to also be private?

Is it possible to have NHS care all the way through but opt for a private birth?

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ILikeToMoveItMoveIt · 28/08/2009 13:05

Do you mean an Independant MW? Or a birth in a private hospital?

Nancy66 · 28/08/2009 13:10

I meant a birth in a private hospital or a private wing of an NHS.

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ILikeToMoveItMoveIt · 28/08/2009 13:35

Sorry, I don't know.

I had an Ind MW but still had 2 scans and blood tests on the NHS. If I had had to have Obs involvement I still would have been able to have it free on the NHS.

I would guess you could still have a crossover but that would mean care from 2 different Obs I guess?

reikizen · 28/08/2009 13:39

I would ring the hospital in question and find out.

kitstwins · 28/08/2009 14:36

Obviously it depends on the hospital so it's always worth calling. The majority will offer two levels of private care i.e. midwife-led delivery or consultant-led delivery. The consultant-led delivery means that you get your own, personal consultant who will be present at the birth of your baby. Obviously this is more expensive than the midwife-led delivery as you have to pay the consultant fees. If you have to have a caesarean section with either midwife or consultant care then you'll have to pay the consultant fees (either your specific consultant or, if you're midwife led, the consultant on duty that day) as well as the aneathetist fees, etc. It can add an extra £3000 plus to your account. You also have to factor in the extra cost of extra days' stay following a section as the private care package usually only includes birth and night's stay. Extra nights can vary in cost from £400 up to £900, although you'd obviously need to check this with your hospital. Some might be more or less. All your antenatal checks and midwife care would be included in the price.

You could opt for NHS care and then try and switch to private care at the point of delivery but you'd have to check the hospital's policy on this and bear in mind that even if they did allow it (and I think most do) you wouldn't be guaranteed it; it would be dependent on space and availability. I certainly wouldn't take it as certain and I think to turn up and be told that, no, there wasn't space would be quite disappointing.

I had split care. I was originally going to opt for private care but discovered it was twins and was put off by the large bill quoted for that. And then I wasn't aware that the NHS hospital I selected had private care. However, I had a month's stay in hospital before my babies were born (due to preavia) and so I switched over to private care. I kept the same consultant and he did my section and then, post-birth I went over to the private ward. It was money well-spent and worth every penny as the care made a huge difference.

Hope this helps and isn't too garbled.

Nancy66 · 28/08/2009 15:29

thanks Kits that's very useful.

am actually enquiring on behalf of my sister in law. She had a particularly traumatic first birth on the NHS and this time wants to go for a private C section, but she wondered if she could have her ante natal appointments on the NHS and just have the birth privately to keep down cost.

The private hospital seemed to think she could but her GP is saying she cannot.

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QTPie · 28/08/2009 15:36

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QTPie · 28/08/2009 15:49

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Nancy66 · 28/08/2009 16:18

SIL is in sussex nr Brighton.

She was hoping that she could have all her ante natal appointments locally (NHS) and then just come to London for a scheduled C section birth on a set day and then recover for a few days with private care.

The main reason she wants to go privately is because she knows she will need a C section and she can't bear the thought of 3 or 4 days on an NHS ward after her last experience.

she has a 15 month old son and it would be very hard for her to get to london every few weeks for her check ups.

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QTPie · 28/08/2009 16:26

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SympatheticConsultant · 28/08/2009 16:43

Hi Nancy66,
Although not ideal in terms of continuity of care having NHs antenatal care and then switching for a private El CS is not uncommon in the private sector. I have had a number of women who have transferred over to the private sector with medical insurance cover, just to have their El.CS (eg.For Breech presentation). As a minimum you will need to allow for 1-2 antenatal consultations, the CS and ideally a 6 week postnatal visit to see your Consultant.

To give you an approximate idea on costs there are 4 main areas:
1)
Consultant Obstetrician Fees
Booking Consultation : £175
CSection Consultant's Fee : £1000-£1500 (this also covers all your in-pt visits and any immediate post-op reviews you may require)
PN visit : £150

2). In addition to this the Hospital will have their own charges:
Eg. 2009 Portland charges for a standard room for a medically indicated CS:

1st 24hrs (inc. day of CS) £5085
(Non-med CS £6255)
Each additional night £1175
(on average allow for 2/occ.l 3 additional nights post-op following the night of the CS)

3).Consultant Anaesthetic charges ~ £750

4). Consultant Paediatrician charges ~ £250

Nb. Also be aware that most insurance companies do not cover the entire costs of a private birth!!

Hope that helps!!

onemoretimetoday · 28/08/2009 21:39

I am having NHS ante natal care and a private delivery at Watford General. The consultant I am using offers 3 options which are excellent value IMO for private care. I am going for private delivery only which means that I will have NHS ante natal but will have 2 appointments with the consultant prior to delivery. He and his dedicated midwife will deliver the baby and I'll then transfer to the newly refurbished private post natal ward.

The costs are

Consultant fees: £3000 regardless of whether it's a natural delivery or a C/S. This includes the 6 week check

Consultant ante natal fees £200 x 2

Epidural £350 - 500

Room fees: £2600 for 4 nights, £1600 for 2 nights

The baby is checked over by an NHS paed but you can pay for a private check if you prefer at £175.

All in all, given I have had natural deliveries in the past I expect it to cost about £5k, and I plan to stay in hospital for 2 nights to recover adn BF in peace even with an easy delivery which is good value for private delivery and buys me the guarantee that I will have a dedicated midwife delivering me with consultant backup.

Nancy66 · 29/08/2009 09:18

Thanks very much for the info ladies - I will pass it on.

Onemoretime - that sounds exactly the package she is looking for I'll suggest she adds Watford to her list.

OP posts:
Cauterize · 02/07/2020 17:47

Thanks

Bells3032 · 02/07/2020 21:49

Haha you realise this thread it from 2009?

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