resting woman with baby in her hands and placenta in tray between her legs.

With hospitals full of COVID-19 patients, she chose to give birth at home

These intimate photos capture one New Yorker's emotional delivery amidst a pandemic

Exhausted after giving birth to her daughter, Suzette, Kim Bonsignore lies in the birthing pool in her living room. Instead of having her baby in the hospital as planned, the Bonsignores decided to have their second child at home due to the coronavirus pandemic.
ByJaenique Hurlock
Photographs byJackie Molloy
May 8, 2020
15 min read

When 33-year-old Kimberly Bonsignore learned in late March that her family members would not be able to join her at NYU Hospital during her labor and delivery, she began making plans for a home birth. Pregnant with her second child, she didn’t want to leave her husband, Al, and two-year-old daughter, Sativa, out of the experience.

“I wanted my daughter to be there, too, because I want her to really experience it,” says Bonsignore. “I didn’t want to come home and say, ‘here’s your sister,’ like she’s a puppy or something.”

After the New York-Presbyterian and Mt. Sinai Hospital networks banned all visitors from labor and delivery rooms in an effort to prevent the spread of COVID-19, midwives across the city received a surge of phone calls. Not wanting to give birth alone, many women searched for an alternative.

pregnant woman in the kitchen and her family.
3:35 p.m.

Bonsignore endures an intense contraction with the support of her doula, Angelique Clarke. Her two-year-old daughter, Sativa, ran to her dad, Al, and grandma, Louise, when her mom cried out in pain.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo has since issued an executive order allowing one support person to be present in the delivery room as long as they are screened for COVID-19. However, the prospect of giving birth in hospitals filled with coronavirus patients has driven up the demand for home births—a practice that is relatively uncommon in the United States, but has been steadily rising in popularity in the last 16 years. According to the National Center of Biotechnology Information, a unit of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), home births accounted for more than 62,000 births, 1.61 percent of total in the U.S. in 2017. Certified nurse midwives attend about 10 percent of all births in the U.S., in the hospital or at home, though their role in patient care varies from state to state.

Women seek home births with a licensed provider—which can include a midwife or doula—for a variety of reasons: They want less medical intervention, such as pain medication and labor induction; they want the freedom to control their birthing environment; they feel a midwife would be more respectful of their religious values; or they feel dissatisfied with the hospital system. (Here's why giving birth in U.S. is surprisingly deadly—especially for black mothers.)

a woman in face mask and headband poring water from bucket into pool.
3:56 p.m.

Doula Angelique Clarke pours boiling water into the birth pool. She had initially used a hose connected to the sink, but the Bonsignores’ hot water ran out, so she heated water in pots.

Preparing for birth

At 37 weeks pregnant, Bonsignore reached out to Angelique Clarke, her doula from her first pregnancy. Unlike midwives, doulas often do not have formal medical training but offer physical, mental, and emotional support for the mother. Clarke connected her with Cara Muhlhahn, a New York City-based Certified Nurse Midwife (CNM). Under different circumstances, Muhlhahn and Bonsignore would have had at least 10 prenatal visits from the beginning of the pregnancy to discuss potential complications.

Over two virtual consultations and a home visit they began to make the preparations needed for a home birth, filling out medical forms and ordering a birth kit. Staging for a home birth requires, among other things, a birthing pool that would be set up in the Bonsignores’ living room.

two women helping pregnant woman to get into blue inflatable pool with water.
5:58 p.m.

Bonsignore climbs into the birthing pool with the help of Clarke, her doula, and midwife Cara Muhlhahn, right.

Midwives generally take a different approach to hospitals. Instead of taking the lead and telling a woman when to push like a doctor might, they believe in letting a woman take the initiative herself.

“When we do birth at home we like to support something that’s called ‘physiologic birth,’” says Muhlhahn. “We tend to believe that in almost all cases births can proceed on their own if we support the woman, encourage her, do the best we can to provide pain relief, let her know that we are by her side, and [occasionally] give her guidance.”

Around noon on April 29, Clarke texted Muhlhahn, informing her that Bonsignore’s contractions had begun. Muhlhahn gathered her equipment and drove to Bonsignore’s block to stand by until the contractions intensified.

man video-recording of his wife in the pool and their daughter reaching the toy in water.
6:12 p.m.

Al Bonsignore records a video of his wife, Kim, midwife Cara Muhlhahn, and doula Angelique Clarke (not pictured), while his daughter, Sativa, plays in the water with her toys.

women in pain clutching to the pool wall.
6:20 p.m.

Bonsignore experiences a painful contraction. She was originally scheduled to deliver in a hospital, but changed her mind with the outbreak of the coronavirus.

little girl covering her ears with hand and woman in mask looking at her.
6:44 p.m.

Sativa Bonsignore covers her ears while her mom pushes during labor. Kim’s screams upset the two-year-old, but Muhlhahn told her, “Mommy screams because it hurts, but nothing is wrong. That’s how it is when you have a baby.”

I didn’t want to come home and say, ‘here’s your sister,’ like she’s a puppy or something.
Al Bonsignore

“I do that because I live under the fear of someone calling me too late when things advance really quickly,” she says. “Angi was communicating with me the whole time I was in the car across the street. She was telling me how far apart the contractions were and she took the lead in terms of knowing when to bring me in, which is often a role that doulas can play.”

Because she was at home, Bonsignore was able to move around freely. She took a shower while Clarke started filled the birthing pool using a hose connected to the sink. But after Bonsignore’s shower, they ran out of hot water and Clarke had to finish by heating water on the stove.

“I was able to do what I wanted,” Bonsignore remembers. “I got in the shower and the heat felt so good. And then when I got out I was able to walk around when I wanted, sit down if I wanted to. Stretch a little bit. When I got tired I was like, ‘I wanna lay down.’ When I laid down, Angi was massaging me. She was hitting the pressure points… Ten minutes after I laid down my water broke.”

A few minutes after Bonsignore’s water broke, at 5:27 p.m., Muhlhahn arrived at the front door, with her bags in tow and wearing a face mask.

woman lying on pool side and two women looking at her from rear.
6:18 p.m.

Clarke and Muhlhahn check Bonsignore’s progress during labor while two-year-old Sativa continues to enjoy having a pool in her living room.

“The first thing I do when I go in to a woman in labor is sit by her, greet [her] in the way that is appropriate, make her feel comfortable. I wait until the contraction is over and tell her I’m here. The first task is [to] listen to the baby’s heartbeat,” says Muhlhahn. “We listen right after the water breaks, and we like to know the color of the water breaking. Angi said it was clear, which is a sign that the baby is in [good] condition.”

For the next hour, contractions came and went. Bonsignore eventually climbed into the pool of warm water to help ease the pain. When she was too uncomfortable to lay on her back, she turned around to lean over the side of the pool. Muhlhahn checked the baby’s heartbeat every 30 minutes. At 6:32 p.m., Muhlhahn determined that Kimberly was fully dilated and could begin pushing.

I didn’t think it was that serious. When we spoke of it after, I cried and got really emotional. It's more traumatic now than in the moment.
Kim Bonsignore

A moment of uncertainty

“She said, ‘Just listen to your body. Whatever you feel, just do it,’” Bonsignore recalls. “Cara kept telling me, ‘You’re made for this. You can do this.’ I didn’t think I was gonna make it. It was so painful. It was the worst pain I’ve ever experienced in my life. But it was pretty fast and I didn’t have to deal with it for so long. And her encouragement helped me. Her guiding me and telling me, ‘She’s almost there. She’s right here. You can’t give up. She’s right here.’”

When Muhlhahn saw the baby’s head crowning, she used her finger to check if the umbilical cord had draped around the neck—a common occurrence that does not harm the baby while inside the uterus.

“When there is a cord around the neck, which happens approximately 40 percent of the time, we don’t consider it a high-risk situation but we do try a few maneuvers to make sure that this doesn’t hold back the birth of the rest of the body,” says Muhlhahn.

Managing the cord is a crucial task. “Once you cut the cord, you’ve cut off another lifeline that the baby has. It protects the baby’s brain from a lack of oxygen,” Muhlhahn explains. She considered three options: lift the cord from the baby’s shoulders and over the head; cut and clamp the cord in utero; or unwrap the cord simultaneously as the baby is delivered. Because the cord wasn’t loose enough to lift over the baby’s head, Muhlhahn decided on the last option.

At 6:46 p.m., surrounded by family in her living room, Bonsignore gave one final push. But there was no crying. The baby was limp and unresponsive. Removing her face mask, Muhlhahn immediately began CPR and started chest compressions with her thumbs. The room was silent aside from her measured breaths and the Grateful Dead’s “I Need a Miracle” quietly playing in the background.

woman holding in one hand pail baby's body.
6:46 p.m.

Midwife Cara Muhlhahn reaches for a bulb syringe to help clear the newborn’s airway. The baby was limp and unresponsive on delivery. “When I saw the cord and the color of that baby, I knew there was going to be a problem,” she says. Muhlhahn, who has been practicing as a midwife since 1991 and for the past 23 years doing at-home midwifery, rarely has had to resuscitate a newborn, but is ready when it's needed.

woman giving newborn baby mouth to mouth resuscitation while mother is watching.
6:46 p.m.

Muhlhahn gives newborn Suzette mouth-to-mouth resuscitation to expand her lungs. Once the baby spit up mucus, Muhlhahn knew she would be okay. “I remember not wanting to give a sign of hope until I knew it was going to be hopeful,” she says.

woman squeezing a baby and parents watching it.
6:48 p.m.

Muhlhahn does chest compressions on Suzette after giving her mouth-to-mouth while her parents urge their newborn on. “Come on, baby. Come on, Suzette,” Al Bonsignore said. “Please, come on, you’re there.”

baby with wide opened mouth and parents looking at her.
6:48 p.m.

Baby Suzette cries out after being resuscitated. Kim Bonsignore says she didn’t realize at the time how serious the situation was. “Every day we talk about it, we look at her and she’s such a beautiful healthy girl,” she says. “It’s so crazy it could have went either way.”

smiling woman handing out baby to parent.
6:48 p.m.

Muhlhahn hands newborn Suzette to her parents after resuscitating her. “That cry, that big cry, it was the most beautiful sound after all that,” Muhlhahn says.

baby with eyes opened.
7:21 p.m.

Newborn Suzette Bonsignore looks up at her father, Al. “It’s daddy,” he told her. “You’re so perfect, baby.”

Moments later, Suzette Indica Bonsignore took her first breath and let out a cry. “Talk to her,” Muhlhahn told the parents, passing the baby to Al. “Mom and Dad are here. We need you with us. You [have a] sister you gotta meet,” Bonsignore’s husband recalls saying.

At 7 p.m., minutes after the baby was born, the sound of New Yorkers clapping for first responders drifted through the window—as if the city were welcoming baby Suzette into the world, says Bonsignore. “The timing was impeccable, it couldn’t have been better!”

Despite the scare, Bonsignore’s husband found the birth experience “exhilarating.” “It’s so much more organic than when you’re in a hospital,” he says.

woman weighting a bundle with baby.
7:33 p.m.

Muhlhahn weighs newborn Suzette in her sling scale as her mom, grandparents, and doula look on. Suzette weighed in at 8 pounds, 6 ounces, and was 20.25 inches long.

After the birth, Muhlhahn listened to the baby’s heart and lungs, gave her vitamin K shots, and weighed her in a sling scale as her mom and grandparents looked on. Suzette weighed in at 8 pounds, 6 ounces, and was 20.25 inches long. With the hard work done, Muhlhahn scheduled follow-up meetings with Bonsignore to check in on mom and baby.

Kimberly Bonsignore said that she didn’t realize how serious the moment of uncertainty had been. Or how crucial experienced providers are in an emergency situation. “When we spoke of it later, I cried and got really emotional. It’s more traumatic now than in the moment,” she remembers. “Every day we talk about it. We look at her and she’s such a beautiful, healthy girl. It’s so crazy it could have went either way.”