This answer depends on so many factors: in which area of the country the person lives, how much the hospital charges for various services, whether or not the woman had a vaginal or caesarian birth, whether or not anesthesia was consulted (for an epidural or other medication), the length of the hospital stay, whether or not there are any complications, and the type of insurance the person has. Hospitals tend to charge a large sum, and the insurance companies agree to pay a certain portion of that. Most insurance companies make their subscribers pay a portion of the bill--sometimes this is a fixed amount per year, and other times, it is a percentage of the total (such as 20% of each hospitalization). It is not surprising to have a $10,000 bill for a completely normal, uncomplicated pregnancy; but again, insurance usually pays the majority of that. If a person does not have insurance, often it helps to discuss this with a hospital and the physicians who will be involved in advance and try to come to an agreement on how much she will be responsible for after the delivery. Hope this helps! Dr. B.
Technically, it's free. The baby just goes right on out of your vagina. That's it. Free. Now if you want to be safe, you should buy some of the stuff that makes the delivery safe, or just have the delivery in a hospital (which can be costly)
This answer depends on so many factors: in which area of the country the person lives, how much the hospital charges for various services, whether or not anesthesia was consulted (for an epidural or other medication), the length of the hospital stay, whether or not there are any complications, and the type.
Hospitals tend to charge a large sum, and the insurance companies agree to pay a certain portion of that. Most insurance companies make their subscribers pay a portion of the bill--sometimes this is a fixed amount per year, and other times, it is a percentage of the total (such as 20% of each hospitalization).
It is not surprising to have a $10,000 bill for a completely normal, uncomplicated pregnancy; but again, insurance usually pays the majority of that. If a person does not have insurance, often it helps to discuss this with a hospital and the physicians who will be involved in advance and try to come to an agreement on how much she will be responsible for after the delivery.
its depend on every dr./hospital if you have insurance much less...but if your planning to have a baby you have to save money for your baby and his/her future
its all according to your state and hospital. mine in VA costed almost 8 thousand that included petocin and epidural
Over $20k
4,000
If you get a c section it will cost about $10.00
c-section
Depends on your condition if you have gential herpes then you HAVE to have a c-section.
Because in c-section the baby did not pass by the birth canal or pelvic bone.
Yes
vaginal birth after c-section
vaginal birth after c-section
Natural birth.
C-Section or Natural Child Birth.
Not really. Mothers can have a natural birth after a C-section
Natural birth