Grafton Base Hospital

Grafton Base Hospital is located at 184 Arthur St, Grafton NSW 2460. Their maternity services have a variety of models for your pregnancy care. They have Midwifery pregnancy clinics, general practitioner shared pregnancy care and obstetric led clinics for women with complex pregnancies. You may also choose care with a private obstetrician or pregnancy care with a private midwife.

The hospital has a neonatal special care nursery, which provides specialist care for sick and premature babies. The nursery is supported by highly experienced midwives, staff specialist paediatricians and GPs. You will also have access to additional care and support from our extended team of social workers, speech therapists and physiotherapists.

midwifery logo

Does Grafton Base Hospital have visiting private midwives?

NO

Does Grafton Base Hospital have visiting GP Obstetricians?

NO

Does Grafton Base Hospital have visiting
Obstetricians?

YES

Hospital Facilities

Antenatal Beds

?

Birthing Rooms

3

Postnatal Beds

10

Special Care Nursery Beds

?

Neonatal Intensive Care Beds

?

Are there birth pools available for labour and birth?

Birth centres are designed to be a home away from home. A birth centre is a separate unit located away from the standard birth unit. Birth centres encompass a philosophy that pregnancy and birth are normal, natural events in the life of a woman and her family.

Does Grafton Base Hospital have a birth centre?

Birth Suite Tour Video

Coming soon

What support is available if I have difficulties breastfeeding my baby?

Baby-friendly accredited?

Grafton Base Hospital is accredited under the global Baby Friendly Health Initiative program.

Grafton Base Hospital Statistics

Grafton Base Hospital

How a woman’s labour starts influences the chance interventions in labour. If labour starts spontaneously, there is less likelihood of interventions. If a woman has an induction of labour there is an increased chance of further interventions. In the above graph, spontaneous labour refers to labour that starts on its own. Labour artificially sped up refers to labours starting spontaneously but are artificially sped up with medication or breaking the bag of water.

Unfortunately, national statistics do not separate spontaneous labour and labour artificially sped up.  So the Australian national statistics combine these two together as spontaneous labour.

Induction of labour in PBB’s graph refers to one or more of the following interventions used to artificially start labour:

  • Artificial rupture of membranes
  • Balloon catheter to open the cervix
  • Prostaglandins placed in the vagina
  • Synthetic oxytocin drug to start or speed up labour

No labour is when a woman has an elective (non-emergency) caesarean before labour starts.

Grafton Base Hospital

Since 1985, the World Health Organization (WHO) has recommended countries keep the caesarean birth rate between 10–15% to ensure mortality rates are kept low for mothers and babies (WHO’s last statement update was April 2015). Since 1995 the caesarean birth rate has increased every year across Australia. In 2020 the caesarean birth rate in the NSW maternity hospitals was more than double the WHO recommendation.

A small number of breech babies are born vaginally. Instrumental births include forceps birth and vacuum extraction. The caesarean birth rate includes both elective (planned) and emergency (unplanned) caesarean births.

Grafton Base Hospital

Please note that even though there is a dramatic increase in interventions in labour and caesarean birth – there is no change in the perinatal death rate.

PBB attained the data in the statistics from the Australia’s Mothers and Babies by Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) and NSW Mothers and Babies by the NSW Ministry of Health.

Photo Gallery

PBB has created this page to help you be informed about local maternity services. We’d love for you to send us photos of the hospital to include on this page. Send photos to our webmaster.

Date page published 22nd March 2022