Posted by Melissa Maimann on Feb 20, 2010 in
Home birth,
Midwifery
Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.
Link
THEY were defending their right to give birth at home … Across the country hundreds of women held rallies …
Homebirth supporters claim doctors and the Government are taking away the rights of women.
Under the proposed Bill … doctors will have the final say if a woman can have a homebirth supervised by a midwife. Previously, private midwives could assist in a homebirth without a doctor’s consent but could not access Medicare rebates.
Passionate homebirth advocate Andrea Smith … said, “We should have the right to choose however we want to birth.” …
After July, midwives will need to work collaboratively with doctors. This will be the case if we are to attend homebirths or if our clients wish to access Medicare benefits for our services.
Collaborative arrangements have not yet been defined so it is hard to say at this stage how they might look. It’s almost certain that high risk homebirths will be off the cards, so no breeches, twins, VBACs, post term or preterm women, or those with high blood pressure or problems in the pregnancy will be able to have a home birth. Women are concerned that these changes will limit their right to a home birth, but the government is concerned for the provision of safe homebirth services. These new laws do not actually prevent “high risk” women from accessing home birth, they just restrict the ability of the midwife to attend them by legistating that midwives will only be able to attend low-risk homebirths.
Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448
Tags: Birth choices, Complicated pregnancy or birth, Home birth, Maternity Services Review, midwife, Midwifery, Midwifery services, women's rights
Posted by Melissa Maimann on Feb 20, 2010 in
Birth,
Home birth,
Midwifery,
Normal Birth
Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.
Link
The Federal Government has been grilled at its latest community cabinet meeting over its proposed changes for midwives and maternity services.
The Government wants to make midwifery services eligible for Medicare rebates, but only if homebirth midwives work in consultation with a doctor.
Several women at last night’s meeting … told the cabinet ministers that the changes would restrict the choice of women who only want to give birth with a midwife at home.
But Health Minister Nicola Roxon says the Government is simply taking a cautious approach.
“To make sure we’ve got some backup protocols in place, so if something does go wrong that there are agreements with the hospital or doctor to be able to step in quickly,” she said.
“And that is a conservative approach, but it isn’t a conservative approach to say midwives are doing good work, have never been recognised in the history of providing Medicare for the last 50 years and we’re going to actually change that.”
She told the meeting that medical professionals should be working together.
“I’m unapologetically on the record as saying let’s encourage people across the health services spectrum to work together and make sure that women can safely choose options that are good for them and suit them,” she said.
Women who access private midwifery services will be able to access Medicar benefits. As well as this, midwives will be able to order medications via the PBS.
The maternity reforms provide women with greater access to continuity of midwifery care. The standard care in a public hospital is for women to see one group of midwives in the clinic, another group in the delivery suite (who work shifts) and then another lot of midwives when they are being cared for with their baby. The maternity reforms will make it possible for more women to be cared for by their own midwife, whom they have chosen. The same midwife will provide care from the first antenatal consultation right up until about 2-4 weeks after the baby is born.
This is a huge step forward for Australian maternity care. For the first time, women will be able to birth in hospital under the care of a private midwife. Private midwifery care will also be available for home births (as is currently the case). We are continuing to book women for home births beyond July.
Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448
Tags: Birth choices, continuity of care, hospital birth, Maternity Services Review, Midwifery, Midwifery services, Normal Birth, Public and private hospitals