Posted by Melissa Maimann on Aug 28, 2010 in
Home birth
Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.
Link
I live for the day that we have these headlines here in Australia!
The number of women who give birth to their children at home in Wales has more than doubled in less than a decade …
Since 2002 … they have risen from 604 to approximately 1,395 last year.
There has also been a rise in women giving birth in midwife-led units.
… the assembly government has encouraged healthy women with low-risk pregnancies to have their babies out of hospitals.
In 2002, maternity services in Wales were asked to reach a 10% home birth rate by 2007, making it the only nation in the UK to have a target.
Midwives say that while it was a very ambitious aim and many areas have not managed to reach it, it has helped transform the choice in maternity services.
On average, 4% of births in Wales last year were at home, which is higher than the UK average of 3%.
Laura Williams gave birth to her daughter Megan at home in Porthcawl, Bridgend county, on 5 November, 2009.
… “I wanted to be in a more comfortable environment – I liked the fact that with a home birth I could use my own shower and sit on my own sofa.
“As it was, I had a fantastic birth at home. I borrowed a friend’s pool and was really relaxed. The midwife even cleared everything up afterwards – I saw no mess.
… “I also think the fact I was at home and relaxed helped my recovery from the birth – the next day I was up and about and even popped to the shops.”
… “Midwives are continuing to work towards it because many see the benefits home births bring.
“They are cost effective in that women don’t need to stay in hospitals.
“And for the mother, there is less risk of medical intervention, the birth is well planned, she is in a relaxed environment and often doesn’t have to leave other children.”
… Rather than staffing a large obstetric unit at a hospital, which midwives have to do in more populated areas, they can “focus on staffing women’s needs”, she said.
… The issue of home births has been in the headlines recently after medical journal The Lancet said mothers-to-be should not be able to opt for them if they put their babies at risk. Under UK law women can override medical advice.
It came after research published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology suggested home births were more risky than hospital delivery.
But the Royal College of Midwives said the research was “flawed”, and the assembly government insisted that only women with low-risk pregnancies were encouraged to have their children at home.
The chief nursing officer for Wales, Rosemary Kennedy, said: “It is for midwives and other health professionals to explain to pregnant women the birthing options available to them, and decide on the most appropriate option after considering their medical history and preferences.”…
Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448
Tags: Babies, birth, Birth choices, Home birth, midwife, Midwifery, Midwifery services, women's rights
Posted by Melissa Maimann on Aug 10, 2010 in
Birth,
Home birth,
Midwifery,
Obstetrics,
VBAC
Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.
Link
Last week, midwives and clients of Andaluz Waterbirth Center in Portland announced plans to file a federal lawsuit to “cease intimidation and threats against midwives” by the Oregon Health Licensing Agency and Oregon Health & Science University.
Midwives say doctors and nurses at OHSU have filed baseless complaints to the licensing agency meant to thwart competition … The threatened lawsuit spurred a passionate online debate among supporters and critics of home birth.
Conflicts between midwives and doctors run deep. One of the biggest problems: Many physicians deal with midwives only when a laboring mother experiences difficulties during a home birth and requires transport to a hospital, sometime urgently.
“It’s an extremely tension-fraught encounter,” according to Melissa Cheyney, an Oregon State University assistant professor and practicing midwife who studied the interactions of midwives and doctors in Jackson County last year. Nearly every physician interviewed by Cheyney and her graduate student expressed the view that births must take place in a hospital to be “safe.”
Studies including higher-risk pregnancies have found that fetal deaths are more likely in home births. But in low-risk pregnancies, most research shows no significant difference in risk to the baby, while home-birth mothers experience fewer complications. In a study in British Columbia last year, women giving birth at home suffered fewer than half as many serious perineal tears, and about a third less postpartum bleeding.
By choosing a hospital birth, women substantially increase the risk of having a surgical delivery. More than 29 percent of hospital births in Oregon resulted in a cesarean during the years 2006-2008. Less than 4 percent of home births ended with a cesarean in a 2005 study of 5,400 births attended by midwives in the U.S. and Canada.
Women who choose home birth often cite the desire to keep birth free of medical intervention. Heather Hermans … transferred to the care of a midwife because she wanted to try a vaginal delivery rather than schedule a cesarean section, as her obstetrician-gynecologist recommended.
“My ob-gyn didn’t remember me from appointment to appointment,” Hermans said. “I was treated like pregnant cow No. 45.”
Many women will choose midwifery care to receive personalised care where they can develop a relationship with the midwife who will attend their birth.
Hermans experienced complications during labor and took an ambulance to OHSU, where a surgeon delivered her healthy baby boy by emergency C-section. The surgeon filed a complaint about Hermans’ midwife to the state … Roy Haber, an attorney hired by the midwives, said the Oregon Health Licensing Agency withdrew all six investigations after he challenged them.
Conflicts aren’t inevitable. Cheyney is working with midwives in Lane County and a Eugene obstetrician, Dr. Paul Qualtere-Burcher, on guidelines for smoother, more collaborative relations. Qualtere-Burcher and his colleagues have agreed to help midwives get access to laboratory testing and ultrasound screening for their clients. Midwives are referring higher-risk home birth clients to the physicians for assessment and another perspective.
“We’d like them to come in and see us before it becomes a big issue during labor,” Qualtere-Burcher said. “I think it’s been very successful.”
Home birth by the numbers
Planned home births in Oregon last year: 877 out of 47,675 total births, or 1.8 percent.
Risk of baby dying in a midiwife-attended home birth: 1.7 percent versus 0.6 percent in hospitals, based on a 2009 British study including women with breech births, twins, or attempting a vaginal birth after a previous cesarean (VBAC).
I’d be interested to see what these stats are when high risk homebirths are removed from the data set, or to analyse the risk of each “risk factor” in isolation to determine the riskier “high risk” situations, for example, is HBAC less risky than twin homebirth?
Risk of baby dying in a midwife-attended home birth when comparing only low-risk mothers: 0.5 percent versus 0.3 percent in hospitals.
Chances of giving birth without medical intervention: 78 percent with a home-birth midwife versus 54 percent in hospitals, according to the 2009 British study.
A women’s chances of having cesarean section when giving birth in an Oregon hospital, 2006-2008: 29 percent.
Fetal deaths in births attended by licensed midwives in Oregon, 2001-2007: 4 in 2,906 births, about 0.1 percent.
Fetal deaths in births attended by physicians in Oregon, 2001-2007: 1,455 in 274,278 births, about 0.5 percent.
This would account for the fact that midwives mostly manage uncomplicated pregnancies and births, while doctors are referred higher risk women and babies.
Number of home birth midwives who are licensed in Oregon: 64, up from 54 in 2008.
Complaints lodged against licensed midwives, 1999-2007: 40.
Disciplinary actions imposed by the Board of Direct Entry Midwifery, 2000-2004: 12
Midwife guide
…
Direct Entry Midwife – A general term for practitioners who train directly into midwifery without a nursing or medical background, and attend births outside of hospitals. Oregon law allows direct entry midwives to practice with no licensure.
Certified Professional Midwife — Direct entry midwives certified by the North American Registry of Midwives, which requires written and practical examinations and practical experience attending 40 births.
Licensed Direct Entry Midwife — Direct entry midwives who obtain a license in Oregon are authorized to use some prescription drugs and medical devices. They must pass a national examination, demonstrate experience in attending births, and complete continuing education every three years. They are licensed by the Oregon Board Direct Entry Midwifery and subject to disciplinary actions if they violate professional standards.
Certified Nurse Midwife – Registered nurses who go on to complete an accredited nurse-midwifery program. Oregon requires certified nurse midwives to obtain a Masters degree. CNMs are the only midwives that practice in hospitals. They are licensed by the Oregon State Board of Nursing.
Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448
Tags: birth, Birth choices, Caesarean, Complicated pregnancy or birth, continuity of care, hospital birth, midwife, Midwifery, Midwifery services, Obstetrics, Public and private hospitals, VBAC
Posted by Melissa Maimann on Jul 31, 2010 in
Midwifery
Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.
Link
MIDWIVES are aggrieved about new rules that might curb their access to Medicare rebates and prescribing rights …
Last year Ms Roxon announced that from November this year midwives would for the first time be able to use the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme and Medicare rebates for their clients.
At the time, Ms Roxon said the historic move would boost a midwife’s ability to work independently and increase options for pregnant women …
But in a long-awaited change to the legislation … midwives will now have to work collaboratively with a doctor, who must endorse their practice before their clients can access financial benefits.
The requirement for collaboration was always planned to be in place, but the detail of collaboration requires that a midwife has a written agreement with an obstetrician to access medicare benefits. This is problematic: more than one obstetrician must sign an agreement because no obstetrician provides 24/7 cover, so there’d need to be at least 2 obstetricians signing the agreement. What happens if one obstetrician leaves the local area? Is sick? Goes on leave? In these situations, the collaborative agreement is very vulnerable. Not only the agreement, but the midwife’s ability to provide ongoing care to her private clients.
After eight months of debate between doctors and midwives, government records show that Ms Roxon signed a determination on the matter two weeks ago, when Parliament was out of session.
Doctors’ groups who say home birth is unsafe are believed to have lobbied the government for the changes.
Yesterday, midwives and home-birth advocates accused Ms Roxon of trying to hide what will be an unpopular decision with midwives and mothers.
Australian College of Midwives president Hannah Dahlen said the change would effectively give doctors the ability to veto their access to Medicare and the PBS.
While midwives working inside hospitals would not be disadvantaged, she said private midwives would find it difficult to find a doctor to endorse them, especially if the doctor did not support home birth.
In fact, doctors have refused to sign agreements with any midwife who attends homebirths. Is this collaboration or control?
Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448
Tags: Birth choices, continuity of care, Home birth, Maternity Services Review, midwife, Midwifery, Obstetrics
Posted by Melissa Maimann on Jul 30, 2010 in
Birth,
Midwifery
Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.
Link
The AMA welcomes the Government’s introduction of new regulations that require midwives … to collaborate with medical practitioners in order to provide Medicare-funded services to patients or prescribe them medications under the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS).
AMA President, Dr Andrew Pesce, said today that the new arrangements would provide a safer higher standard of care for patients.
… “There is now a requirement for midwives … to establish collaborative arrangements with a medical practitioner in order for the service to attract a Medicare patient rebate or PBS benefit.
And that’s the problem: midwives are required to establish collaborative agreements, but obstetricians do not have to collaborate with the midwife. And there are fears that if the midwife does not work according to the obstetrician’s protocols, the agreement will be revoked. this does nothing to establish midwifery as a profession in its on right.
… “Evidence shows that patients enjoy better health outcomes when they receive coordinated, continuous, and comprehensive care that is delivered by appropriately trained health professionals,” Dr Pesce said.
Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448
Tags: Birth choices, continuity of care, Maternity Services Review, midwife, Midwifery services, Obstetrics, Public and private hospitals
Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.
Link
That I am pregnant again is an act of either incredible optimism or mind-blowing amnesia. As the sonogram technician squirts jelly over my abdomen for my 20-week checkup, I think it’s the latter. Watching this baby, who the tech tells me is a boy, I am not caught up in visions of his future; I’m caught up in visions of mine. All of a sudden, I know with a certainty I haven’t allowed myself to confront before: Somehow, I am going to have to deliver this baby.
Obviously, you say. But my first birth was traumatic, and although my son and I emerged fine, I lost a year seeking treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder and all the depression, fear and anger it brings. I imitated mothers who seemed normal to me, cooing and tickling my son. In truth, I was a zombie, obsessing about how I had ever let what happened happen.
What happened is this: In my 39th week, I am induced because of high blood pressure. At the hospital, I am given Pitocin, a synthetic form of the labor-inducing hormone oxytocin, and Cervidil, a vaginal insert used to dilate the cervix. Within two hours, my contractions are one minute apart. I had lasted as long as I could without an epidural because I had read that they sometimes slow dilation. That’s the last thing I need: I’m at a pathetic 2 centimeters. My doctor comes up with a solution for the pain: a syringe full of a narcotic called Stadol.
“I have a history of anxiety,” I tell the nurse who has brought in the syringe, as I always warn any medical professional who wants to give me drugs. “Is this drug OK for me?” “It sure is,” she says.
It is not. Within 10 seconds, I begin hallucinating. For five hours, I hallucinate that I’m on a swing that’s soaring too high, that houses are flying at my face. My husband has fallen asleep on the cot next to me, and I’m convinced that if awakened, he will turn into a monster — literally. I’m aware this notion is irrational, that these images are hallucinations. But they are terrifying. I buzz the nurse. “Sometimes that happens,” she says …
By noon the next day, 24 hours after I had arrived, I am only 3 centimeters dilated. The new nurse, a nice lady, tells me the induction isn’t working. “Your blood pressure isn’t even high anymore,” she says. “Tell the doctor you want to go home.”
When my OB comes in, I say, “I’d like to stop this induction, if that’s possible. I’m worn out. I hallucinated all night … I just don’t think this is working out.”
“OK,” he says. “Let me examine you. If you’re still not dilating, we’ll talk about going home.”
My previous dilation exams had been quick and painless, if not entirely pleasant. This one takes a long time. Suddenly, it hurts. “What are you doing?” I scream. “Why does it hurt?”
No answer.
“He’s not examining me,” I scream at my husband. “He’s doing something!” My husband grips my hand, frozen, unsure.
I scream to the nurse, the nice one who had suggested I go home. “What is he doing?” She doesn’t answer me, either. I writhe under the doctor’s grasp. The pain is excruciating.
The first sound I hear is the doctor’s directive to the nurse, in a low voice: “Get me the hook.”
I know the hook is for breaking my water, to speed my delivery by force. I scream, “Get off of me!” He looks up at me, as if annoyed that the specimen is talking. I imagine him thinking of the cadavers he worked on in medical school, how they didn’t scream, how they let him do whatever he wanted.
“You’re not going anywhere,” he says. He breaks my water and leaves. The nurse never looks me in the eye again.
Eleven more futile hours of labor later, I am exhausted and terrified when the doctor comes in and claps his hands together. “Time for a C-section,” he says. I consider not signing the consent form, ripping off these tubes and monitors, and running. But the epidural I’d finally gotten won’t allow me to stand up.
It’s nearly midnight when I hear a cry. My first emotion is surprise; I had almost forgotten I was there to have a baby.
I was desperate to find someone who could tell me what had happened to me was normal. To say, “You hallucinated? Oh, me, too.” Or “My doctor broke my water when I wasn’t looking. Isn’t that the worst?” Nothing …
Now, I’d never loved my doctor … I’d found him patronizing — “Normal!” he’d shout at me, when I asked a question — I thought his assuredness might be a good antidote to my anxiousness. It seemed to work, until it didn’t.
… I also didn’t have a birth plan … Sure, I had a plan for the birth: Have a baby using whatever breathing method I’d learned in the hospital’s birth-preparedness class, maybe get an epidural. But I didn’t have the piece of paper that so many of my friends have brought to the hospital with them … in my opinion, the very act of creating such a contract was to ignore what labor is: something unpredictable that you are in no way qualified to dictate.
… people who hear my story ask … Did I consider a home birth? A midwife instead of an obstetrician? … The answer is no. I am not holistically minded. My philosophy was simple: Everyone I know has been born. It can’t be that complicated.
The women who ask me about my preparations for my first son’s birth — who imply with these questions that I could have prevented what happened to me if I’d been more diligent — are part of an informal movement of women who are trying to “take back” their birth — take it back from the hospital, the insurers and anyone else who thinks he can call the shots.
But hospitals aren’t so interested in giving women back their birth … stipulations dealing with labor and delivery (“I want only one medical professional in the room at a time”) garner barely a glance. University OB/GYN in Provo, Utah, even has a sign that reads, “…we will not participate in: a ‘Birth Contract’, a Doulah [sic] Assisted, or a Bradley Method delivery. For those patients who are interested in such methods, please notify the nurse so we may arrange transfer of your care.”
… This question of whether I could have prevented my trauma has lingered in my mind since that day; now that I am pregnant again, it has become deafening. I have a chance to do it all over. Would I benefit from thinking more holistically? Should I bother taking back my birth?
During my pregnancies, friends gave me two books; their spines are still barely cracked. The first is called “Ina May’s Guide to Childbirth.” … The other book is “Your Best Birth” by Ricki Lake and Abby Epstein; it’s an offshoot of their 2008 documentary, “The Business of Being Born.” Their urgent message is that women who want to deliver vaginally can do so if no one intervenes. Instead, doctors and hospitals are doing all they can to “help” the laboring woman along … and failing. Inductions like mine, epidurals given early in labor, continuous fetal-heart monitoring — all of them have been associated with a higher risk for cesarean section. The result is an epidemic — 32 percent of U.S. births were C-sections at last count, the highest rate in our history. Individual surgeries may be medically necessary, but as a matter of public health, the best outcomes for mothers and babies come with a rate of no more than 15 percent, according to the World Health Organization.
Sam … was five months pregnant when watching “The Business of Being Born” convinced her that hospitals could be dangerous and a home birth would be more meaningful. She and her husband found a midwife … and spent the rest of the pregnancy preparing.
After 24 hours of labor, Sam’s contractions were two or three minutes apart, yet when her midwife examined her, she was only 3 centimeters dilated. The midwife gently told her that she was nowhere close to delivering, despite her contractions, exhaustion and pain. Sam asked to be taken to the hospital.
The change of scenery did her good. “At that point, I had been in labor for 40 hours,” she says. “I entered the relaxed zone. The epidural took the edge off … It was a sacred space.”
After her son’s delivery, Sam passed out, having lost 50 percent of her blood volume in a postpartum hemorrhage. Needless to say, she was relieved that she was in a place where blood transfusions were readily available … she believes she will want midwife care at a hospital next time.
… Bialik’s first birth didn’t go the way she wanted. After three days of labor at home, she stalled at 9 centimeters, one short of the goal. Her midwife suggested they go to the hospital, where after a natural childbirth, Bialik’s son spent four days in the neonatal intensive-care unit. “My son was born with a low temperature and low blood sugar, which isn’t unusual in light of the fact that I had gestational diabetes,” she explains. “I understand doctors need to err on the side of caution, but there was nothing wrong with my child. All of our plans for bed sharing, nursing on demand, bathing him — gone.”
The experience was scarring. “I felt a sense of failure that I had to call my parents from the hospital,” Bialik continues. “Yes, I know vaginal birth in the hospital is the next best thing to a home birth.” …
I point out that natural childbirth in the hospital — her “failure” — was my best-case scenario. But I also understand when she says, “Everyone is allowed her own sense of loss.” She realized her vision when her second son was born at home.
The second time around
I don’t consider myself a candidate for a home birth. The risk of uterine rupture from an attempt at vaginal birth after cesarean (VBAC) makes it unthinkable … I’m also not really interested in a home birth … But I’m also not interested in another C-section …
So I’d like to attempt a VBAC, but I know that it doesn’t always succeed. I have a new doctor — the 10th I interviewed following my son’s birth — at a new hospital, and he has agreed to help me try. But my primary goal is more modest: not to be retraumatized. Even now, my heart pounds at the sight of hospital receiving blankets, the antiseptic smell of the maternity ward.
The common thread in Bialik’s and Sam’s stories that impressed me was how supported and safe they felt with their midwife …
In an e-mail Bialik sends after our meeting, she goes back to my idea that some women weren’t meant to have babies the holistic way. “There are those among us who believe that if the baby can’t survive a home labor, it is OK for it to pass peacefully,” she writes. “I do not subscribe to this, but I know that some feel that … if a baby cannot make it through birth, it is not favored evolutionarily.”
I think about my appendectomy, back in 2003. Had I not made it to the hospital in time, I would be dead. What would it be like to refuse medical intervention? I’d call my family, say my good-byes. “I’m sorry,” I’d say. “But I’m not evolutionarily favored. It’s time for me to go.”
This attitude, that everything was better back when there were no doctors, seems strange to me. C-sections, although certainly done too often, can save lives. Orthodox Jews still say the same prayer after childbirth that those who have been in near-death experiences say — and with good reason. A birth that leaves mother and child healthy may be commonplace, but it’s also a miracle every time.
As the weeks pass and my belly grows, I can’t stop thinking about Sam. Her pregnancy was a sacred time, and she had truly looked forward to labor. Is that what I should try for — a meaningful birth, as well as an untraumatic one? At what point had people like Sam and me learned to feel entitled to a meaningful birth?
“I think that birth should be a beautiful experience,” says obstetrician Kimberly D. Gregory, M.D. She’s the vice chair of women’s health care quality and performance improvement at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in L.A. “It should be exactly the way you want it, and doctors should intervene only to preserve the health or life of you or your baby.”
Naturally, one would assume that Dr. Gregory advocates birth plans. When I ask her this, she laughs. “We always say, ‘If you show up with a birth plan, just get the C-section room ready,’” she says. “You get everything on that list that you don’t want. It’s like a self-fulfilling prophecy.” Dr. Gregory led an unpublished study that compared women who took traditional hospital birth classes with those who employed Bradley-like training and a birth plan. The birth-plan group trended toward a higher C-section rate and more interventions. “There’s a certain personality type that tends to be more anxious. Maybe the anxiety hormones themselves put them at risk,” Dr. Gregory theorizes. “It seems that being open and honest and choosing the right doctor is probably a better option than writing everything down. Walking in with this list appears to set up an antagonistic relationship.” …
… In the past three weeks, I’ve had the same dream. I’m in a field (I believe at Ina May Gaskin’s Farm), and women in braids are dancing around me as my baby is born, painlessly, joyously. As I reach down, I notice my C-section scar is gone.
I wake up upset. Am I truly under the impression, subconscious though it may be, that taking back this birth will undo the damage of the last one?
“I don’t understand this phrase ‘take back your birth,’” nurse-midwife Pam England, creator of “Birthing From Within,” … tells me. “Who took it? What would a woman tell herself it meant about her if she failed to meet the criteria she made up for ‘taking back’ her birth? I am concerned that this phrase, meant to generate action and a feeling of empowerment, may actually be generated by or feeding the victim part of her.”
England is right: Having a childbirth that I deem successful this time will not change what I haven’t overcome from the first. I try to find a way to make what my doctor and nurses did to me OK, but my mind rebels. I feel loss — no, theft — of an opportunity for me to have a baby the way so many other women do: a carefree pregnancy, a labor that could still go any way.
Maybe I’m not so different from the women I spoke with, after all. Bialik had a successful natural childbirth but felt like a failure because it was in the hospital. Women who had a C-section also used words like failure. Perhaps part of the problem is that our generation of women is so ambitious, so driven, that we don’t know how to do anything without quantifying it as a success or failure.
According to Dr. Gregory, women are now requesting a C-section for their first birth, even without indication. “A lot of people are uncomfortable with the unknown,” she says. Plenty of people are wary of C-sections by choice, from holistic moms to obstetricians. But isn’t this, too, taking back your birth? Refusing to be out of control seems to me the epitome of taking it back. You don’t have to have an unattended birth in the woods to be considered a real woman.
Deciding that you can’t control the uncontrollable — and committing to that decision when you are, in fact, out of control — is also taking back your birth. It’s what your grandmothers did. It’s what their grandmothers did.
With this, I realize that I have already taken back my birth, but not as part of any movement. I have stopped judging women who take extra precautions as defensive and started to understand that everyone has to find her way.
I don’t know how this story ends. I’m still not convinced my body was made to deliver vaginally. But here’s what I do know: I will insist on kindness. I will insist on care. And I hope I will be open to being treated kindly. It’s harder than it seems.
I have another hope, too. I hope there will be a moment when … I will look down at my baby — whether he is handed to me on my belly or from behind a curtain as my body is sewn shut — and I will remember what I’ve known from the beginning, when I looked down at that plus sign and we were alone together for the first time. Before these questions wrapped around my neck, choking me for answers. I will know that I am his mother and he is my son. And maybe, in that moment, I will be ready to say that the only success and failure is the outcome of the birth, that we are healthy …
I’m concerned that birth is defined in terms of success and failure, and that after this author’s journey, she has determined that health is the only important factor. In this day and age, it is entirely possible to have a safe VBAC – a safe birth experience as well as a satisfying one. The vast majority of women who choose VBAC will be successful provided that they choose the right care provider.
Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448
Tags: birth, Birth choices, birth debriefing, Birth trauma, Caesarean, Complicated pregnancy or birth, continuity of care, CTG, Epidural, fetal monitoring, Home birth, hospital birth, intervention, midwife, Midwifery, Normal Birth, Obstetrics, Public and private hospitals, VBAC
Posted by Melissa Maimann on Jul 11, 2010 in
Midwifery
Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.
Link
I am a midwife who wants to continue to provide private midwifery care. The systems and protection mechanisms that came into effect on July 1 are letting down midwives and women …
The experienced midwife has watched the deteriorating standards of care in hospitals. Consumers and midwives asked the politicians and the various health authorities for change, but what have we ended up with? A confusing set of rules that reduce women’s birthing choices and rights to privacy.
I have read the two professional indemnity insurance policies available for private midwives … I now have to scratch a plan of care that by virtue is demonstrating the “collaboration of care”, or signing over a woman’s right to privacy to a doctor or a hospital.
As for collaboration, the definition of this term cannot be agreed by legislators, health professionals or bureaucrats. I will pay a minimum of $5000 for the four to five private clients a year. Since July 1, if I do not have profession indemnity I will not be meeting the professional standards of the new national Nurses Midwives Registration Board, and I could be disciplined, de-registered or fined.
Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448
Tags: Maternity Services Review, midwife, Midwifery, Midwifery services
Posted by Melissa Maimann on Jul 7, 2010 in
Birth,
Midwifery,
Normal Birth,
Obstetrics
Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.
A question I have often wondered.
Through my practice, I have a lot of women coming to be because although they have chosen an obstetrician, they really want a natural birth and it has recently occurred to them that their obstetrician will only “deliver” their baby if they’re on their back in bed / do an episiotomy / induce by 41 weeks / insist on continuous monitoring etc, and this is not what they want.
I often ask the question, “What was it that made you decide to have an obstetrician?” or, “What was it that made you decide on this particular obstetrician?”
And the responses are generally very interesting.
• My GP referred me
• My mother / sister / friend / neighbour used this doctor and she said he’s wonderful
• Well, when I got pregnant I went to my GP. She asked me if I have private health insurance and I said yes, so she wrote a referral to Dr XX.
I ask these women if they considered any other options. “What options?” comes the response.
I’m amazed that with the marvels of modern technology, internet etc, that women don’t know they have other options. It seems to be to be an interesting handing-over of responsibility and I’m curious why it happens with pregnancy and birth, but not in any other aspect of life. Do we buy a particular computer – that can’t meet our needs – because it was recommended and we didn’t know there were other computers on the market? Do we buy a large house when we need a small house because it was recommended by the real estate agent?
In most other situations where choices are involved, people will engage in a process of assessing options.
We might list all the possible options and then assess each option across a range of qualities.
We might seek the recommendations (note: plural, not singular) from significant others.
We ask questions.
We consider what it is that we really want, and then match it to what’s available, seeking the most satisfactory choice.
But sadly, this does not happen with pregnancy and birth. Countless women come to see me, having chosen an obstetrician, but really desiring a natural birth that the obstetrician states openly he will not have a part in. There might be a birth centre in their local area, private midwives who could attend them, or even a public hospital caseload midwifery program. Sadly, these options were not explored by the family.
The next question, then, is why, having chosen a care provider who is truly not suited to our needs, do we stay with that care provider?
I always applaud women who make the courageous change. Many women who come to me describing their “predicament” will re-appraise their options and make choices that are aligned to their preferences. Others will remain with their original decision but will ask me to attend them throughout their pregnancy and birth in attempt to act as an intermediary between them and their obstetrician. I don’t consider this to be the most advantageous position, either for the woman, the obstetrician or myself. However, surprisingly, it seems to work well and all the births I have attended in this capacity have occurred on the woman’s terms. I am in awe of those women for having the courage of their convictions to remain with an ill-suited care provider and find the resources that will help them to still have their birth on their terms. They come away elated, feeling they have truly achieved the best of both worlds: an obstetrician they know for if something “goes wrong” and a private midwife who is an expert on natural birth.
Ideally, women will see a midwife for a pre-conception consultation where birth options can be discussed. Some women will ultimately benefit from – or desire – an obstetrician for their pregnancy and birth and this should not be denied to those women. However, a large majority of women simply want a “natural birth” and assistance to avoid tearing and a long labour. They want a healthy baby, a satisfying experience and they really want continuity of care. These women need to know – even before they become pregnant – the options that are open to them. It’s never too early to meet with private midwives and choose the one who is suited to your needs.
Ultimately, if the maternity reforms work to women’s advantage and if obstetricians and midwives are able to put The Birth Wars aside, women ought to be able to have continuity of midwifery and obstetric care: one midwife and one obstetrician who provide the woman’s care so that she benefits from a natural birth expert and an expert in things that “go wrong”. Place of birth could be home, birth centre or hospital and waterbirth would be a supported option.
Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448
Tags: Birth choices, continuity of care, midwife, Midwifery, Midwifery services, Obstetrics, Preconception care, Public and private hospitals
Posted by Melissa Maimann on Jun 28, 2010 in
Home birth
Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.
I was sad to read this article in the papers yesterday (although I love the beautiful homebirth photo that it included!)
The article is entitled, “Homebirth Laws Confusion” and only served to increase the confusion about homebirth.
Homebirth is not illegal. Nor will it be after July 1 this year.
MIDWIVES attending home births in Tasmania could be liable for misconduct prosecution after July 1.
The article stated that, “Australian Nursing Federation state secretary Neroli Ellis said the changes meant midwives who continued attending home births could be open to misconduct liability legal action.”
The reported interviewed a well-known and experienced midwife who was quoted as saying, “The new regulations are meant to take effect from July 1 but there is nothing in place and we have no idea what we are meant to do” … She said she suspected the regulations were a backdoor way of banning home births.
The ANF is only correct *if* the midwife practices homebirth without insurance. So long as the midwife has insurance for pregnancy and postnatal care, it is perfectly legal for midwives to continue to attend births.
There may be some issues with insurance:
- The policy is quite expensive, especially for midwives with low caseloads, and costs for homebrith are expected to increase
- The insurance policy requires that the woman books into a hospital and that the midwife shares with the hospital a maternity care plan for the woman – in the interests of safety
- The insurance policy demands that the midwife works to evidence-based guidelines and best practice.
But … so long as these conditions are met, homebirth is, and remains, perfectly legal.
Women having homebirths need to know that there is no insurance for the actual birth. Pregnancy and postnatal care is covered by insurance. You can expect to sign a form stating that your midwife has told you about this fact and that the have understood this.
All births will be reported to the Health Department – already a legal requirement.
As well as this, midwives will need to adhere to a Quality and Safety Framework. This Franework is in the hands of the Nursing and Midwifery Board at the moment and until it is placed in a code or guideline, it is not intended to be folowed. Indeed, we only have a final draft, so cannot follow it as it has not been released.
The bottom line is: homebirth is not illegal!!
Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448
Tags: Birth choices, Home birth, Maternity Services Review, midwife, Midwifery, Midwifery services
Posted by Melissa Maimann on Jun 23, 2010 in
Birth,
Home birth,
Midwifery
Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.
Can private midwives be fined for delivering a baby at home?
No. it’s perfectly legal for private midwives to attend homebirths. There are no fees or penalties to the midwife or family.
What is an eligble midwife?
An eligible midwife is a midwife who has:
Current general registration as a midwife in Australia with no restrictions on practice;
Midwifery experience that constitutes the equivalent of 3 years full time post initial registration as a midwife;
Current competence to provide pregnancy, labour, birth and post natal care to women and babies;
Successful completion of an approved professional practice review program for midwives working across the continuum of midwifery care;
40 hours per year of continuing professional development relating to the continuum of midwifery care (20 hours in addition to standard requirements);
Formal undertaking to complete an accredited and approved program of study to develop midwives’ knowledge and skills in prescribing within 18 months.
Clients of eligible midwives are able to access Medicare benefits for the services provided by eligible midwives. eligible midwives are also able to access visiting rights at a later date.
Can you use a private midwife in public hospital in sydney?
Yes. You can work with a private midwife during your pregnancy and she can provide all of your pregnancy care. You can labour at home as long as you like with your private midwife, moving to hospital when you feel ready. In hospital, your midwife will ensure that your needs are met and provide support and advice. After your new family member arrives, you can return home and be cared for by your private midwife.
Sometime after November, private midwives will have visiting access to hospitals.
Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448
Tags: Birth choices, continuity of care, Home birth, hospital birth, Maternity Services Review, midwife, Midwifery, Midwifery services, Public and private hospitals
Posted by Melissa Maimann on Jun 15, 2010 in
Birth,
Midwifery
Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email Melissa Maimann or call 0400 418 448.
I came across this interesting article detailing an American woman’s experience of giving birth in an American hospital: Mom fires OB during birth when threatened with a cesarean! The woman writes:
… I let myself be pushed into inducing. We were at 42wks … My family was all becoming quite impatient and there was a lot of pressure to have her out. I agreed to be induced and get things started.
… 6 am we were at the hospital. I took a ton of food in with me, because I was not going to do this with no fuel. We got settled, the first nurse got us all checked in did all the paperwork and started the IV. They had a change of shift, so the next nurse, Anna, come-on and she was wonderful.
Anna spoke with us and I told her how things were going to go. To call the doctor if she needed but I was the one birthing a healthy baby, and unless the stats of baby changed, this is what I wanted …I told her we would be doing the pit slowly. I only wanted an increase every 45 min to an hour, not the every 15 the Dr. had ordered. She called the Dr and it was agreed. So off we set. We had a cervical check and I was barely dilated 2 and my cervix was very posterior.
I had no idea how the pit would work on me and baby so we just waited. Annabella was so squirmy, they couldn’t keep her on the monitors, Anna had to hold them on and move with her …
After awhile the Dr came in and wanted to look for Annabella and when she couldn’t find her well stated the baby was breach and we needed to go have a c-section. I looked at this woman and told her no, baby had not flipped I would have felt it, and I was not getting a c-section today. That if baby had turned, then we would turn off the pit, and I would go see my Chiropractor to help move her around again. I don’t think the Dr liked me. I didn’t care. So she ordered an ultrasound just to see, and I was later told she knew baby was breach and had started the paperwork to send us on.
Annabella was in fact not breech. She was head down just not really engaged. I felt so good knowing I was right. All this happened about 11am. There had been no increase in the pit for awhile … We started upping it again.
During these times since Annabella wasn’t staying on the monitor anyway, I was up. I walked and rolled on the ball. I leaned over the ball to do pelvic tilts. Pretty much anything I wanted. I really enjoyed that. I was eating and drinking … At 2pm I declined another cervical check …
I was standing and rocking my hips back and forth during the waves, and they were nice. Just these waves, they never were uncomfortable. I didn’t feel I needed to go in to off during them so I just stayed in center moving as I felt I needed to. Anna would come in and check baby with a Doppler, and the let us do our thing.
About 4 the Dr was back, she wanted to see where we were so we checked. I was 4cm, and my cervix was no longer posterior, about 70% effaced.
• The Dr. said I was not where she would like to see me by now. She wanted to break my waters and move things along.
• I told her no thanks; I felt we were doing fine. Baby was fine, so was I.
• She didn’t look surprised. She did get quite nasty though, and told me if I didn’t do things the right way this will land in a c-section and was putting myself and child at risk. That she was going off shift and there would be someone else.
• I … looked her square in the eye and told her that my child in fine.
• I am not having a c-section to please her that if she had not noticed this was MY birth. I was the one doing things, until someone can show me that my child was unsafe I would do this all night if needed. That was the RIGHT way.
• Also that it was a good thing that she was going off shift, because she was fired. I didn’t want her back in my room. I didn’t need any one in there being negative. I was sure there were other people around who could catch this child, and if not I would do it myself.
• She left the room in a quick hurry, and as I turned around again, my husband and … the nurse were all just kind of staring at me.
My husband was stunned, and asked if I could do that, firing the Dr. I told him I didn’t care if I could or not, she wasn’t coming back to my room …I don’t know how things happened from there, but another Dr. came in and introduced himself about 45 min. later and was way more respectful than that woman had been.
We continued, at 7pm the waves were more intense and almost on top of one another … I started to shake and shiver but I wasn’t cold. I vomited all over, and then with the next wave I felt pushy. soon there after my waters broke during one of the pushy waves.
… My body had taken over, I had no choice but to push … Annabella was born at 8:06pm 7lbs 10oz. 21 inches long. She cried for a bit but was so awake and alert. She is just perfect. She latched on and nursed minutes after birth. I am so happy with this birth. I did it the way I wanted even if it didn’t start the way I choose. I wish the dr had been more supportive. But you can’t have it all.
Let’s consider this case from the perspective of private midwifery care after July 1, 2010. This woman went to 42 weeks. The ACM Guidelines stipulate that at 42 weeks, the midwife must refer the woman to an obstetrician for opinion. No doubt the opinion will be that induction is warranted. The woman may accept or decline this advice. If she declines, and if the obstetrician does not agree to the midwife’s continued care of the woman, the woman will be left without care under the Government’s insurance policy. On the other hand if the woman agrees and accepts induction, this will take place according to the obstetrician’s preferences or hospital policy. As the story above shows, the woman advocated for herself throughout. She declined a caesarean, artificial rupturing of her membranes, a vaginal examination and continuous monitoring. Currently, women can birth in a hospital with their private midwife and their midwife can advocate for them provided that the woman has a birth plan that clearly states her preferences. After July 1, our continued involvement in the woman’s care will be dictated by the obstetrician in attendance or with whom we have a collaborative agreement. In the interests of maintaining a collaborative agreement and ongoing income, the midwife will need to remain silent when the woman is outside of the ACM Guidelines and does not agree to the care being suggested. After July 1, women must fend for themselves if the care being suggested is at odds with their preferences.
Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448
Tags: birth, Birth choices, Caesarean, Complicated pregnancy or birth, continuity of care, hospital birth, intervention, midwife, Midwifery, Midwifery services, Normal Birth, Obstetrics, Public and private hospitals