American Midwives will be insured for home birth

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email me at Essential Birth Consulting or call 0400 418 448.

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Effective immediately, American College of Nurse-Midwives (ACNM) and its longstanding [insurance] partner … have created an insurance plan for home birth coverage in all 50 states. This measure means that the 5,000+ members of ACNM will now be able to obtain coverage for home birth practice.

… We support the right of women to choose a planned home birth …

It would be great if this could be extended to Australia too!

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Mother of all Rallies

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email me at Essential Birth Consulting or call 0400 418 448.

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THE official decision to withhold medical insurance for home births has come under fire as an unjustified step not supported by international evidence, a Liberal MP and former obstetrician, Andrew Laming, says.

Dr Laming said the call by state and federal health ministers for more data on the safety of home birth before providing medical indemnity was ”ridiculous”, given the relative safety and likely low cost of any government subsidies that might be needed.

He said several big international studies had made it clear that home birth was as safe as hospital birth in low-risk cases, which represented 90 to 95 per cent of births.

… The ”mother of all rallies” drew 2000 home-birth supporters to Parliament from all over Australia who braved drenching rain …

Labor senator Claire Moore, chairwoman of the Senate’s Community Affairs committee, defended the decision by the health ministers last Friday to exempt home births from provisions that would have outlawed the procedure for two years while a ”quality and safety framework” was developed.

Senator Moore said ”everybody talks about safety”, and the Government wanted to get it right for home birth.

The federal legislation to extend medical indemnity to private midwives, but not for home birth, is now before Parliament but is not expected to be opposed by the Coalition despite the strong support for women to be able to choose the option of home birth provided by Dr Laming and other Liberals.

… The protesters included Michelle Marazakis, from Melbourne, who decided on a home birth after suffering painful obstetric intervention when she had her first baby, a daughter, Mikaela, in a public hospital.

Ms Marazakis said she was subjected to ”high intervention” during delivery – drugs to induce labour, then a forceps delivery.

For her second delivery, she chose a midwife-attended, deep-immersion delivery at home …

”It was fantastic. It was safe … there were no drugs and no intervention.

”I had a home birth baby because I knew it was the safest way,” Ms Marazakis said.

Suzanne Clutterbuck, 87, came from Middle Dural in Sydney because two of her four daughters had given birth at her home.

Doctors were often too busy to spend time with women in labour and tended to intervene because they could not spare the time to let nature take its course, Mrs Clutterbuck said.

Dr Sarah Buckley, a GP who had her four children by home birth and has written books on the subject, said: ”Home birth is the safe choice.”

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

No sense in denying women safe births

Interested in home birth, hospital birth or private midwifery care? Questions or comments? Email me at Essential Birth Consulting or call 0400 418 448.

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As a medical student, I am encouraged to think critically about health-care legislation. I can see no reason why registered midwives should not be enabled to attend home births, as a safe and desirable part of maternity services.

… the weight of medical evidence shows that for low-risk women, a planned home birth attended by a competent midwife is essentially as safe as giving birth in hospital, and involves fewer interventions such as medicating for pain. The (noticeably fewer) studies that report a higher risk for home births often neglect to discriminate between low- and high-risk situations, such as a preterm or unplanned birth, or where the mother is not attended by a registered carer.

The unavailability of a midwife will not prevent some women giving birth at home with no professional assistance. This year’s Maternity Services Review reported its concern about the ”small number of Australian women [who] are choosing home births without the support of an appropriately trained health professional”. Why, then, did it recommend making it harder for women to obtain such support?

There appear to be two reasons. First, few women in Australia, 700 to 800 a year, choose a home birth. But this is no reason to restrict the practice further. A woman giving birth at home with a midwife will incur lower costs than one using a public hospital and the services of nurses and doctors. In many regional and remote areas , a midwife may be the only option …

The second reason the report gives is that allowing home births risks ”polarising” the health professions and obstructing a collaborative approach to maternity services. I can only ask how restricting the services of one profession can promote a collaborative approach.

Given the proven safety of planned, low-risk home birth attended by a registered caregiver, and its economical and practical benefit, it is strange and disappointing to see Australian women’s choices in giving birth restricted in this manner.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Delivering security for midwives

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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OVERTURNED meeting procedure and a unanimous vote will see Mitchell Shire Council requesting future security for home births in Victoria.

Councillor Kelley Stewart – who has given birth to two of her three children at home – put a motion to council last week seeking written representation to the Federal Government in support of privately practising midwives.

Her call comes as Federal Parliament prepares to debate a new Bill regarding public professional indemnity for midwives, which will potentially exclude privately practising midwives.

… “… no private insurance provider will insure a private midwife, not because it’s a ‘safety risk’ profession, but because there are so few privately practising midwives that it’s not a profitable business,” Cr Stewart said.

“If then they are excluded from this public indemnity, they will basically be banned from practising in Victoria because they have to be registered and insured to work in this state.”

Cr Stewart raised the motion for representation to the Federal Health Minister as a matter of urgent business … councillors voted unanimously in favour of the motion.

… private midwives were currently the only midwives in Victoria who attended home births.

… “I made an educated, informed choice to have my children at home where I was relaxed, comfortable, my wishes, my needs were listened to and respected.

“But it was not so much the location that was important to me but that one-on-one continuity of care I got from my private midwife.

“I had the same midwife antenatally, during the birth, postnatally. She knew everything about my pregnancy – labour, breastfeeding issues – from start to finish.”

Kilmore mum Lisa Costantin had planned a homebirth for her first child and, although she was transferred to hospital, was pleased to have had the choice.

“Homebirth is not high risk – women have been doing it for years,” Mr Costantin said.

“For any low-risk pregnancy it should be an option.

“I had planned a homebirth but there were complications and when the time came my midwife said I should go and I trusted her.

“You are not going to risk your baby just to make a stand on an issue.”

Cr Stewart said that banning homebirth as an option in Victoria would force women to either go to hospital or choose freebirthing, which without appropriately trained carers could increase the risk to both baby and mother …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Government backs down over homebirthing legislation

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The Federal Government has backed down on controversial legislation that would have seen homebirthing effectively made illegal.

… Under the draft laws, midwives must be insured to join the register but private insurers no longer provide cover for homebirthing and the government has also refused to subsidise professional indemnity for homebirth claims.

As a result, up to 200 independent midwives faced deregistration from July 2010 and, if they continued working, risked fines of up to $30,000.

… following a meeting of state and territory health ministers … Nicola Roxon announced a two year exemption from holding indemnity insurance for privately practising midwives who can’t obtain cover for attending a homebirth.

To take advantage of the exemption, homebirthing midwives will be required to tell women they are not insured, report each homebirth they attend and participate in a quality and safety framework which will be developed after consultations led by the Victorian government.

… “I was concerned that as an unintended consequence of the national registration and accreditation process that homebirthing may be driven underground, that that would not be a good outcome.

“This arrangement agreed to today ensures that homebirthing midwives can lawfully continue to provide their services in jurisdictions where that’s allowed.”

That’s concerning …. where is it allowed?

Ms Roxon said the government would ask the National Nursing and Midwifery Board to give advice on protocols for homebirthing outside the public health system.

I don’t believe anyone on the new Board is a private midwife who attends home births. And I question the wisdom of inviting nurses to have input into the midwifery profession. Are optometrists asked to give comment on psychology practice?

“We have a process to be able to work further on protocols that would either bring more homebirthing services into our public system or potentially open the way in the future for an insurance product to be extended to cover them,” she said.

I have a better idea. Keep hospital birth in the hospitals, and keep home birth at home. If private home birth is allowed to continue legally, then we ought to promote private home birth services, not the public hospital services that cater best to risk-associated pregnancies.

“This two year exemption allows plenty more time for those protocols to be established and worked on.”

… “We’ve undertaken a maternity services review process which did not recommend that public funding be provided for homebirthing and we stick by that advice,” she said.

Home birth has never been funded by the Govt.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Home birth with a private midwife will be exempt from insurance requirements

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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Pregnant women wanting to give birth at home have won a reprieve after Federal Government and the States cut a deal today to allow midwives to continue practising without insurance.

Health Minister Nicola Roxon announced privately practising midwives would have a two year exemption from obtaining medical indemnity cover.

… Under the deal announced today following the Health Ministers conference in Canberra, midwives will be able to keep practising homebirths provided they warn expectant mothers they do not have insurance, they follow quality and safety guidelines being developed and each homebirth is reported to health authorities.

The exemption will last until June 2012 …

Fantastic news!! The details are still hazy though – will home birth be funded in any way? Will midwives who attend births at home be able to access PBS and order tests for their clients? Midwives will need to have insurance to register. What is the situation for midwives who only attend births at home? It seems that they will need to purchase an insurance product that they cannot use!

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Deaths at Birth Illuminate Tanzania’s Health Challenges

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In Wayali Hospital in Bagamoyo, Imani Msisi – just over eight months pregnant – lies motionless on a narrow metal bed, pressing a thin sheet to her chest.

She was referred to the hospital several days ago because of unusually sharp pains in her abdomen. There is no nurse or doctor in Msisi’s village, only a health officer with some basic medical training. Fearing the worst, he sent Msisi in a taxi on the nearly hour drive to Wayali.

She was found to be having a false labor and was treated at the hospital, but is being kept there until she gives birth. If Msisi goes home and a complication does occur, she may not be able to make it back in time.

“In the villages … If [pregnant women] are hemorrhaging they are transferred here but sometimes they die before they leave …” …

According to the most recent maternal mortality data … 578 women died in 2004 per every 100,000 live births, and that rate has increased since 1999.

World Health Organization data paints an even bleaker picture, listing the Tanzania maternal mortality rate for 2005 at 950 deaths for every 100,000 live births. In comparison, the United States had 11 maternal deaths for every 100,000 live births in 2005.

… The leading cause of maternal death in Tanzania is excessive bleeding before or after birth … Infection and high blood pressure also cause many maternal fatalities …

… “In the rural areas [it is] an average of 5 to 10 kilometers for someone to walk to the nearest health facility …” …

… the ministry is planning to have a dispensary and health officer in each village, and is upgrading some dispensaries to health clinics, which can handle minor operations. The country is also working to train more health professionals to ease the dire nursing and doctor shortage in the country.

Assistant medical officers, with three years of medical training, have had to take up many of the responsibilities of doctors in Tanzania, and perform about 80 percent of cesarean sections.

… About 53 percent of deliveries in Tanzania are attended by unskilled people, while 47 are attended by skilled health care professionals …

“… [traditional healers] are a necessary evil,” … because there simply are not enough health workers and some people only trust healers. In response the government is trying to provide some training to traditional healers, teaching them to recognize danger signs and providing them with antiseptics.

… maternal deaths are “just a part of life” and she estimates the Morogoro hospital sees as many as 20 maternal deaths in a month.

… “You could have three or four birth on one day,” Massi said. “Sometimes if they are rushing they can’t sterilize the equipment between births so that is dangerous.”

… While assistant medical officers are an important resource, Im says she gets angry when she sees women suffering with botched cesarean sections, which should be a simple operation.

… Efforts to educate women about the importance of antenatal care have been successful …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Outcomes of planned home birth with a registered midwife versus planned hospital birth with midwife or physician

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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More research to prove the safety of low risk home birth. It’s interesting to note that VBACs are included in this home birth study as low risk. For the record, there were 2 uterine ruptures, both in the hospital-doctor-attended births. The rate of rupture was therefore 0.0154%. Much lower than the oft-quoted 0.7%. The midwives must be doing something right!

Giving birth at home with a midwife present is as safe as a hospital delivery accompanied by a doctor, suggests a new Canadian study …

Actually, they got that bit wrong. Midwife-attended home birth was not found to be as safe as doctor-attended hospital birth: it was found to be the safest. The safest way for a low risk woman to birth is at home with a midwife, then in hospital with a midwife, and the most dangerous way to birth, according to the study, was with an obstetrician in hospital.

The study … analysed nearly 2,900 planned home births in British Columbia that were attended by regulated midwives, more than 4,700 planned hospital births attended by the same midwives and more than 5,300 hospital births attended by physicians.

The research found that women who had a planned home birth had a lower risk of having to undergo obstetric interventions such as electronic fetal monitoring, epidural, assisted vaginal delivery and caesarean section, and adverse outcomes such as hemorrhage and infection.

The babies born at home were also less likely to suffer birth trauma, require resuscitation at birth and less likely to have meconium aspiration, where they inhale a mixture of their feces and amniotic fluid.

The perinatal death rate per 1,000 births was also low across all three groups.

But it was lowest amongst the midwife-attended home births.

“The decision to plan a birth attended by a registered midwife at home versus in hospital was associated with very low and comparable rates of perinatal death,” the authors said. “Women who planned a home birth were at reduced risk of all obstetric interventions assessed and were at similar or reduced risk of adverse maternal outcomes compared with women who planned to give birth in hospital accompanied by a midwife or physician.”

The findings add to the ongoing debate about the safety of home births. According to the study, research from North America, the United Kingdom, Europe, Australia and New Zealand has not found a link between planned home births and an increased risk of complications …

This research adds to the growing body of research that is no longer suggesting – but proving – that low risk home birth is safe. I think we can mount a strong case that the Australian Government is now putting women at risk by failing to indemnify midwives for home births after 2010.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Put The Safety Of Babies And Their Mothers Ahead Of Home Birth Ideology

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The title of this article is offensive to say the least! The vast majority of home birthing women do not put home birth ideology ahead of a safe birth.

Australia’s peak group of obstetricians and gynaecologists today repeated its warning that home births – with or without a midwife – carry too much risk to babies and their mothers and the Government should resist calls to indemnify midwives outside of hospitals.

For starters, she does not seem to even acknowledge the difference between midwife-attended home births and free births.

The President of the National Association of Specialist Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (NASOG), Dr Hilary Joyce, congratulated the Government-majority Senate Committee investigating proposed legislation relating to the role of midwives, for putting the safety of babies ahead of protestations by a small but vocal minority of people.

“I would urge all politicians to look to the evidence and to speak to the doctors and the midwives who have to deal with some of the tragic consequences of home births,” Dr Joyce said today.

“Australia has one of the safest and highest quality maternity services in the world where specialist doctors work side by side with qualified midwives to ensure babies and their mothers have a safe and successful birth experience.”

Safe and successful? Many women who enter the hospital system to give birth come away traumatised. The majority of women who birth at home with a midwife are happy and satisfied with their experience. Rates of mortality are the same for low risk women whether they birth at home or in hospital. But morbidity is far higher in hospital.

… “There is irrefutable evidence that women and babies are significantly safer in hospitals because of the immediate access to specialist care. Thankfully, only 0.25% of Australian women risk their lives and that of their babies by choosing a home birth.”

I’d like to see this irrefutable evidence. I cannot find it. “only 0.25% of Australian women risk their lives and that of their babies by choosing a home birth.” – is this offensive or what? The vast majority of home birthing women I know will not risk their baby’s life or their own simply to birth at home.

Dr Joyce said the Minister for Health and Ageing was acting in the best interests of babies and their mothers by refusing to financially endorse the unsafe practice of delivering babies at home.

“There are things that can go wrong suddenly in a birth which, if not under specialist care or near medical assistance, can result in an avoidable death or permanent injury,” Dr Joyce explained …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Birth wars rage in your delivery room

For further information about birth or private midwifery, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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YOU’RE in the dentist’s chair with a painful tooth, feeling fragile.

“That tooth has to come out,” says the dentist.

“I’ll give you an anaesthetic and extract it.”

You’re surprised – you had hoped the tooth would be all right – but you nod and say something like “Ungh-hnghm” through a mouthful of cotton wool and dentist fingers. After all, he’s the expert.

The dentist turns to prepare the needle, when a dental technician leans over and whispers in your ear: “You know you don’t have to do what he says.

“He doesn’t know what he’s talking about. What about root canal? Or homoeopathic remedies? And anyway, you don’t need an anaesthetic.

“There’s a dentist next door who does acupuncture and hypnosis for pain relief. It’s much safer. Oh, and did you know fluoride is toxic?”

The dentist snaps at her to stop: “Ignore her – she’s pushing her own agenda.”

Tense, stressed and utterly confused, you lie back, open your mouth and look up at two medicos glaring at one another.

Who is in charge here? What’s the real truth? And why didn’t anyone tell you there was some sort of power struggle going on?

Of course, this doesn’t happen in dental surgeries. Open hostility between clinicians would be madness, serving only to baffle patients and undermine the whole purpose of creating healthy smiles.

But this is exactly what happens in maternity care, every day, in birth centres, hospitals and homes. Hostility, suspicion, mistrust, abuse and vitriol abound in relationships between obstetricians and midwives, clinicians, academics and activists.

Many readers already will have decided that this article is biased because I chose to use a dentistry metaphor – they’ll say a diseased tooth is utterly incomparable to the natural process of childbirth.

Or … they might say it’s unfair to choose a dentist and a technician to represent the opposing forces, because it implies one is more expert than the other – or that it’s wrong to mention homoeopathy or acupuncture because they have unfair implications of hippiedom.

Welcome to the birth wars. Everything that is published, posted or broadcast about the topic of pregnancy, birth and parenthood is contentious.

Some midwives and obstetricians are moderate and co-operative – but many are entirely opposed to the idea of working together, or sharing expertise …

There seems to be no middle ground. And that’s the problem, according to author Mary-Rose MacColl, a journalist … who spent years investigating maternity care. Her new book, “The Birth Wars” … is an exploration and denunciation of “the conflict putting Australian women and babies at risk”.

… MacColl uncovers a battleground that she believes Australians need to understand. It’s a fight between “organics” and “mechanics” for control and influence.

In MacColl’s parlance, the “organics” are mainly midwives who believe birth is a natural process that has become overly medicalised, with the consequence that many women are traumatised by cold, clinical births, unnecessary caesareans and excessive medication.

The “mechanics” include many obstetricians and hospital clinicians, who believe birth is a risky, delicate process that must be carefully monitored to ensure women and babies are safe.

Between the two sides, virtually nothing is agreed. Can a breech baby be delivered vaginally? Can a caesarean birth be followed by a vaginal birth? Should women be given synthetic hormones to help deliver placentas quickly after birth? Should home birth be encouraged, or even allowed?

… Beneath those practical questions are deeper, theoretical fights that rage with equal vehemence: what is an acceptable level of risk? What does “safety” mean? Is it essential that women have continuous care from a single, trusted practitioner?

Do we even have a right to expect that all births will result in live, healthy mothers and babies – or have we deluded ourselves about what to expect?

… The biggest problem … is not home births nor caesareans nor any of a hundred other contentious issues: the biggest problem is the destructive birth wars themselves.

“They need to talk to each other and they need to work out their differences, so that women get a coherent view about maternity care from the maternity care profession. I think that’s a reasonable thing for women to expect,” she says.
… if there is no consensus between practitioners, how are expectant parents supposed to make decisions?

… Lillienne’s story is told in The Birth Wars, but the short version is that her mother … was labouring in the midwife-run Birth Centre … After many … hours she was transferred to the hospital’s surgical Birth Suite. The baby’s heart rate dropped dramatically during labour, she was deprived of oxygen for some time and was eventually born by c-section.

Reviews found numerous problems: Debra’s high blood pressure was not interpreted as a warning sign at an early stage; confusion reigned over who was in charge; obstetricians were not welcome in the Birth Centre, where midwives were in charge.

… MacColl says there are many birth centres within hospitals, where doctors and midwives oversee completely separate domains ….

… the federal Government proposes to overhaul maternity by subsidising insurance costs for midwives, helping them to operate in private practice. Home births will not be covered.

… The proposal has sparked a furious debate, with home-birth advocates warning that women will have secret, underground home births without expert care.

… “While ever they’re fighting and it’s `organics versus mechanics’ we’ll have no change in the hospital system. We’ll keep establishing birth centres that draw lines in the linoleum and (say): `He’s on that side, I’m on this side and he better not cross the line.

… How crazy is it that you can be in one of the largest tertiary hospitals in Australia and have a situation where doctors are not allowed in? And, at the same time, how can you not recognise that a woman in labour is going to need a quiet, dark, calm environment like a birth centre, instead of a stark hospital room?”

MacColl has two goals. The first is to raise awareness that the birth wars exist, in the hope that parents can think carefully about their choices before the contractions begin …

I thought that was a fantastic article! I’m not sure that the solution is as simple as midwives and obstetricians sitting down and talking. For one thing, I don’t necessarily agree that obstetricians have an agenda that is too dissimilar to midwives’ agendas. I believe insurance is the key.

Currently, obstetricians have insurance and are far more likely than midwives, to be sued. Midwives essentially cannot be sued. For there to be a case, there needs to be solicitors and barristers on both sides. Private midwives are self-employed, and despite the view that women pay excessive amounts of money for their births, I can assure you we’re not wealthy. Essentially, midwives do not have money to fund lengthy court cases. But obstetricians do. And so do hospitals. Hospital-employed midwives are covered by vicarious liability. So if there’s going to be a court case, the woman or her baby are best suing the doctor or the hospital, rather than the private midwife.

No hospital or doctor wants to go through a court case. Even if they win, it’s emotionally and mentally taxing, it takes much time, and costs money. So there’s a strong incentive to avoid court cases and being sued. And the best way to do this is to practice defensively. Do a caesarean sooner rather than later. It’s easier to sue for a caesarean that was not performed in time – clearly, if something went “wrong”, a woman can argue that a caesarean should have been performed. Conversely, it’s very hard to prove that a caesarean was unnecessary. You can always find a reason why it was necessary.

So we have created – via our legal system – a situation where caesareans and any other interventions are encouraged. You cannot be sued for intervening. Only for failing to intervene.

So our caesarean rate is amongst the highest in the world. Over 31%.

We induce many women.

We continuously monitor many babies in labour.

We do not encourage waterbirth (how can you get a woman out in time if there’s an emergency??)

We encourage birth on the bed so that forceps or a vacuum can be easily applied if needed.

All births ought to take place in hospitals – or at worst, birth centres that are right next to the delivery suite and operating theatre. You just never know when they’re going to be needed.

Can you see what’s happening here? The fear of litigation prompts defensive practice, which leads to higher rates of intervention.

But I come back to my original statement: I don’t believe that mdiwives’ and obstetrician’s agendas are too dissimilar. Both want the best for women and their babies. I do not believe that obstetricians are out there to perform as many caesareans as possible, and to induce all other women and extract their babies with forceps. Nor do I beieve that every midwife wants to birth women in the water, with no monitoring of the baby, letting the labour go on for as long as it takes.

But insurance is the key. People have a need for safety. That includes midwives and obstetricians. Noone goes to work with the intention of traumatising a woman with surgery – particularly unnecessary surgery – but this needs to be balanced with the needs of the professional to practice their profession safely, however they define it.

If it were up to me, I would call for two things:

1. Greater transparency of pratitioner’s intervention rates, perhaps on a public register that is easily accessible, so that women are able to choose their health professionals with accurate information; and
2. Reform of our legal system, to a no-fault system such as the ACC Scheme in NZ.

Midiwves and obstetricians getting together and talking is a way away. It happens every day, but actually sorting out the differences will take time. There are many issues at the heart: competition, money, perceived superiority (from both sides!), the list goes on.

National guidelines on midwifery and obstetric care might help. Guidelines that state that within certain guidelines, women see a midwife. If they choose to see an obstetrician, they may fund this themself. And then, if a woman’s condition deviates from normality, as defined by guidelines, the midwife and woman consults with an obstetrician, or refers the woman’s care to an obstetrician. In this model, we see midwives caring for healthy pregnant and birthing women – doing what we do best, and obstetricians caring for women who need their services – doing what they do best. Such guidelines would optimise the care of pregnant women and eliminate the turf wars. These guidelines are in existence, and have been developed by the College of Midwives. Private midwives and employed midwives use them to guide the care they give to women.

The author of the article states, “obstetricians were not welcome in the Birth Centre, where midwives were in charge” – there is no issue with this. Midwives ought to be in charge of normal birth: it is our specialty. What is wrong is to fail to offer an obstetric consult to a woman when her condition deems it necessary. The GP provides most of the care to a family and refers members of the family to specialists when necessary: this is not perceived as a turf war. Why is midwifery and obstetrics any different?

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Women and birthing choices

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WOMEN wanting homebirths are under pressure to have their children before July 1 next year …

… some women are considering limiting their families … if homebirth midwives are refused professional indemnity support.

… all women should have the birth they wanted.

… The Health Legislation Amendment (Midwives and Nurse Practitioners) Bill 2009 and two related bills currently under debate could make homebirths unlawful from July 1 next year …

… the legislation could put babies and mothers at risk.

“Does it take a baby to die at home without a midwife for things to change?”

About 30 Ballarat Maternity Coalition members will attend a Homebirth Australia rally in Canberra on September 7.

There has been a lot of media about this issue.  I’m hopeful that a resolution will be found, however home birth services as we know them will change forever.  I will write another article about the positives that may come of the changes, and also the hesitations that I have.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Birth wrangle

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A warning from Australia’s peak group of obstetricians and gynaecologists that home births carry too much risk to babies and their mothers is completely false, according to an Echuca midwife of 25 years.

The National Association of Specialist Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (NASOG) claims home births, with or without a midwife, are too risky and the government should resist calls to indemnify midwives outside of hospitals.

How can she compare midwife-assisted home births and free births?

Proposed laws … would require midwives to have professional indemnity insurance before they could be registered.

But such insurance is unavailable for people who work outside hospitals.

Midwife and maternal and child health nurse Andrea Quanchi, who operates Echuca-Moama Midwifery and Parenting Service, said if the laws were passed, said she could possibly face fines of up to $30,000 for helping with home births.

… “Then there will be no regulation of midwifery standards and that is dangerous.

… There was nothing dangerous about home birthing – it was about providing women with choices, she said.

… “If there is an emergency, we transfer them to the hospital … The transfers run seamlessly … ”

Mrs Quanchi said she didn’t force clients into home birthing and had been present at countless hospital births.

“It’s not my decision as to where they want to have their baby,” she said.

“It can’t be their ultimate goal. It’s about what’s right for them at the time.

“If something goes wrong, we’re out of there.”

NASOG president Hilary Joyce said Ms Roxon was acting in the best interests of babies and their mothers by refusing to financially endorse the “unsafe practice” of delivering babies at home.

“There are things that can go wrong suddenly in a birth which, if not under specialist care or near medical assistance, can result in an avoidable death or permanent injury,” Dr Joyce said.

And far more goes wrong when women birth in hospitals with every machine that goes ping.

That has not been the case with any of Mrs Quanchi’s 75 clients, over a 10-year period.

“Home births are for women who have low-risk pregnancies, no complications and have a good back-up plan. They also need to be from a good, stable home environment,” Mrs Quanchi said.

“We’re not in the danger game of proving a point.”…

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Dutton Duds Our Valuable Nurse And Midwife Workforce, Australia

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The Liberals have put at risk the Rudd Government’s landmark reforms for the nursing and midwifery workforce by refusing to indicate the opposition will support the bill before the Parliament.

In a contribution of 30 minutes, the Shadow Minister for Health and Ageing couldn’t bring himself to support these important reforms that will improve choice and support for thousands of families in our community.

Provided that they birth in hospital …

… These landmark changes for nurses and midwives will give them access to the Medical Benefits Schedule (MBS) and Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) for the first time. These changes will provide all Australians with greater choice about their healthcare via improved access to the skilled services of nurses and midwives.

Again, only for hospital birth. Women choosing home birth will be on their own.

This legislation is a key plank of the government’s $120.5 million maternity reform package, improving the choices for Australian women in accessing high quality, safe maternity care, as well as providing support for the maternity services workforce.

On the separate issue of Registration and Accreditation that is causing concern for those in the community that support homebirths …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Fight for right to homebirth

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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MELISSA McFarlane is devastated expectant mothers could soon be denied the right to the intimate and private homebirths she received.

… Under the legislation, midwives must be insured to join the register but private insurers no longer provide cover for homebirthing and the Federal Government has also refused to subsidise professional indemnity for homebirth claims.

As a result, up to 200 independent midwives could be deregistered from July 2010. If they continue working they risk fines of up to $30,000.

Ms McFarlane delivered three of her four children through homebirths in the comfort and familiar surroundings of her own home.

She said the homebirths of her last two children were an incredibly intimate, gentle and beautiful experiences.

They allowed her children to be present at the birth of their siblings, minimised the disruption to family life and kept her in the comfort of her own home.

“There’s no diseases at home … it was my normal environment, food from my own fridge, my normal air,” she said. “I have found it a very gentle process.”

… Supporting Ms McFarlane through her four pregnancies was the same midwife, who she said was the utmost professional.

… A Senate inquiry last night found that homebirthing may be driven “underground” if the Federal Government’s proposed changes to maternity laws were passed …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Homebirths hit by insurance law

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NORTH COAST midwives who attend homebirths could soon be out of a job after a Senate committee yesterday recommended all homebirth midwives be insured.

Midwives warn this would shut them down because no insurance company in Australia will cover homebirths.

… Ms Juszczak said women intent on having their babies at home would no longer be able to access a registered midwife and would instead have to rely on unqualified help or ‘go it alone’.

“I believe that in most circumstances homebirth is safe, but there are circumstances where intervention is necessary and someone who is not skilled may not pick up on those instances,” Ms Juszczak said.

“So potentially, in those few cases, it will be more dangerous for those women and those babies.”

… “But even if the midwife can’t gain insurance, she is still registered … so you know that the woman has a particular level of expertise and experience,” she said. “The impact of this is that women will no longer be able to access a registered midwife for a homebirth, so basically it opens up the door to unsafe practice for women in homebirths.”

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Mums fight for home births

For further information about home birth or midwifery, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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Four Busselton mothers concerned about the future lack of choices for expectant women are going to join a rally at Canberra House next month.

Mother-of-five Jane Reynolds said proposed changes to Commonwealth legislation … would take away the choice for women to home birth.

Mrs Reynolds said women in the South West depended on independent midwives for home birth deliveries but this would be hindered by their inability to secure professional indemnity insurance.

… Busselton was in an unusual position with three independent midwives and two in Bunbury and had become an “enclave for home births” with a heightened awareness of the proposed legislation, Mrs Reynolds told the Times.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Home births to be outlawed

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HOME births would be driven underground by new maternity laws, a Senate committee has admitted.

The community affairs committee said that without special insurance, midwives would be unable to legally practice.

“The committee acknowledges the concerns expressed by stakeholders that an unintended consequence of this may be to drive home births underground unless an exemption is granted or an insurance product found,” …

But it said the changes should be approved regardless.

Home birth advocates said the recommendation was insane.

The proposed laws would require midwives to have professional indemnity insurance before they could be registered. But such insurance is unavailable for people who work outside hospitals.

“It categorically will be unlawful,” Homebirth Australia secretary Justine Caines said.

“Without amendments, it should not pass through.”

Health Minister Nicola Roxon said she was trying to secure special insurance cover that would allow midwives to work outside hospitals.

… Mara Dower, who gave birth to her son … and daughter … [at home], said women would be deprived of the most nurturing environment if midwives were prevented from overseeing home births.

She said midwives were needed for many women to have safe births, with the level of medical interventions and unknown people involved in hospital births making it an unrealistic option for some.

“I would definitely go underground and still have a midwife if I had to,” she said.

“It would increase the dangers for women because having a personal midwife means they have a duty of care.

“… you get the advice, … feel cared for and looked after, and you have information at your fingertips.”

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Homebirth mums ‘forced to use unregistered midwives’

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A national maternity consumers’ group says women will be forced to use unregistered midwives if they want homebirths from the middle of next year.

… under the proposed amendments, new indemnity insurance arrangements for midwives will not apply to homebirths.

… “Women will be able to choose a non-registered care provider to give birth at home, which is of concern to the Maternity Coalition,” she said.

“We would really like women to be able to access a registered midwife for their care during birth and labour at home.”

So long as we don’t use the title “midwife”, and are not registered as midwives, we will be able to attend home births. However, midwives who are not registered will not be able to access valuable continuing professional development exercises, participate in the profession, access additional care for our clients, or have anything to do with the profession. We will nto be able to transfer in with our clients if hospital transfer is necessary. We will need to leave our clients at the front gate of the hospital. They will need to lie about all the antenatal and labour / birth care that they have received. Is this how we provide safe and effective care in 2010? It sounds like a mighty step backwards to me!

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Mums angry over fed govt homebirth midwife row

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… federal government legislation could drive the practice of homebirthing underground.

In the chilly pre-dawn moonshine of May 3, 2008, Felicity Gibbins went into labour …

The night was still and the household calm as the family prepared for the arrival of their second child …

… A homebirth is such a beautiful and intimate experience, Felicity says.

“The power of the mind is really an amazing thing. My attitude towards the pain was that each contraction was going to bring me one step closer to seeing my baby,” she says.

“I was really excited about meeting my baby. I’d already fallen in love with it. It was my little friend who I would talk to all the time.”

Using visualisation, meditation and yoga techniques, she worked through the pain, surrounded by her loved ones.

… “We had talked a lot about having the baby and read a few children’s homebirth books, so she was aware of what was going on.

… Maya helped Paul fill the homebirth pool with warm water and baby Haile arrived at 8.22am weighing 3.9 kilograms.

“I pulled him out and into my arms,” Felicity says.

“It was delightful … my eyes were closed and I can still feel him now, his wrinkly skin over his head, his arms and legs stretched out searching for his mummy like a little slippery frog,” she says.

Coaching her through this birth, as she had with Maya’s homebirth, was [an] independent midwife … with 25 years’ experience.

But a federal government proposal could effectively criminalise midwife care for homebirths, jeopardising the health and safety of mothers.

Under the proposed new laws, debated in the House of Representatives this week, midwives must be insured in order to be registered.

But since 2001, private insurers stopped providing cover for homebirthing and the federal government has also refused to subsidise professional indemnity insurance for homebirth claims.

… independent midwives could be deregistered from July 2010. If they continue working they will risk fines of up to $30,000.

Felicity says if she does have a third child she could not imagine going through labour in the public setting of a hospital after two special experiences at home.

But, she said she would not have a homebirth without a midwife … I felt really confident.

“In the hospital you can’t have one-on-one care with a midwife … there might be one midwife for three or four women.

“Being told where I should birth my next baby is offensive … ”

… “I could be at … the hospital and catch people’s babies but you don’t necessarily remember their names; with homebirths you remember everything about it because you have that opportunity to make that connection,” …

“I do all the [antenatal] visits in the client’s time and then give labour support and then post-natally you see them every day for a week or two … so it’s a huge amount of hours that goes into each client.

“You become very good friends. It’s still professional but it’s more than that.”

… if the government changes are adopted, the health of women and their babies could be at risk.

“There’s certain potential for danger,” … “Women could go it alone.”

… it’s a myth that it’s mostly hippies who choose to have homebirths.

“I have had clients who are doctors, lawyers, people in financial services, IT – all sorts of career paths,” she says.

“It’s become a mainstream option.”

… “Women have the opportunity if they have had birth trauma to choose to have a caesarean, which comes at a higher cost to (taxpayers) with higher risk factors, yet women who are low risk can’t choose to homebirth which is deemed to be safe by world-wide reports.”

… up to 2,000 women have home labours each year …

Homebirth mothers and midwives will protest at Parliament House in Canberra on September 7 at 11.30am

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Midwife indemnity plan may spark GP obstetrician exodus

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GP obstetricians could ‘down tools’ as a result of Federal Government plans to allow midwives to practise independently with subsidised indemnity insurance.

The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RANZCOG) has warned the move could drive up doctors’ insurance premiums and force them to quit practice.

“Obstetricians may be called in too late to manage an obstetric emergency and have to face the blame for a poor outcome, when an earlier referral may have averted a crisis,” the college said.

“[If] premiums rise, that could be a considerable driver for doctors [to exit] the obstetric workforce, and we are already on… a knife edge with workforce,” RANZCOG president Dr Ted Weaver said.

The college warning comes as three pieces of legislation were introduced to Federal Parliament that would expand MBS and PBS rights for midwives and nurse practitioners, and provide the former with federally subsidised indemnity cover.

In submissions to a Senate inquiry into the legislation, doctor groups have called for clearer detail on the proposed collaborative models of care, amid fears the legislation will lead to fragmented and lower standards of care (MO, 31 July).

There’s no reason for doctors to believe that their premiums will be affected by this legislation. Midwives will have their own indemnity. If a woman or baby needs to sue, they will sue the midwife for her part in what has happened, if negligence can be proved. Instances of unsatisfactory professional conduct or professional misconduct will be dealt with through disciplinary processes, as is the case currently. What the legislation does is to extend to midwives and the women they care for, the professional right to insurance that is shared by all health professionals. It places midwives on par with other professionals who are responsible for their practice.

If RANZCOG / AMA believe that insurance makes a profession safer, as they have previously stated, they ought to be happy that midwives will now have insurance. They ought to be especially pleased if insurance would be extended to cover home births, which they see as high risk and dangerous. Medical groups have been heard to say that doctors are often left to “pick up the pieces” from home birth that have “gone wrong”. Well, if midwives are insured, they would not be sued in place of the midwife. So why aren’t RANZCOG, the AMA and other medical groups right behind our demand for insurance to be extended to cover home birth?

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Midwife laws may force homebirths underground

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A SENATE committee has acknowledged that proposed legislation for midwives may ”drive homebirths underground”.

The Government chairwoman of the Senate’s Community Affairs Committee, Claire Moore, said the three Labor members recommended proceeding with legislation that would expand the role of midwives and extend government support for medical indemnity cover for midwives operating in hospitals.

Senator Moore said the legislation did not make homebirth unlawful, but separate legislation dealing with the accreditation of health workers ”may result in homebirths being outside the scope of practice of registered midwives due to the requirement for indemnity insurance as a condition of registration”.

The committee acknowledged the concerns that ”an unintended consequence of this may be to drive homebirths underground unless an exemption is granted or an insurance product found”.

Since the potential barrier to homebirths emerged, the Health Minister, Nicola Roxon, has indicated that she is prepared to consider ways of extending medical indemnity to homebirths, provided this could be achieved without making the insurance costs ”unaffordable”.

The Liberal members of the committee, Sue Boyce and Judith Adams, called for the Government to commission an actuarial analysis of the risks of professional homebirth and, if feasible, make it eligible for government support.

A Greens senator, Rachel Siewert, also called for the indemnity scheme to be extended to low-risk homebirths.

” … the voices of more than 2000 women speaking out on fundamental women’s rights has been ignored and given the sheer magnitude of the evidence put forward and the results the committee has come up with, it looks like we are getting to the end of the line when it comes to options.”

More than 10,000 women are expected to attend a rally outside Parliament House in Canberra next month to continue the fight.

If you’re wanting to have a home birth, it’s best to start trying for a baby now so that you birth before June 30, 2010. It’s almost certain that this legislation will be passed. National Registration demands that all health professionals have professional indemnity insurance to practice. That does not make home birth illegal. The other 3 Bills around PI for midwives and midwife eligibility for MBS, PBS and insurance, state that insurance will not be extended to home birth. That also does not make home birth with a private midwife illegal. It is the intersection of the 2 laws that make private home birth illegal.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Home births

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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When it comes to giving birth, more mothers-to-be are deciding that there’s no place like home. In what can be a painful and at times scary experience, it is easy to imagine the appeal of creature comforts, far away from the clinical environment of a hospital.

“The nicest thing was after the birth I could have a bath in my own home, sit on the sofa, and watch TV with a cup of tea,” says Katrina Fox, 29, a full-time mother from Bournemouth who gave birth to her daughter Casia at home … She joins a growing number of women who have decided to have a home birth. … there has been an 8% increase in the number of home births since 2006 …

Any expectant mother … may quite understandably be apprehensive. … nearly one in four babies in England are still being delivered by caesarean section, despite additional risks to both mother and baby …

… a recent Dutch study … concluded home births were just as safe as hospital births … [for] low-risk mothers …

… Statistically less likely to suffer complications in labour, [low risk] women in good health who have not had caesareans or unexplained stillborns in the past …

Hughes gave birth to her second daughter Elizabeth at home four weeks ago, and is a strong advocate for home births. “It’s just so much more relaxed and a much better experience. The fact that you’re at home in your own space with two midwives the whole time means you’re not stressing as you have the full attention of them,” she says.

Fox agrees that home birthing is a much calmer experience, and one that requires little preparation. “For a hospital birth, you have to make sure everything you need is in a bag ready for you to go. Women obviously used to have their babies at home many years ago and they didn’t make a big fuss over it. Really all you need is a clean area, towels to wrap the baby in, and something to cover your floors.”

It can be difficult to forget about the neighbours, though … “I just warned my neighbours beforehand as they were directly below and above me. They were old dears and were very excited and thought it was lovely.”

As relaxing and intimate an experience as home births can be, the hospital cannot be removed from the equation altogether. About a quarter of home birthers will end up being transferred to hospital during or after labour, which is an area of concern for critics. There are a number of complications that can require transferral to hospital, including shoulder dystocia, haemorrhaging and breech births. A 2008 study … found that a transfer increases the risk of the baby dying by eight times the national average. Despite this, there are no set restrictions on the distance between the birthplace and the hospital.

The government has pledged that every woman will have the option of a home birth by the end of the year …

If only this was the case in Australia!

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Roxon joins mother of birthing battles

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The author of this article has got the facts very wrong, but none-the-less, it’s great to get home birth and midwifery in the media.

THE Rudd Government’s threatened ban on home births is moving closer to reality …

From July 1 next year, the requirements of a new registration scheme mean independent midwives – long denied medical indemnity insurance – will be fined $30,000 if they practice without it. This finishes their ability to work outside the hospital system.

Midwives will not be fined $30,000. Midwives who practice without insurance may be deregistered. If we continue to practice midwifery once we’re deregistered, we face fines and/or a jail term. This is the same rule that applies to anyone who practices midwifery without registration.

… Where to give birth, and who attends, is a medical decision. If a pregnant woman is competent and informed, it is her decision to make. Australian law allows patients to choose who will treat them and where, and even to refuse interventions – like transfusions – that medicos deem life-saving.

Again, I disagree. The decision about where to give birth rests with the woman and the professional who is attending her. This may be a doctor (in which case, the decision is medical). However, for the majority of women birthing at home, the decision is a midwifery decision.

This means that even if evidence showed that hospital births were life-saving, pregnant women could still refuse them. Given that the evidence shows no such thing, this right seems even stronger.

A recent article in the British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology looked at 529,688 cases and found no difference in the health of babies born at home to low-risk women and those born in hospital. Another large study found that the only difference in outcomes favoured home birth, which produced babies with higher Apgar scores, and showed home births were less likely than hospital births to result in unnecessary and risky medical interventions, such as induced and augmented labour, forceps delivery and caesarean sections.

… Denying independent midwives registration won’t stop women from birthing at home. It will simply increase the risks they take doing so. It will be backyard abortion all over again – complete with shonky providers, death and suffering – except this time it’s backyard birth.

The mantra that birth is simply a normal part of a woman’s life is rubbish. It is an extraordinary event that most women will face just a few times. They need medical guidance, in the form of proper pre-natal care to know if home birth is a safe option for them.

Professional, experienced, independent midwives can offer this advice, and a safe and secure environment for low-risk women who birth at home.

Again, it is midwifery guidance, not medical guidance. If doctors supervised home births, there would be no home births.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Insurance measures could force homebirths underground, Opposition says

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HOMEBIRTHS will be driven underground by Rudd Government moves to force midwives to be insured. Some 200 midwives could be driven to practice clandestine homebirthing because they will be denied indemnity insurance, the Opposition says.

Opposition health spokesman Peter Dutton said the Coalition backed women’s choice of where a child was born but Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and Health Minister Nicola Roxon were trying to drive the practice of homebirth underground.

“Does Mr Rudd really believe that by making homebirth illegal or for midwives making homebirth illegal to practice, that that will somehow stop the practice of homebirth,” he told reporters.

Under proposed new laws, midwives must be insured in order to be registered.

But private insurers will no longer provide cover for homebirthing and the Federal Government has also refused to subsidise professional indemnity insurance for homebirth claims.

… In a statement released by her office, Ms Roxon said the Government recognised the important role played by qualified midwives in the birthing experience of many Australian women.

… “… [I] am currently investigating if there is some way that we can provide this as an option without making the proposed midwife indemnity insurance unaffordable,” she said.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

More C-sections, more problems

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After an emergency cesarean with her first baby, Ruby Wales was holding out for a vaginal birth with her second one … finding a physician to deliver her second child wasn’t easy. Her first obstetrician turned her down flat …

… the cesarean is now … the most common operation in the U.S. … performed in 31% of births, up from 4.5% in 1965.

… the intensive and expensive U.S. brand of medicine has failed to deliver better results and may, in fact, be doing more harm than good.

… As the No. 1 cause of hospital admissions, childbirth is a huge part of the nation’s $2.4-trillion annual healthcare expenditure, accounting in hospital charges alone for more than $79 billion.

Because the average uncomplicated cesarean runs about $4,500, nearly twice as much as a comparable vaginal birth, cesareans account for a disproportionate amount (45%) of delivery costs …

… The problem … is that the cesarean … exposes a woman to the risk of infection, blood clots and other serious problems. Cesareans also have been shown to increase premature births and the need for intensive care for newborns. Even without such complications, cesareans result in longer hospital stays.

Inducing childbirth … also is on the rise and is another source of growing concern. Experts say miscalculations often result in the delivery of infants who are too young to breathe on their own. Induction, studies show, also raises the risk of complications that lead to cesareans.

Despite all this intervention — and, many believe, because of it — childbirth in the U.S. doesn’t measure up. The U.S. lags behind other developed nations on key performance indicators including infant mortality, birth weight and neonatal intensive care admissions.

… The maternal death rate began to rise in 2002, and the typical American newborn is delivered at 39 weeks, down from 40 …

… “Cesarean birth ends up being a profit center in hospitals, so there’s not a lot of incentive to reduce them,”

… Among California hospitals, cesareans range from 16% to 62% of births.

Such variation means a lot of women are getting unnecessary cesareans …

… “If the old incision was a vertical, then a trial of labor is not a good idea,” … “But what happens now in the United States is the low, transverse, an incision in the bottom part of the uterus, from side to side. Those heal better. All the studies say, in those types of incisions, the risk is less than 1%, probably a half percent, that it will open during labor.”

… Saddleback supported Wales’ desire for a vaginal birth. Nine days after her due date and after 30 hours of labor, she gave birth — the way she wanted — to an 8-pound, 11-ounce boy.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Victoria to Pilot New Home Birth Option

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Victorian families will more birthing choices thanks to a Brumby Labor Government pilot program. … a pilot program would be established at two Melbourne hospitals to trial public home birth services.

“The Brumby Labor Government is taking action to provide Victorian families with world-class health services,’’ Mr Andrews said.

“Home birthing has been a popular option considered by women expecting straight-forward, uncomplicated births.

This is great news. But I disagree with the statement that “Victorian families will more birthing choices”. Some will have more choices open to them; most will not. Only low-risk women will have home birth as an option available to them.

… Until now, the only option for women seeking a home birth has been to engage a private midwife at their own expense …

… “Trailing the Victorian model where homebirth could be part of the public system is consistent with the Commonwealth recommendations, and would ensure that women opting for home births would still fall directly under the umbrella of hospital services should any complications arise,” Mr Andrews said …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Government discriminating against home births, says Homebirth Australia

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PROPOSED laws which would stop mothers from accessing registered midwives for homebirths would jeopardise the health of thousands of women and babies, a peak maternity group says.

… Under the draft laws, midwives must be insured to join the register but private insurers no longer provide cover for homebirthing and the Federal Government has also refused to subsidise professional indemnity for homebirth claims.

HA secretary Justine Caines said the draft laws effectively stop registered midwives legally attending home births.

“The national registration requirement is absolutely appropriate,” she told a Senate inquiry into the legislation.

“What is not appropriate has been the (Health Minister Nicola Roxon’s) response to say …’I will enable the funding of one-to-one midwifery care through Medicare for midwives who care for women birthing in the hospital system, but I won’t do it for homebirth’.”
Related Coverage

… Australian Greens senator Rachel Siewert said draft laws effectively rendered homebirths illegal.

“Where there is a low-risk pregnancy it is safe to have a home birth and women and families need to be able to have that choice,” she said.

The Greens will seek to amend the bills to ensure homebirthing with registered midwives remains an option for women in Australia.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Ban on midwives doing home births sparks protests

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Women who want a home birth could be forced to hide their pregnancies from doctors and give birth without a registered midwife under the proposed Federal Government midwifery indemnity scheme, endangering themselves and their babies, advocates say.

… Rachel Siewert said the legislation did not protect the rights of women to choose safe home births with the help of registered midwives.

Homebirth Australia secretary Justine Caines said a growing number of women were dissatisfied with hospital births and the Government should reconsider excluding home births.

An independent review done for the WA Health Department into the safety of home births two months ago said they generally were no riskier than hospital births when they were well supported.

… Mother-of-five Jane Reynolds … said she would consider an unsupervised home birth if she was having another baby because she strongly opposed hospital births for low-risk pregnancies.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Fear of childbirth increases risk for dystocia, emergency C-section

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Nulliparous women who fear childbirth during pregnancy are at increased risk for dystocia and emergency cesarean section but not fetal distress …

“Fear and anxiety activate a hormonal stress response in pregnant and laboring women, which can result in dystocia or protracted labor,” …

Fear of childbirth in early (16 weeks) and late (31 weeks) pregnancy was associated with emergency cesarean section, with corresponding odds ratios (ORs) of 1.23 and 1.32. When fear of childbirth was present in both early and late pregnancy, the OR increased to 1.43.

… women who feared childbirth … had an increased risk for dystocia, but not fetal distress (OR = 1.33 and 0.94, respectively).

They recommend optimal support during labor to reduce the risk for emergency cesarean section.

It would be interesting to see a comparison study between midwifery-led care and obstetric-led care in terms of women’s perceived anxiety at the end of pregnancy and subsequent caesarean rates for dystocia.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Maternity body slams home birth proposal

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Proposed laws which would stop mothers from accessing registered midwives for homebirths would jeopardise the health of thousands of women and babies …

Homebirth Australia … is angry about a suite of bills … which propose … midwives must be insured to join the register but private insurers no longer provide cover for homebirthing and the federal government has also refused to subsidise professional indemnity for homebirth claims.

… draft laws effectively stop registered midwives legally attending home births.

“The national registration requirement is absolutely appropriate,” … “What is not appropriate has been the (Health Minister Nicola Roxon’s) response to say … `I will enable the funding of one-to-one midwifery care through Medicare for midwives who care for women birthing in the hospital system, but I won’t do it for homebirth’.”

…. “What she has done is made a giant step forward and been too scared to take the next step because of medical objection, because of the power of the medical lobby.”

The Australian Medical Association has previously spoken out against homebirthing, warning it is significantly more dangerous than giving birth in a hospital.

But Ms Caines said Labor’s legislation would endanger pregnant women who were unable to access registered midwives for their homebirths.

… “Where there is a low-risk pregnancy it is safe to have a home birth and women and families need to be able to have that choice,”

… The Greens will seek to amend the bills to ensure homebirthing with registered midwives remains an option for women in Australia.

… The government was examining ways of allowing home births to continue without imposing prohibitive costs on midwives …

If you’re planning to have a home birth, it’s best to start trying for a baby now so that you can birth before June 30, 2010. The future of home birth is uncertain after that date.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Don’t tell women how to give birth

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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How a woman gives birth provokes strong views, with impassioned arguments for normal births, and for Caesareans.

But … the most important thing is for women to be able to choose.

The use of technology in birth – such as the development of epidurals for pain relief and Caesarean sections – has long been a cauldron into which divisive and conflicting issues and opinions have been poured.

… Women can be left deeply scarred by a birth which may have been physically safe but has ignored the emotional aspect of it

When the … NICE was considering guidance on giving birth in the NHS, the large number of midwives who sent in comments were only too aware of how the home birth option was once again nearly lost.

They had to challenge the appropriateness and interpretation of the evidence being considered on the safety of place of birth.

There is a fundamental question needing to be asked here: why do some doctors and midwives devalue the choice of home birth, despite the lack of evidence against it?

… what women want at all times, is good and unbiased information from the health professionals caring for them, so that they can make the appropriate choice about how technology can help them.

One high-profile obstetrician recently relating the birth experience to the advances in agriculture, transport and energy production reminded us alarmingly of the language previously used in the “active management of labour”, when women’s bodies were viewed as machines that were frequently “inefficient” and in need of acceleration.

It has seemed that the health professionals that care for women today had largely moved on from this strange and controlling discourse, and it’s disappointing this may not be the case.

The bottom line here is that what women want is to be able to make a real choice, for the health service to offer them that choice, and for that choice to be based on having all the information needed to make an informed decision …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Government plan to ban homebirth an attack on “Women’s Rights”

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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The Rudd Government’s plan to ban midwives from attending homebirths is an attack on women and their right to give birth how they choose …

Senator Fielding will be attending a rally today … to voice his opposition to the ban on homebirths.

“This is an outrageous decision … totally inconsistent with all other health care systems which operate around the world.

… “It is a woman’s right to decide how she gives birth. It is not up to the Government to tell her how to do this or where to do this.

… “Numerous studies have shown that for low-risk women with appropriate transfer… options available, homebirths are at least as safe as births in hospitals or birth centres.

“This Bill is a dangerous move … “whether the government likes it or not, women will continue to give birth at home. All this will do is drive homebirths underground with disastrous ramifications for women and their newborn.”

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Homebirth in the Netherlands

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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… the largest study of … home birth that has ever been done … [showed that] the planned place of birth made no difference in the rates of babies dying or getting severely sick.

This is exciting and validating news for those of us who are advocates of home birth and midwifery care. … the medical community is barking up the wrong tree: it’s not the location of the birth that is the problem … it’s the fact that midwives are not integrated into the maternity care system. This causes problems with safe and timely transport.

What does the maternity care system look like in the Netherlands?
Midwives are the primary care providers for all low-risk pregnant women and are fully integrated into the Dutch maternity care system. Midwives are independent, autonomous care providers and can attend births at home or in the hospital. Low-risk women are placed into “primary care” with midwives, and women who are at increased risk for complications are placed into “secondary care” with obstetricians; in other words, midwives are the routine provider for most pregnant women, and OBs are the specialists.

A woman might start out in primary care at the beginning of her pregnancy, and if risk factors arise during pregnancy, in labor, or during the postpartum period, she would be transferred into secondary care with an obstetrician. If the problem is resolved in secondary care, the woman goes back to primary care with a midwife. At the onset of labor, if a woman is in primary care, she can choose to give birth at home or in the hospital with her midwife …

When a woman laboring at home has to be transported to the hospital, this can be accomplished quite quickly.

… Once they arrive at the hospital, the midwife may continue to care for the woman … or she may be cared for by an obstetrician if the situation warrants secondary care.

How was “low-risk” defined in the study?
* No VBACs at home
* No multiples at home
* No planned home breech deliveries
* Hospital transport from home must occur after 4 hours of no progress in active first stage, and one hour of no progress in second stage

… How were women selected for the study?
… All women who were in midwifery-led care at the onset of labor were included in the study … By definition, these women had low-risk pregnancies …

… Of low-risk women in midwifery care, about 60% planned home births.

What does the data say?
Of low-risk women cared for by Dutch midwives, the location of birth did not make any difference in outcomes for babies … There were some characteristics of the women or their pregnancies that did seem to have an impact on the outcomes. Those having worse outcomes were the following:

* Primiparous
* Gave birth at 37 weeks or 41 weeks
* Were 35 years or older
* “non-Dutch” ethnicity

… The Dutch study had a transport rate of about 30%; … North American CPMs in 2000 had a 12% transport rate … The hostility toward homebirth midwives is probably one big reason for this difference, and other facets may include more conservative indications for transport in the Netherlands, ease and readiness of the Dutch EMS transport system, and/or possibly different training of midwives.

… this new study contributes excellent data to the body of literature that continues to affirm that birth at home with qualified midwives is no more risky than birth in the hospital for low-risk women.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Defending the right of Mums to have a safe home birth

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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Home-birthing can be a safe option for parents with proper medical supervision.

My wife and I were very lucky with both our babies. High quality medical advice mixed with relatively easy births … meant that our experience was everything we could have hoped for.

It was a very intense and private experience.

… I was surprised when I saw the Federal Government’s reforms to maternity services … I was very surprised by a small but concerning provision in the legislation that bans a range of medical professionals from delivering babies at home.

As it stands now, you are able to legally choose to have your baby at home …

Many [women] have had horrific experiences in state run public hospitals and simply refuse to risk that experience again.

The new Roxon plan will ban these women from having professional assistance during their home birth. It will not prevent the practice of home birthing, it just proposes to outlaw health professionals from assisting with the birth. It has the potential to make these home births much more dangerous.

It would seem to me that banning health professionals from assisting with home births is more likely to increase the danger by pushing the practice underground …

Now this is just crazy. The Government is not suggesting that birthing at home is dangerous, indeed there are Government funded programmes that operate home birthing services.

The evidence suggests that the health outcomes from home births have not led to increasingly dire outcomes, to the contrary it appears that many parents who have chosen to have home births have healthy babies and then recommend the experience to others …

… Home births are not for everyone … But I don’t believe removing this choice will help ensure that the birthing experience should be as safe and special as it can be.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

(UK) Government to promote home births

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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Women will be given every encouragement to give birth at home if that is their preferred option.

The Department of Health says it wants to end assumptions that a hospital is always the best place to have a baby.

Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt has commissioned work into how to make home births more available.

… women with a history of complications will still be urged to give birth in a hospital.

… flawed research from the 1970s which falsely concluded home births were not safe had informed government policy for decades.

… there [is] a well of evidence to suggest that home births were at least as safe as giving birth in hospital.

Patient satisfaction levels were higher for home births, and simply booking a home birth led to a halving of the Caesarean section rate, she said.

It’s great news that our government is now supporting low risk home birth and private midwifery care for hospital birth. It’s such a huge step forward!

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Home births back on agenda

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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CANBERRA is reconsidering its controversial exclusion of home births from a new midwifery indemnity scheme …

Federal Health Minister Nicola Roxon revealed yesterday she was looking at whether the government could accommodate home births in the $25 million indemnity scheme.

“I recognise that a very small proportion of women would like to have home births and (I) am currently investigating if there is some way that we can provide this as an option without making the proposed midwife indemnity insurance unaffordable,” she said.

The scheme was welcomed by midwives, when announced in the May budget, as a precursor to next year’s expansion of their powers to prescribe subsidised medicines, order publicly funded tests and claim Medicare rebates.

Private midwives had gone without insurance cover since the indemnity crisis at the start of the decade, putting their ability to practise at risk under a new national registration scheme for health professionals that also takes effect next year.

Fantastic news for home birth! With private midwives being scattered all across Australia, these changes will ensure that home birth remains a valid option for the majority of Australians.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Where to, maternity?

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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A tiny kick reminds Anna Edlington that her life is about to change. Forever. Soon the 27-year-old West Aucklander will not only be a daughter, a wife or a teacher. She is becoming a mother … Foxcroft investigates the midwife crisis, and the state of the baby business across Auckland.

… The ability to choose who delivers a baby sets New Zealanders apart internationally. Our maternity system is discussed, held up and analysed by other nations. This year, the hard-fought-for system is set for a shake-up with a new Ministry of Health Maternity Action Plan.

… It is given that Auckland has very real problems in the baby business. The Aucklander reported more than two years ago that there are not nearly enough lead maternity carers (LMCs) for the population.

… The College of Midwives recommends midwives care for four women a month, or 50 a year. Some midwives cannot say no to the voice on the phone, pleading: they are taking eight or more clients in a month because the women have no one else to turn to.

… “My husband and I were lucky. We were able to find a midwife late – I was eight weeks pregnant. I know it’s not the same for others.”

Mrs Edlington also counts her lucky stars her midwife takes only a limited number of clients – four a month.

“For her, it’s never been an issue that she is at one birth when someone else goes into labour. It just doesn’t happen,” she says.

“In terms of personal care, it makes a huge difference. It’s harder the more clients your midwife has.”

… the shortage of midwives is the biggest problem.

… Another problem is the lack of primary birthing centres … We would like more women giving birth in primary units or at home.”

… We have to remember that New Zealand is often referred to as the gold standard.”

BEFORE 1990 a doctor had to supervise all births, which is still the case in other countries. The Nurses Amendment Act 1990 allowed midwife-led care for well women; in 1996 the Government enshrined choice for women by developing the Lead Maternity Care model. This meant women could choose who would look after them during pregnancy, birth and post-natal care.

It was a brave and socially challenging decision …

… there is no standard model for health boards to collect electronic data. The methods differ from area to area …

Post-natal care is another issue. “Having primary care centres where mums and dads can get used to being parents would help …

Fray, an independent midwife based on the North Shore, sees areas ”screaming out for improvement.

”Hospital shiftwork midwives earn minimal incomes, especially considering the enormous responsibilities of managing the care of a labouring woman and unborn foetus,” she says. ”Self-employed midwives can earn a reasonable income but only with the cost to lifestyle by being on call 24-7. Let’s face it, that deserves an excellent income.”

… ”The other horrid area … is the hideous way the media revels in attacking midwifery. Childbirth has never been so safe, yet midwives have never been so slammed with criticism. It’s incredibly denigrating and disparaging to all of us who work with phenomenal dedication.”

For Denise Hynd, another independent midwife, the main concern is the high level of medical intervention, stemming in part from where most of the country’s babies are born.

”Even with midwives it’s still a very medicalised system,” she says. ”All the evidence suggests that normal healthy women have best outcomes if they give birth at home or at birthing centres.”

But she praises our approach against other countries where she’s worked – Australia and Britain.

… Dr Mark Peterson, the Medical Association’s maternity spokesman, helped write the draft action plan but believes it needs refinement.

”Maternity care requires a team,” he says. ”The potential problem of our system is we have lost the team philosophy. Care is concentrated on one person.

”Disasters tend to happen because of system errors, not because of people. But when you only have one person the system is not so robust. When you have a team you have more eyes.” …

… An overwhelming 75 per cent of women chose a midwife as their lead maternity carer
6 per cent chose an obstetrician
6 per cent went to their local GP
The other 13 per cent? Believe it or not, most don’t use ante-natal services – they ”rock on up” to hospital when the time comes …

We asked a range of people what works in Auckland’s maternity services and where the challenges are …

Anna Edlington (mother-to-be) loves the choice for women but believes the present system needs more resources.

… Denise Hynd (independent midwife) ”The system is too ‘medicalised’ but it’s OK. We need more birthing centres.”

Kathy Fray (independent midwife) ”The dedication of lead maternity carers makes our system so successful. But the people who work in the field need to be recognised for their work.”

Karen Gulliland (NZ College of Midwives) ”The system is sound but we need more lead maternity carers, a standardised system across district health boards and more birthing centres.”

Dr Mark Peterson (NZ Medical Association) ”We need more teamwork and integration between GPs, specialists and midwives.”

In Australia, we can only dream of such a maternity system!

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Mother Dies At 69 Orphaning Twin IVF Babies

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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[A woman] … has died at the age of 69, orphaning her two and a half year old twin sons that she gave birth to at the age of 66 after receiving IVF treatment …

[The] death … has reignited the debate about allowing older women to undergo fertility treatment.

[The woman] … admitted lying about her age: she told doctors … that she was 55.

… the babies were born with no complications, apart from having to spend one month in incubators.

[The] family will most likely care for the two boys …

The news has provoked fresh calls for an upper age limit for fertility treatment …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

MPs praise East Lancashire midwives

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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MIDWIVES from East Lancashire’s hospitals, who more than doubled the area’s home and water birth rate in just two years, have received a prestigious MPs’ award.

… The team were awarded the “Normality of Childbirth” category at the annual awards after transforming the choices and opportunities available to expectant mums.

… water birth training for just two midwives in 2006 had spread through the service and sparked a “phenomenal shift” in the ways births are managed … By the end of 2008, almost six per cent of East Lancashire mothers were opting for water births, and more than three per cent chose a home birth.

Why is this not possible in this country? There was nothing other than support for the supreme efforts of these midwives who supported women to birth at home. Home birth is safe and midwifery care is a great option for women.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Birthing after July 1, 2010?

Here’s the full text of an article I have written for Essential Baby.

Melissa Maimann
July 22, 2009

Currently, all health professionals are registered by their own State Board. There are approximately 90 Registration Boards throughout Australia. Come July 1, 2010, all of these Registration Boards will be merged into one National Registration Board.

The benefits of National Registration include:

• Health professionals will be able to work between States and Territories, without having to register in each State or Territory prior to practicing
• Consistency of registration requirements and implementation of national standards
• Cost savings for both government and professionals with the elimination of unnecessary complexity and duplication
• A framework for maintaining consistency of state and territory regulation for individual professions
• Admission to professional practice (restrictions on professional practice by non-professionals)
• Regulation of professional practice (through consistent standards for accreditation and registration)
• Consumer protection (through complaints processes, insurance of professionals, criminal record checks of professionals and so on).

Alongside the changes to the registration of health professionals, there was a recent review of maternity services in this country (the Maternity Services Review, or MSR). There were several recommendations from this review.

What does all of this mean for pregnancy and birth?

The intersection of these changes has significant meaning for women, midwives and obstetricians.

Insurance will be a requirement for general registration after July 1, 2010. This is in place to protect the public, so that in the event of negligence that results in a baby or woman being harmed, the family may access a pool of funds to support medical and other expenses. That is fair and reasonable, however insurance is not available for midwives who are self employed.

To explain this further, most midwives are employed by a hospital and are covered by insurance through their employment. Midwives who work in private practice attending home births or hospital births do not have access to insurance. These midwives perform a very special role. Since they are contracted by women and are not employed by hospitals, they are uniquely placed to provide families with evidence-based and independent advice. This is significant for families, and often means the difference between a surgical birth and a natural birth. Currently, independent / private midwives may attend women at home or in hospital.

After 2010, all midwives will be required to have proof of insurance in order to register on the general (practicing) register. There will be different levels of registration, such as general (ie, a practicing health professional), non-practicing (in which case the professional cannot practice or give advice), student, and so on. All midwives will be able to register, but those who do not have insurance may only register as a non-practicing health professional. In that case, they may not attend births, provide advice and so on.

This affects all women! Yes, that includes you.

It is thought that these changes only affect families who want home births. This is not true! The changes affect all women who seek private midwifery care. Women consult with private midwives on a range of matters, regardless of the place of birth or chosen care provider. Things like, “My doctor / hospital said I have to have an induction / caesarean / epidural because… Do I have any other options?”

Private midwives give second opinions, run independent childbirth education classes, attend women who are birthing in hospital, and also attend home births. All of this will be affected by the changes to Registration come July 1, 2010. If midwives cannot secure insurance, your ability to seek private midwifery care and impartial advice will be impacted.

Which midwives will be able to access insurance?

Private midwives will need to show proof of insurance in order to practice. With insurance, private midwives will be able to birth with women in hospital, but not at home. Employed midwives working in hospitals will not need insurance.

In order for a midwife to access insurance, the midwife must work in a collaborative team with a doctor. Currently in Australia, midwifery is still seen by some as a profession that is only practiced under the direction and supervision of an obstetrician or obstetric guidelines. Although the Maternity Services Review does much to provide a framework through which midwifery may be seen as a profession in its own right, we have some time to pass before this is realised in the wider community. In the meantime, it is hard to say what will become of women’s choices when their choices are not within obstetric guidelines.

The midwife must be credentialed. This means participating in annual Peer Review and being up-to-date with continuing professional development.

S/he must have completed a certain amount of practice in a setting such as a hospital (eg one year) prior to entering private practice.

Then – the private midwife may apply to have access to the Medicare Benefits Schedule and the Pharmaceutical Benefits Schedule.


What does this mean for hospital birth?

Currently, a mere 3% women Australia-wide are able to access continuity of care with a midwife. The good news is that after November 2010, it may be possible to contract a private midwife to attend you for a hospital birth. The details in this instance are a bit hazy. It would seem that you will be able to choose your own midwife, have your antenatal (pregnancy) consultations in your home, birth in hospital with your midwife, and then continue postnatal care at home with your midwife for up to 6 weeks. As well as this, you will be able to claim a Medicare benefit for midwifery services (in other words, midwifery will be bulk-billed). And your midwife will be able to order blood tests and ultrasounds, and s/he will be able to order medications such as Syntocinon, Vitamin K, Anti-D and Hepatitis B vaccines.

There are, however, a lot of unknowns, such as:
• What is the process by which a midwife becomes eligible for MBS and PBS, and how long does this process take?
• Can midwives access any hospital, or only a select few, and can a hospital refuse visiting rights to the midwife?
• What are the hospital’s requirements for granting private midwives with visiting rights?
• If a doctor is required to intervene in the labour or birth, does the midwife forego her / his payment to the doctor?
• What are the $ values of Medicare benefits for antenatal and postnatal consultations?

These questions remain unanswered. The current Medicare fee for midwives to attend to antenatal care is approximately $23 per antenatal consultation. Private midwives typically book 4 women each month, so they do not spent a full eight hours a day seeing women in 20-minute time slots. More likely, private midwives drive an hour to consult with a family in their home for one or two hours, and then drive home for another hour. $23 remuneration for this service will not make ends meet for the midwife.

Likewise, if the midwife forgoes the birth fee because she has needed to call a doctor to intervene, it will not be economically viable for the midwife to continue practice.

I have no doubt that the Health Minister would not put the energy into making these changes if they could not work, however, the detail that is missing is the essential “nuts and bolts” that will see private practice flourish or die.

What does this mean for home birth?

Currently, there are two ways to have a midwife-attended home birth: you may have a home birth through a government-funded program, or you may access a private / independent midwife. Women who choose a private midwife generally experience more choice and control over their pregnancies and births. Care is usually provided in the woman’s home, and consultations are one to two hours long. Publicly-funded programs usually see women going to the hospital for antenatal consultations, which are around 20-30 minutes long. The programs have strict inclusion criteria and generally have high transfer rates. What this means is that if you are accepted onto the program, you have a reasonable chance – up to 40% or 50% – of being transferred out of the home birth program at some point in your pregnancy or labour and birthing your baby in delivery suite.

If a woman contracts a private midwife to attend the home birth, she generally has a higher chance of being accepted for homebirth, and the transfer rate is lower: around 20%. Publicly-funded home birth is not possible for women having vaginal births after a caesarean (VBAC), breech babies, twins, women who have their babies after 42 weeks or before 37 weeks, women with gestational diabetes, previous bleeding after birth, previous shoulder dystocia, women whose BMI is over 35 (or who are over 100Kg in weight) and so on. Come July 1, 2010, all of these women will have no choice but to birth in delivery suite if they are to be professionally attended.

What about women who do not meet the criteria for publicly-funded homebirth programs, or those women who cannot access a public home birth program?

There are two options for women who wish to birth at home but either cannot access a publicly-funded home birth program, or are not accepted into such a program.

One option is to freebirth, and the other option is for a midwife to attend the woman.

1. Freebirth
The safety of freebirth (home birth without a midwife) has not been researched, and indeed, it would be unethical to have a randomised controlled trial of freebirth. So it is impossible to say that it is safe, or that it is not safe. However, it remains an option for women.

2. Midwife-attended home birth
Midwives who attend home births outside of the publicly-funded models cannot access insurance. It is a requirement of registration that everything a health professional does in the course of their practice, is indemnified. Since insurance will not cover home birth, the midwife will be in breach of her / his registration by attending a home birth. This may lead to disciplinary action, up to and including de-registration.

If a midwife lets her / his registration lapse, planning to perhaps work as a doula or in some other capacity and attends a birth, s/he can be charged with practicing midwifery without registration. This carries a jail term or a fine.

It is important to note that there are no penalties for women and families who ask midwives to attend their births. Consumers of health services can never be charged for inciting professionals into unprofessional behaviour.

If midwives decide to work “under the radar”, although s/he may not be “found out”, there are important considerations for women and families:

• A midwife working under the radar will most likely not have the same access to continuing professional development as a registered midwife working legally. This can compromise safety as the midwife will not be up-to-date in her / his practice.
• Midwives working under the radar will not be able to report their births to the government for statistical analysis.
• Midwives working under the radar will not be able to register births or sign Medicare and Tax forms.
• Midwives working under the radar will only be able to take cash payments and they will not be able to declare their income.
• Women who experience complications at home with a midwife working under the radar will have to front up to hospital alone, without the ongoing support and advice of their midwife, and lie about all prior antenatal and birth care.

Additionally, there is a requirement of registration that includes mandatory reporting of health professionals. This means that health professionals must report other health professionals who place the public at risk of harm, for example by practicing the profession in a way that constitutes a departure from accepted professional standards. Hence, the midwife who attends home births without insurance risks being reported by her / his peers.

Clearly, the options of freebirth or midwife-attended home birth (if the midwife works under the radar) are not acceptable to women and families and have the potential to severely compromise safety for women and babies.

Although home birth is not every woman’s cup of tea, many people accept that it is the right of every family to choose where and with whom they will birth their baby. Forcing women to birth in hospital is no different to forcing women to accept other birth choices that they find unacceptable. Currently, your right to an elective caesarean, elective epidural, or elective induction is not questioned. Yet your right to home birth and private midwifery care is compromised, quite severely, by this new legislation. Imagine the outcry if hospital birth or epidurals were no longer possible for women!

Wow! That’s serious. What can I do to help?

• Increase awareness of the issue. Tell everyone you know, send an email to everyone in your address book, place a note about this in your email signature.
• Visit Save Birth Choices for information on what you can do.
• Attend the rally on September 7, 2009 in Canberra. See http://www.homebirthaustralia.org/ and scroll to the bottom of the page.
• Talk to the media.
• Talk to your local MP. These changes need to be accepted by every State and Territory in order to go ahead.

Author Melissa Maimann is an Essential Baby member and a private midwife.

DIY birth it’s radical, it’s dangerous

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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IMAGINE giving birth on your own, with no professional help. Imagine choosing to do that. Women do. It’s called freebirthing or DIY birth and it’s a pretty radical idea. It scares the crap out of me …

… it’s dangerous, and it could be on the rise if new legislation comes into effect.

The Federal Government has given increased rights to midwives – as long as they are “eligible” or attached to a hospital.

They will not grant indemnity insurance to private midwives attending homebirths, effectively banning them from the practice.

… there are some women who reject the idea that childbirth is a medical procedure and want to give birth at home.

They are not a bunch of … hippies … It’s … well-educated women, many of whom have had horrific births in hospitals … that they want their next one in the security of their own home.

… there is a real issue at the core.

… It is … a public health issue because these women are determined not to birth in a hospital unless it is medically necessary.

That means they have to go underground.

Some independent midwives, who will be deregistered if the laws go through, will sell their services as masseuses or photographers. They will charge a premium and they will give women what they want.

Women … will be forced to make dangerous choices. If they … run into trouble, they could be more reluctant to seek emergency help.

… In SA, there is a hospital-based homebirth program, but it is selective. Women have to meet strict criteria and … be in the right catchment area … they only do a handful of homebirths a year.

… Of 107 homebirths [in SA], three were stillbirths, two of these were unplanned and the women had had no antenatal care at all …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

National Health Registration Law Flawed – Should Be Scrapped

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

For various reasons, some of the health professions that are set to be regulated under National Registration, are opposing the legislation. National Registration – and the requirement of all health professionals to have insurance (which is not available to private midwives currently) – is placing private home birth and the safety of mothers and babies under threat. Here are the Australian Doctors’ Fund’s comments:

The Australian Doctors’ Fund has called for medical practitioners to be removed from the Health Practitioner Regulation National Law (Bill B), claiming the Bill is flawed.

… “Were this bill to become law, a state parliament would no longer have jurisdiction in its own state, since a “disallowed regulation” by a state parliament would still be in force until a majority of other states disallowed it” … This effectively means that the citizens of any state would be governed by other states.

“Here we have the most complex piece of health legislation ever devised, affecting over 400 000 health and allied health professionals, owned by no single jurisdiction. It is an orphan with 9 mothers, none of whom can claim any legal responsibility for their child.”

… “Yes, it is quite a complicated structure. It is sort of underpinned by the IGA… The Boards are accountable to ministers; it’s just that they are accountable to multiple ministers” …

… Despite stating that “the object of this law is to protect the public”, Bill B would set up the apparatus for the deregulation of complex medical procedures …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

It’s a woman’s right to choose how she births

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Changes that will effectively outlaw supported home births are paternalistic.

IN FIVE months’ time, if my pregnancy progresses without complication, I will birth my second child at home, attended by two registered private midwives. If I’d become pregnant a mere six months later, this carefully researched, intensely personal decision would have been far more tenuous.

From the middle of next year, if the draft legislation establishing a new national registration scheme for health professionals becomes law, midwives will be required to hold indemnity insurance and midwives in private practice — those who typically attend home births — will be unable to access this insurance. This means that, with the exception a few small home-birth support programs run out of public hospitals, home birthing will effectively be outlawed.

… Dr Hilary Joyce, the new president of the National Association of Specialist Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, dismissed the significance of this ban by pointing out that only a small percentage of women in Australia choose to give birth at home …

She misses the point. It’s not about numbers. It’s about choice. The government has no right to remove choices from people. Registered midwives, independent of the hospital system, are available to attend home births. Women, some of whom prefer their care to be independent of the hospital system, wish to contract these midwives to attend their births. There is demand, and there is supply. A market exists. The government’s failure to provide insurance for midwives is against the laws of economics.

The assumption underlying her argument — that minority rights are unimportant and can be casually overridden — is both offensive and antithetical …

… The legislative squeezing-out of home birth represents a serious regression in this reform process. Given that the new laws will effectively make private midwife-assisted home birth illegal, the Federal Government is acting to deprive most women of the ability to make a fundamental choice about their own bodies; the choice to birth in a non-medicalised environment.

Birthing is an extremely intimate, uniquely visceral, sometimes terrifying physical experience. There is much that will inevitably be out of a woman’s control during her confinement, so allowing her to birth in the place in which she is most comfortable is fundamental to maintaining both her personal dignity and her sense of ownership over the experience.

Just as adequate abortion rights are important for all women, not just those with unwanted pregnancies, so the fundamental right to birth in the way one chooses is an issue for us all. In this respect the proposed legislation is a setback for all women, not just those who would take up the option of a home birth if it was offered to them.

… Many assume that this is the crux of the matter; that home births are simply unsafe. But the facts suggest otherwise. International studies, and experience in countries such as the Netherlands and Britain, have conclusively demonstrated that for uncomplicated pregnancies, home births carried out with proper support are just as safe as hospital births.

… Such a paternalistic provision, effectively telling women what is and isn’t good for them, cuts to the heart of women’s collective dignity and autonomy. While women were once routinely patronised in this way, the contemporary assumption is that those bad old days are behind us. Sadly, this does not appear to be the case when it comes to birthing.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Dobbing in drs will breed culture of fear

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

National Registration brings with a requirement that health professionals and employers must report other professionals who are deemed to be placing rhe public at risk of harm, for example by being intoxicated while at work, or for departing from accepted standards of safe care.

This article questions the wisdom of this requirement.

A proposed national accreditation scheme … will make it mandatory for practitioners to report others they fear are placing the public at risk.

Reportable conduct includes a physical or mental impairment affecting a doctor’s ability to practise or a departure from accepted professional standards, as well as drug and alcohol abuse or sexual misconduct.

… “A statutory duty to report is likely to create a punitive atmosphere and a culture of fear among practitioners … and potentially drive problems underground,” …

The association wants spouses, practising doctors and health advisory services exempted from any potential mandatory reporting laws.

That’s an interesting request. This part of the legislation has supposedly come into effect after the cases incolving Dr Graeme Reeves and Dr Jayant Patel. It is no longer acceptable to sit by while a colleague harms patients. Why should doctors be exempt from the requirement, while all other health professionals need to comply?

… Claire Moore said there remained an overriding public belief that doctors protected one another, especially in the wake of surgeon Jayant Patel’s case at Bundaberg.

The public needed to be reassured there were adequate safeguards in place to protect patients, she said.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Reducing Maternal Death In Bangladesh

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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New strategies to reduce maternal death in Bangladesh will be presented at the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG) South Asia Day …

The maternal mortality ratio has significantly declined in Bangladesh, from 512 deaths per 100,000 live births in 1996-2000, to 3.2 deaths per 100,000 live births in 2007. One of the main reasons for this is the decrease in unsafe abortion and abortion-related complications due to the wide availability of abortion services. Maternal deaths have also been reduced through improved access to contraception, skilled birth attendants, antenatal care and obstetric surgery.

Despite these gains, challenges remain for many women in Bangladesh, especially those who live in rural and hard to reach areas …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Promoting Safer Childbirth

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Despite recent internal conflict, Sri Lanka has emerged as a success story in promoting safer childbirth. The country’s significant decline in maternal deaths will be presented today at the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG) South Asia Day.

… Despite the country’s meagre healthcare budget, its maternal and child health indicators are vastly more favourable than what would be expected.

The maternal mortality ratio of Sri Lanka has declined dramatically as a direct result of the availability of midwives and trained assistance at birth – from 340 per 100,000 live births in 1960 to 43 per 100,000 live births in 2005.

Dr. Hemantha Senanayake, from the University of Colombo, said “The most important contribution to maternal and child care has come from Sri Lankan midwives …

“Every household in Sri Lanka belongs to a designated Public Health Midwife (PHM) area and the norm is for the PHM to provide home-based care. During the past few decades the Government has made a policy decision to increase the number of midwives. The number of women having a minimum of 4 antenatal visits has reached 99%.”

Let’s hope that with the proposed changes in this country, for maternity care, that women are not denied access to skilled and competent midwifery care for home birth.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

The Long Road To Safe Motherhood In Nepal

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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Women in Nepal face the highest risk of maternal death in South Asia.

… the maternal mortality ratio still stands at 281 deaths per 100,000 live births. The majority of women (81%) deliver at home, and less than 19% of births take place with the assistance of a Skilled Birth Attendant.

Key challenges include the limited number of health workers in Nepal, as well as the inadequacy of emergency obstetric care services. Women also face barriers due to costs, lack of transportation and long distances to health facilities.

Dr. Pushpa Chaudhary, from the Paropkar Maternity and Women’s Hospital in Kathmandu, said “For the first time in the history of Nepal, the new Interim Constitution has declared the state’s commitment and responsibility for people’s health. Free maternity services and a safe delivery incentive program have been launched, but it is important to ensure quality of services and regular funding to sustain the program.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Home birth worries prompt action call

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

HOME-birth advocates have welcomed the Federal Government’s reaction to the Maternity Services Review but say there is still a long way to go if women’s choices are to be truly respected.

In April, the Leader reported that home-birth supporters were alarmed that births outside of hospitals and birthing centres could become illegal after July 1, 2010, unless issues over the indemnity of privately practising midwives were resolved.

The Federal Government, in its response to the review, has flagged the establishment of a new government-supported professional indemnity scheme for eligible midwives.

However, this PI insurance will not cover private home birth.

Does anyone ever hear the term “hospital birth advocates”? “Home birth advocates” seems to be thrown around, as if it’s some sort of odd thing to want or to do. I would think that willingly putting yourself in a place that is intended for sick and dying people, when you’re healthy and well, deserves more attention. Anyway …. back to the article:

… Other changes announced by the Government include the introduction of legislation that will give midwives access to the Medical Benefits Schedule and Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) for the first time.

But only for hospital birth.

… Maternity Coalition’s national president, Lisa Metcalfe, welcomed the changes, especially those giving midwives access to Medicare and the PBS, but said many women would miss out on the proposed changes if national registration of all health professionals proceeds for it would effectively ban homebirth with a midwife.

“… we are taking a big step backward for a women’s right to choose their place of birth,” she said. “Our vision is for all Australian women to be able to choose where, how and with whom they birth.”

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

Will IVF Work For A Particular Patient? The Answer May Be Found In Her Blood

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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… researchers have been able to identify genetic predictors of the potential success or failure of IVF treatment in blood.

… The researchers found that the peripheral blood gene expression ‘signature’ (also known as the transcriptome) before IVF was predictive of IVF outcome.

One of the most difficult decisions for patients who have had unsuccessful IVF treatments is whether they should undergo further attempts at IVF, or if there are ways to optimise chances of success. The researchers hope that the results generated by this work will lead to the development of a test to aid in IVF decision-making. They say that their work will help to identity biomarkers that can identify events occurring at implantation, the maintenance of pregnancy and successful or unsuccessful pregnancy outcome.

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448

IPS Examines Obstetric Fistula In Southern Senegal

For further information, contact Melissa Maimann at Essential Birth Consulting.

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Inter Press Service News Agency examines the prevalence of obstetric fistula in the southern region of Senegal. According to state reproductive health officials … 58 percent of births take place at home without medical assistance. “Women in the region suffer from exceptionally high rates of fistula,” which “occurs when extended pressure damages the soft tissue in a woman’s pelvis during … birth” and can lead to debilitating complications and ostracization from their families …

For every 20 deliveries … at least nine women develop fistula …

“… girls are married off between the ages of 13 and 15. … from a morphological perspective, their pelvic girdles are not yet fully developed … labour is prolonged,” …

“The extreme poverty … means that fistula sufferers stay away from health facilities … Being ashamed of their condition also keeps them away, as well as their awareness of the odour they give off,” … because the condition can cause leakage of urine or feces.

A shortage of health workers … also contributes to the pervasiveness of fistula … there are seven doctors … for every 100,000 people, and one midwife for every 400,000 people …

Melissa Maimann, Essential Birth Consulting 0400 418 448