|
I agree that the lack of understanding of even who
the midwife is is wide spread. I agree that the more women know about the
benefits of midwifetry based care the more can start demanding them.
I am also aware of the lack of support and
understanding from the community for those women who after becoming educated are
left emotionally damaged (so to speak).
Perhaps another avenue would be to also try and get
the option of midwifery led care increased in the private sector? Many
women take out private insurance solely for the births of their children.
The options of care is singular -ob in the private sector. Perhaps
we could sell the benefits of mw led care lower interevntions thus lower costs
to them the insurance companies. It has always baffled me that if I had
car insurance but lived in a high risk area then my insurance would cost more;
why is it that the health insurance companies do not investigate the massive
difference between intervention rates (thus increased costs -longer stays
etc) between public and private births?
I am unsure how this would work with the midwifery
insurance problem though. I am also unaware of the politics involved with
private hospitals.
I am not citicising informing women of the greener
grass at all; I am contiually trying to think of 'under the radar' ways to sell
the benefits of less medical births.
Maybe we should get involved with feminist
groups at universities and enlighten them and get the reality of what happens in
the birthing room out there. I am continually amazed at how young
intellegent women whom I have met through gender studies courses and so forth,
have very little understanding about child birth. they think it is yucky
because it ruins your sex life and changes you "down there" (some of the things
that have been discussed in some of my classes). They dont seem to realise
that the episiotomy is commonly preformed for male convienece! Surely that
is something for these women to get up in arms about. The feminists have
always been willing to jump up and down about the rights over their own bodies,
but after they leave uni and get jobs they are in the highest group for private
insurance, older births and higher interventions. the rights over their
bodies only seem to stem to their demands for the cs...why is that?
I did a talk at uni last year that followed a talk
on rape. I began mine with "..oh did anyone catch the story of the woman
yesterday who was drugged, starved, strapped down, had her vagina repeatedly
invaded, she was mutilated, objects inserted into her AND to make things worse
she was 9 months pregnant!!!" everyone was up in arms and really upset by
this. Then I told them that it happens in labour rooms everyday and nobody
considers this abuse?? Infact we often passivley allow it to
happen.
It got them thinking.
Any thoughts??
Jo Bainbridge
founding member CARES SA email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] phone: 08 8365 7059 birth with trust, faith & love... |
- Midwifery Resolution Dean & Jo Bainbridge
- Re: Midwifery Resolution Mary Murphy
- Re: Midwifery Resolution Denise Hynd
- Re: Midwifery Resolution Steve & Bronni McGrath
- Re: Midwifery Resolution Andrea Robertson
- Re: midwifery resolution Dean & Jo Bainbridge
- Re: midwifery resolution Denise Hynd
- Re: midwifery resolution Vernon at Stringybark
- Re: midwifery resolution Denise Hynd
- Re: midwifery resolution L & D Staff
- Re: midwifery resolution Lois Wattis
- RE: midwifery resolution Macha McDonald
- Re: midwifery resolution Rhonda
- Re: midwifery resolution TinaPettigrew
