Hi Sue
I have met you and your gorgeous family at the Homebirth Conference at
Byron Bay and yes I agree you have a warm and generous spirit with
everyone you meet and if I were in labour I'd love to have you care for
me.
As I read your sad birth story I was thinking of how lucky the woman was
to have had you by her side during the ordeal.
It is heart breaking to experience these atrocities and my heart goes
out to you.  I wish there was something I could do or say to help heal
you.
Please, I appeal to you to send this as a letter to the editors of all
the major newspapers.
Warm hug

Julie Clarke
Childbirth and Parenting Educator
Transition into Parenthood
9 Withybrook Pl
Sylvania  NSW  2224
T. (02) 9544 6441
F (02) 9544 9257
M. 0401 265 530
email [EMAIL PROTECTED]


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of Sue Cookson
Sent: Sunday, 5 January 2003 3:27 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [ozmidwifery] DISHEARTENED ANGRY AND ASHAMED

Hi all,
Am writing my last missive to this list but would love some replies
before I
sign off.

I was in attendance at a Christmas day birth.
41 week  34 year old primip, everything normal in pregnancy, but endured
severe pain in early labour and was unable to 'break through' this. So,
24
hrs after SRM, and 12 hours of severe pain, 3 cms and needing help.
Light
mec with some tachchardia.
Arrival at hospital at 7.30 am
First midwife (older and 'very experienced') declared baby to be either
breech or OP. Wee in this cup she demanded to a woman who was screaming
in
pain. Lie here then and examined her through a contraction ...probably
OP
...
Next came the Resident who asked the woman how tall she was. 5'2" was
the
reply - Well your husband had a big head so there is probably
disproportion,
and baby will not fit through.
Our request was simply for an epidural for pain relief. Next doctor
arrived,
the registrar who said " I will order an epidural, a syntocinon drip and
antibiotics" (the latter because she was prolonged rupture of
membranes).
We just want pain relief was her answer - no  to routine antibiotics and
routine synto. "So what are you going to do," he asked, "just lie about
all
day?"
Next midwife on duty had been an independent midwife for 10 years. She
repeated the request about 10 times to have synto set up - this with a
baby
whose heartrate was incredibly variable, and whose contractions had
remained
very strong throughout. Fresh mec appeared on and off.
Catheterised with a bag against our request - we were happy for the
catheter
to be inserted and removed, but not left in. "I can't take it out, says
the
ex homebirth midwife, because I might need to catheterise you again."
To cut a long story short, all we asked for was 4 hours of pain relief
followed by a period of being active, maybe cutting down or out the
epidural, and assessing progress. Such a big request?? ( I had
experienced a
similar situation only a few weeks before with a wonderful outcome of
baby
being born vaginally and home 3 hours later - same hospital, next door
room)

The ex homebirth midwife said she had never seen anyone up and active
with
an epidural in, and then said the woman failed the 'test'to be able to
manage that (left leg was pretty heavy). She could not take
responsibility
for the woman to be active.
We negotiated our way through that ... ambulate at our own risk...
Hours later progress was negligible, so we asked for a few more hours,
being
hassled the entire way about oxytocics.
So about 12 hours after admission there, we agreed to a c/section after
no
progress. We negotiated a lotus birth and that was agreed to.
So baby born 8.30 pm Christmas Day by epidural c/section.
Apgars 9/9 but baby held at the resus table for 13 mins anyway - after
being
told that if she was 'pink and screaming' she would go straight to mum.
baby
then to mum for a brief 'look' then off to wherever.

Told she was a little off colour - this followed by a decision to put
babe
in special care for 4 hours for observation. Luckily lovely midwife had
come
on duty and took baby out of special care and in to dad's arms until mum
was
out of recovery and back in her room. Initially told dad could stay
there
(single room) but when requested a mattress, told dad had to go home (45
mins away) Lotus birth presented a major problem to the staff, who told
mum
it put them at risk, and in fact wrapped placenta up in industrial waste
bag/ toxic waste plastic bag.
Second morning slight redness at umbilicus, with streaks up baby's
tummy.
Baby whisked off to special care nursery and on IV antibiotics. NOTHING
has
shown up on  skin swabs and blood tests done at birth or since. Cord cut
off
with midwives telling mother how dirty it was ...

There are a lot of things I have not included here - the looks, the
inferences, the queries about who the support people were, the obs who
came
in pointing at us asking our names, the sighs, the comments to the
mother
about 'your type' (funny eh, this couple both work...)

This woman was made to feel she could not achieve normal birth, her baby
was
too big for her, her baby was in a bad position, her requests were
unreasonable, her decisions were from poor information, her lotus birth
was
'dirty' and a health hazard.

She gave birth to a 7lb 5oz baby who was presenting OT. No obvious
reasons
for failing to get past 4 cms.

I am totally disheartened at how little movement the 'normal/natural'
birth
movement has made in the medicalised system of childbirth in the last 22
years. The midwives who took part in the birth were active participants
in
the demoralisation and bullying of this woman and her partner and her
attendants. They collaborated to intimidate and pressure her into
various
positions. There was no serving of this beautiful pregnant, labouring
mother, but only the intention to make her fit into a very narrow and
closed
medical framework.

I cannot and will not continue to support this method of childbirth in
any
way. I hope that most people on this list do not work in this manner,
but I
am also aware after being on this list for many years, that there are
too
many midwives in Australia who DO NOT KNOW WHAT THEY DO by behaving in
similar ways to the midwives I came into contact with over the last 96
hours.

I care totally for the emotional state of the women I see - the
c/section in
this case was not a problem, but the narrow and judgemental attitude of
far
too many of the people involved in this birth was an enormous problem.

Well this is one birth attendant who is signing off, from the fight,
from
the work, from the discussion. The birth scene has gone SO FAR away from
normal that it is really scary.

Good luck to you all and good luck to all of you who think you can make
a
difference. After Christmas Day I am damned sure no one person can stand
alone and make a difference for others. All one person does is put
herself
at risk of ridicule and danger, irrespective of her heart's desire and
intentions.

I know I have  a good heart, I work so hard for all the pregnant women
and
families I have served.

I grieve for all the women who give birth in hospital with the type of
midwives I experienced recently. No wonder our children are being born
with
high levels of syntocinon abuse, epidural damage leading to such
increased
mevels of autism and ADD etc that our Australian society is
experiencing. No
wonder our women have such high levels of PND.

Disheartened, angry, and ashamed - the shame? Of the abuse,
misinformation
bullying and lack of true care our 'system' can and does give out, all
in
the name of midwifery and [medicalised] childbirth.


Sue Cookson
mother of 4 homeborn gorgeous children.







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