Dear Colleagues,

This is a fantastic workshop Andrea has put together and will be so useful
to managers and leaders everywhere.  Good on you Andrea for doing this,
wonderful to see.

One of the many strands in this complex issue is that of learned
helplessness. The pattern of learned helplessness has to be overcome in our
profession and in that of nursing.

I have been horrified by the working conditions in hospitals since I have
been back as midwifery educator.  People are overworked and overstretched.
People are working too hard for little satisfaction.  From what I see, the
complexity of the clientele, the simply dreadful midwife/motherbaby ratio,
the skill mix, the paperwork mountain, plus the responsibilities of new
domestic violence and child reporting legislation, not to the mention
burgeoning use of technology and the ever present fear of litigation in the
approach to maternity care, are creating a fertile ground for all sorts of
unconscious reactions/responses and inappropriate behaviour.  And as for the
students, the staff do their best and work hard to help them learn, but
there is no time to teach on the job.  This is just from my midwifery
perspective, nursing is a whole other kettle of frogs.

You know that saying, if you put a frog in hot water it will immediately
jump out, but put a frog in cold water and heat it up and it doesnt realise
what is happening and before it does, it expires from the heat.  The health
system is heating up to expiry point.

At our place, we have been told there will be a 20% increase in women to
care for, as GP's stop bulk billing and obstetricians stop doing private
obstetrics, already there were 2000 more occasions of service at the
prenatal clinic in the last 6 months - but there will be no more staff and
no more resources. WHAT?  That's right.  However, there is another layer of
senior management happening and the line of management is through a doctor -
no senior midwife manager directly reporting to the executive.  Grrr.

So I figured what we need is serious action.  I've joined the union (NSWNA)
and become a branch delegate.  I've been reading and searching for ways to
address these and other issues and have joined a team called "The real
nurses team" as they are have a real grasp of the issues facing both nursing
and midwifery. They are dedicated to remaining independant from any
political party to pursue safe and effective staff/patient and
midwife/womanbaby ratios and other urgent requirements.  I have been
nominated for council for this team, along with two other midwives, Michael
Whaites and Liz McCall. The election for General Secretary, Assistant
General Secretary and councillors from the committee of Delegates will be
held by postal vote and closes 17th June 03.  The details of all the
nominees will be in the next Lamp.  For those of you in NSW, please ensure
your membership is current and investigate the nominees and choose who you
will vote for and please vote. We need your voice.   Please have a look at
the Real Nurses Team site,  it's www.realnurses.net

For midwives working in other states, please join the union or if already
members become actively involved. We are working for name change, to include
midwifery in the title of the union.

It is time to get real, to address the real issues facing our twin
professions. There is power in numbers and many issues are the same for
nurses and midwives, it is great to work together.

in solidarity (thanks Justine)

Carolyn Hastie
Council nominee for the Real Nurses and Midwives Team

www.realnurses.net



-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Andrea
Robertson
Sent: Thursday, 3 April 2003 1:07 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [ozmidwifery] Bullying - doing something about it


Dear Denise and Marilyn,

This issue is one I am very concerned about as well. I realise that it is a
complex issue that is hard to tackle as many strands are involved in its
source as well as its resolution.

In a workplace, however, the managers have responsibility to make sure that
bullying is not tolerated and individuals are supported and nurtured. The
new midwifery we hope to see in place in Australia will be reliant on
managers with foresight, ability and good team building skills. There will
always be those who knock change and feel threatened by new (unfamiliar)
ways of doing things - a good manager will need strategies to deal with
these threats to progress.

These are the kind of issues we will be tackling at the Managing Midwifery
workshop at the end of April.  It will include a whole day of skills
development in coaching psychology that will enable midwifery managers to
feel more confident around team building and motivating staff. This is
definitely one program that all midwifery managers should try to attend.

http://www.birthinternational.com/event/managing2003/index.html

Please, everyone, make sure you manager has this info.....

Cheers

Andrea




At 02:54 AM 4/04/2003, Marilyn Kleidon wrote:
>Dear Denise:
>
>Sadly I recognise the truth you have written. I wish I didn't. After
>reading Carolyn Hastie's work earlier I wrote my senior paper at Seattle
>Midwifery School on Horizontal Violence amongst midwives. As I found in my
>research this bullying exists throughout the health professions. Because
>it can be subtle (as well as fierce) most often we grin and bear it. Also,
>I don't believe it just exists within the enclaves of beauracracy but is
>alive and well through the ranks of independent practitioners as well.  I
>have observed a closing off from those who don't practice as "we" do. The
>bullying goes in both directions from those of us who are more
>conservative in practice than alternative and vice versa.  It also
>embraces the political aspects of midwifery practice.  And I am not
>considering the healthy discussions of alternative ways to practice that
>emerge from within healthy professions. This is definetly an area that
>needs ongoing feminist action research to document it and find ways to
>strengthen  midwives and the midwifery profession. First off I think we
>need to acknowledge we belong to an increasingly bullying culture and have
>developed our own means of pushing and shoving just to keep our heads
>above water.
>
>Treading water
>
>marilyn
>
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>Denise Hynd
>To: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>;
><mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>Maternitycoalitonmidwi
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>Sent: Wednesday, April 02, 2003 7:12 AM
>Subject: [ozmidwifery] Bullying
>
>Dear All
>I feel sure one of the reasons many of us are on this list is to gather
>strength and heal from the effect of bullying as well as to learn and be
>encouraged in ideas toward humanisation of birth.
>
>I also think one of the main reasons Australia is not a land of midwifery
>is due to bullying of midwives, women and their supporters. Stories of
>incidents abound (especially on this list)  and it is evidenced in the
>predominant negative outcomes  of our national pregnancy and early
>parenting experiences.
>For me bullying behaviours usually stop the transference of knowledge to
>effect change including humanised birth and real midwifery services!
>
>It is not just that women are given inaccurate information about how to
>birth, more importantly they are too intimidated to listen, hear about and
>believe or act in their own abilities and to trust (real) midwives to
>assist them to birth in their own powers.
>
>Historically midwives have been subjugated into subordination to medicine
>and nursing. Now several generations of Australian midwives have  lived
>and learnt only this role as well as how in turn to keep themselves and
>the women in powerless places and belief systems. Thus most of our
>profession does not recognize that there is a problem in this
>subordination, is not demanding positive changes (including NMAP), Sadly
>now most Australian midwives actually believe we (the women and midwives)
>are safest where we are, that birth is inherently dangerous and we best
>leave it to the rescue brigade to make the decisions whilst we support
>them not the women or ourselves!.
>
>If you recognise what I say is true or has some truth and want to
>understand this common,unacknoledged behaviour pattern in our places of
>birth, as well as act to change at least your contribution to this toxic
>culture I recommend you read Carolyn Hastie's article
>
><http://www.acegraphics.com.au/articles/hastie02.html>http://www.acegraphic
s.com.au/articles/hastie02.html
>
>
>
>
>Denise Hynd
>
>Peace at birth
>Peace on earth.


-----
Andrea Robertson
Birth International * ACE Graphics * Associates in Childbirth Education

e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
web: www.birthinternational.com


--
This mailing list is sponsored by ACE Graphics.
Visit <http://www.acegraphics.com.au> to subscribe or unsubscribe.


--
This mailing list is sponsored by ACE Graphics.
Visit <http://www.acegraphics.com.au> to subscribe or unsubscribe.

Reply via email to