Dear Trish and all,
Please can we send a letter to Media watch and 60 minutes

We all see the pain of the women who want natural birth but after this
infomercial have partners and families to fearfull to support them or
consider a midwifery model o care, the bureacrats also who will continue to
not question the rising costs with the caesar rate as thye have watched 60
minutes and see it as what women want.

Otherwise a Ho Hum response (acceptance) of this is support of it from 60
minutes down!!

Denise
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Trish David" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, May 31, 2004 8:09 AM
Subject: Re: [ozmidwifery] 60 minutes.


> Dear Marilyn and list. I saw the segment and thought HO HUM here we go
again. I
> felt they were somewhat disingenuous having a media denizen as
spokesperson for
> pro-elective luscs, and the woman who lost her baby (for late LUSCS as the
story
> implied) but who was also a documentary maker. Hardly your 'average'
mother!
> These people thrive, indeed exist, because of controversy and therefore
will be
> happy to create or perpetuate it. Justine did a fine job, but I felt was
made by
> editing and camera angle to come across as somewhat belligerent. The
> obstetrician, predictably, blamed everyone but his own profession
(justifiable
> blame, but not for 100%), taking himself off the hook for the rise in
> interventions.
>
> As for Tracey Curro's excuse of preservation of the pelvic floor, that is
such
> an old chestnut! What about all the women who have never given birth who
have
> continence problems, and what about the research that tells us it's not
giving
> birth so much as carrying the child that is the issue. And the growing
evidence
> that even men in late life have continence issues due to pelvic floor
problems.
> It seems while we focus on vaginal birth as the cause of women's
continence
> problems we deviate money from public health and research into the real
reasons
> and cures and spend it on expensive surgery.
>
> The argument about increased risk of losing a uterus infuriated me. The
> obstetrician suggested the rate was too small to worry about, and that
most
> women would not mind losing their uterus if they didn't want more children
> anyway (an argument he justified by the low birth rate). I am almost
menopausal,
> but want to take my uterus to my grave, never mind the fear of bleeding to
> death..... And he didn't address the fact that these complications
(placenta
> increta, percreta, accreta) are on the rise so he can expect to see more
as time
> goes by, nor was the problem of abnormally situated placentae and
increased risk
> of miscarriage raised or addressed (research from USA where luscs have
been much
> more common for a generation longer than here).
>
> No one seems game to really liken a medically unnecessary LUSCS to any
other
> unnecessary surgery. Cosmetic surgery (for vanity not function or
restoration
> which is plastic surgery) is not subsidised by taxpayers, and neither
should
> unnecessary LUSCS be. If a woman wants to have LUSCS just to pick the day,
she
> may, as far as I am concerned, but I don't want to pay for it when we
can't get
> a hip replacement for a 70 year old pensioner. And as for the surgeon who
> performs it, would he cut off a perfectly good finger? Or make a long
incision
> in a perfectly good arm? Then why in a perfectly healthy uterus?
>
>
> My dummy spit for the day!
>
>
> Trish
>
>
>
> Marilyn Kleidon wrote:
>
> > Excellent  footage Justine. I was disappointed with the slant of the
whole
> > segment though. We are being presented with promotions of caesarean
birth.
> > Misinformation, misinformation, misinformation. We know that the number
of
> > women seeking elective caesarean births for their first birth is around
1%
> > (I mean truly elective i.e. by choice with no medical/obstetric reason
such
> > as malpresentation etc.) and yet it was portrayed as being the overall
c/s
> > rate that is, around 30%. They (some of the obstetric community, not all
but
> > some very vocal and public ob's) are doing with c/s what plastic
surgeons
> > have done with botox and plastic surgery for the last 10 years. It is
all
> > about the marketplace and consumerism. Everytime we participate in their
so
> > called debate we end up in an infomercial for obstetric care and
caesaren
> > birth normalisation.
> >
> > And you know I have no problem with women like Tracey Curo having the
right
> > to have an elective c/s, in privacy. It is after all their bodies not
mine.
> > Let us just not give them the space to promote it by pretending to be
> > participating in a public debate/discussion. Please note, I am not for
> > denying them the right to have their say, I am all for freedom of
speech. I
> > don't want to debate her womanhood or mothering abilities or even her
> > extreme thinness. But I do not want her birth choices to become the only
> > options for my daughters.
> >
> > We seem to be in a turf war over what will a "normal" birth look like/be
and
> > the ever shrinking number of new mothers.
> >
> > ooooh! I have to remember to breathe.
> >
> > marilyn
> >
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: "jayne" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Sent: Sunday, May 30, 2004 5:20 AM
> > Subject: [ozmidwifery] 60 minutes.
> >
> > >
> > > Mmmmmmm, just how much is vaginal birth to blame for that serious
medical
> > > issue of a weak pelvic floor?
> > >
> > > I wish they had of gone into the evidence....they just make it sound
like
> > it
> > > is the traditionalist's word against the ob's.
> > >
> > > Did anyone else think Tracey Curo looked painfully thin?
> > >
> > > And Justine you have beautiful children and well done :)
> > >
> > > Jayne
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > --
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> > >
> >
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