Jo,
I hope you are able to forward a letter to 60 minutes because women  need to
hear what you have to say.

kathy
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jo & Dean Bainbridge" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, May 30, 2004 9:59 PM
Subject: [ozmidwifery] Cs story



I am a mum whose first birth was by caesarean, the next birth with medical
interventions (forceps etc), and then a natural vaginal birth.  Pretty much
done it all!  It really concerns me when people like Tracy Curio can make
statements like a vaginal birth is not a life changing essential rite of
passage into mother or woman hood....when she has never done it!  Women who
make comments about experiences they have not lived should never make
blanket comments.  To say something like that is not only arrogant but
ignorant.

Nothing compares to birthing a baby naturally, with no complications, with
no fear and surrounded by those people who truly care for you and your baby.
There is nothing like it, there is no way to describe it.  Complicated
vaginal birth is something that I have experienced twice, it is for that
reason that I feel that I can accurately compare the experiences.  For me to
finally birth a baby naturally and without fear or complications was a major
accomplishment and healed many sorrows.  I feel that it is understandable
for Vanessa to chose her caesarean birth, but is her experience reflective
of the general population?  Many women do have traumatic vaginal birth
experiences, but should we not be asking why? Why is it that some hospitals
have induction rates of over 50% and coincidently have cs rates of 35% to
40%?  Is there not correlation in this?  Why is it that all birth centres
around the country are booked out continuously?  Why the newly introduced
midwifery group practice in Adelaide is having to double it's numbers next
year from 500 women per year to 1000 due to the demand for midwifery led
care.  What is happening in our labour wards under the medical model of care
that makes major abdominal surgery a preferred option?

The story presented by 60 minutes was fraught with incorrect information:
pelvic floor being 'saved' by cs...it is more likely pregnancy hormones,
botched or poorly timed medical interventions like forceps and episiotomies,
and the lack of pelvic floor exercising by women that causes stress
incontinences etc;  and the story's total exclusion of the serious
complications from cs that are sadly becoming 'less rare' as the more cs are
done...life threatening events such as serious placental complications and
even links with still birth in future pregnancies.

Such biased and incorrect information being shown to our birthing mothers is
a sad reflection of our society loosing the sacredness and importance of
birth.  On one aspect you are reporting caesareans as being as  normal as a
vaginal birth (however you only acknowledged the complicated vaginal birth
scenario) but not once did the reporter or those involved in the story refer
to caesarean as a caesarean birth.
C-Section, or caesarean section is the medical terminology. We don't call
the baby the foetus in every day speech do we?

I watched the segment with interest, but sadly was left disappointed and
thinking once again: "you just don't get it!"

Jo Bainbridge
Nairne, South Australia




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