I like to have the membranes intact till 2nd stage. I will break them when
they produde from the vagina with fluid in them. But it is wondrous to have
a baby born in the caul, and I have never had a problem with baby's
breathing. Wouldn't it be similar to a water birth? Before I'm asked, I
don't know why I break them when visible. I've been splashed with many
substances....blood, vomit, liquor.
Part of the job.                            Maureen
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Marilyn
Kleidon
Sent: Tuesday, 5 October 2004 3:54 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [ozmidwifery] VE, ARM etc..


Hi Trish:

I love these discussions too! And find myself agreeing with all here! I also
think we need to be aware that some of the skills deemed "medical" or
"obstetric" (VE's and ARM's for example) and indeed at some level are
interventions, became missing from the midwife's tool bag historically
because of legislation instigated by doctors. This was in the period of time
when they were trying to make midwifery illegal in Britain, the USA and
Canada: succeeding in the USA and Canada towards the later part of the 19th
Century and early 20th. Thus midwives who continued to practice learned to
do so without tools that were deemed to be the scope of practice of the
medical profession. This also included attending births without oxytocics or
oxygen as these became available and instead having a pharmacopia of herbs
and other medicinals usually no longer in the medical kit.

All I am saying is we do need to cautious about drawing boundaries around
what is good midwifery practice.

As for ARM's I seem to know of no good reason for doing them other than
strong maternal request. I peronally love to have a baby born in the caul,
but also know this freaks some other practitioners out. I have never had an
incident with a baby, and have always been able to simply wipe the caul
away(and save it of course), but do know from comments that it does worry
some (midwives/doctors) regarding the first breath. Has it (being born in
the caul) really ever been associated with delayed respirations, amniotic
fluid aspiration, anything else?

The only other reason I have heard (but can't bring myself to do) for ARM is
if you are suspecting mec stained liquor: confirming it or not... so as to
decide place of birth: home or hospital perhaps ... for baby resusc purposes
(actually not supported by current research on MAS), just wondering what you
all think?

marilyn

----- Original Message -----
From: "Trish David" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, October 03, 2004 5:24 PM
Subject: Re: [ozmidwifery] VE


> Mary, Denise, I agree. However, and I risk a minor lashing, I have found
it, on
> occasion, necessary to do a VE on a woman not in labour to reassure her
that she
> will (or will not) go into labour shortly. This has been for a variety of
> reasons ranging from my imminent absence for a few days interstate and her
> desire to have me at her birth, to another's warm-up niggles and her worry
that
> she would be in labour during (1) her partner's trial for burglary or (2)
her
> grandmother's funeral. All wanted reassurance that labour would/not start
within
> a couple of days. A long firm closed posterior cervix is less likely to
preclude
> an imminent labour than one that has started to efface/dilate and which is
> central or anterior (some of the factors in the Bishop Score). On each of
these
> occasions they were 'social VEs' instigated at the woman's request, and
> performed with the best of intentions. An intervention, for sure, but are
all
> interventions necessarily bad? (This question also puts me in mind of
'natural
> induction' with remedies like cohosh and evening primrose or orange juice
and
> castor oil, or even penetrative sex, none of which are effective when the
cervix
> is long, firm, posterior and closed. It is still an induction or an
attempted
> one, but nevertheless an intervention which seems to be accorded less
censure
> than a 'medical' one.) And in my opinion, to refuse such a request because
of my
> belief that all women should be powerful enough to be accepting of their
body
> and to trust the process would be to impose my ideological position upon
them in
> a context which has not prepared them to accept it. Now was not the time
to
> begin that education process, but perhaps for next time?
>
> I would suggest, and some of my own research informs this notion, that the
> technology that allows 'knowledge' (and I count in this simple
technologies like
> partograms and centile charts for tracking fundal height, right up to VEs
and
> pinards) becomes oppressive when used with an ideological intent that
subsumes
> women's interests to powerful others'. So, ARM by a doctor intent on
getting
> home is 'bad' while ARM by a midwife intent on shortening labour at the
woman's
> request because she is sure she needs it is 'good'?
>
> The converse would be to suggest that women who want to shorten labour are
> somehow ducking their responsibility to take labour at it's natural best,
and
> yet we have absolutely NO idea what this is and have no way of knowing
since we
> can't separate cultural practices of birth from the unadulterated biology
of it.
>
> Therefore, the best we can hope for, I think, is to practice our culture
of
> birth humanely, VE or no VE.
>
> All power to those independent midwives, birth centre and caseload/team
> midwives, and especially to those midwives in very medicalised settings
who do
> this so well. And thanks, Mary, this discussion is exactly what you called
for,
> a rethink on VEs. I love this list, and our students reading these posts
are
> exposed to discussions that we find it difficult to introduce into the
> classrooms, because of the amount of 'fact' we have to impart, and the
lack of
> resources to allow panel discussions of experienced practitioners. So
please,
> keep up the discussions like this, I am sure they are deeply appreciated.
>
> Trish
>
> Mary Murphy wrote:
>
> > Going right back to the beginning, I said that we should "re-think
V.e's"
> > Obviously  I realise that they are a valuable  tool when caring for
women in
> > labour.  Again, we need to learn to diagnose labour correctly without
> > relying on V.E's.  Putting ones hand into the vagina and finding a long,
> > thick, cervix means that a woman is not in establsihed labour.  This
could
> > have been diagnosed by eyes and ears.  I don't mean to prolong the
> > discussion unnecessarily, but it has been a fruitful discussion between
> > midwives of all skill levels and experience. Stacey, keep asking
questions
> > and above all, keep searching for women friendly practices. cheers, MM
> >
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