|
Hi Emily, Could you please email me off list? Re
your supervisor's request.
Regards, Lynne
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Saturday, June 17, 2006 10:49
AM
Subject: Re: Re: [ozmidwifery] ctg
stuff
hi all i have just finished the 'obstetrics' term of my
course and over the 9 weeks i repetitively brought up my disgust with the use
of CTGs against all the very high quality evidence that is out there against
them, that noone refutes they just ignore. the wonderful obstetrician who was
my supervisor (only one ive ever met that i like) agreed and said it is only
collective inertia and fear that has led to everyone still using it. the fact
that it has sneakily become the best practice standard. in the big cochrane
review on the subject the only benefit seen was a reduction in neonatal
seizures seen in the CTG group. this was used as evidence that it may reduce
the incidence of cerebral palsy in this group also. actually, there was follow
up studies done on all the studies included in the review some years later and
it actually showed no difference in cerebral palsy rates in most studies. one
study amazingly actually showed a higher rate of cerebral palsy in the CTG
group !! this has been conveniently forgotten. CTGs are still sold to women as
being a safety net to prevent cerebral palsy despite the fact that there is
absolutely no evidence whatesoever of this being the case all that remains
to be the benefit of CTGs is for care providers. it makes many people feel
safe to have a neat little print off documenting what has been happening. the
other thing is that apparently in the court system, parents can only be
'compensated' if a no fault verdict is made and that requires a CTG.
anyway i wrote a huge article about this titled 'the irony of obstetric
risk analysis' and handed it in with my end of term work. i am waiting
with bated breath to hear the feedback and whether i will fail for being so
blatently anti-obstetrics to my obstetric supervisors!!! but i figured theres
less harm saying it all now, on my way out :) the reason im writing this is
that the (good) obstetrician wants me to put together my views on social
inductions and social elective caesars and how we should respond to women who
sometimes demand these things and whether it is ethical to refuse. im really
struggling with it because if we all always say inform and then follow the
mothers wishes, what right do we have to refuse this? it is often for what i
see as ridiculous reasons (ie the woman recently who demanded an induction so
she wouldnt birth on 6/6/06 and threatened to kill herself if we didnt) but
who am i to judge women's choices like others judge non-interventionalist
choices? id love to know everyones thoughts on this one love emily
Do you Yahoo!? Everyone is raving about the all-new
Yahoo! Mail Beta.
|