Thursday, June 25, 2009

Rally for Homebirth - Canberra

HOME - EVERY WOMAN’S BIRTH RIGHT – RALLY FOR HOMEBIRTH – MONDAY SEPTEMBER 7 2009, PARLIAMENT HOUSE CANBERRA


Homebirth Australia is hosting a MAJOR rally in Canberra (outside Parliament House) on Monday September 7 from 11.30am.

There has been much discussion about the potential outlawing of homebirth and the continued lack of equity for women choosing homebirth.

We need this to be BIG. When I met with the federal department of Health they commented on the huge number of submissions (900 of which over half came from homebirth consumers). Sadly I said if you outlaw homebirth I will lead 9000 angry women and babies to Canberra!

Now 9000 may be a tall order but we need thousands.

For all the women and midwives that have contacted and said this issue matters please put it in your diary.

There is lots to organise and we look forward to many providing ideas and support.

The states close to Canberra will be called on to provide as many as possible to attend.

It would be great to have at least a few from every state and territory.

Please forward this meeting far and wide.

Details will soon be on the HBA website.



For any other info please email justine.caines@bigpond.com

In solidarity

Justine

Justine Caines
Secretary
Homebirth Australia Inc

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FOR THOSE WHO CANT MAKE IT TO CANBERRA: Please check out Homebirth Australia's new website (www.homebirthaustralia.com.au) for details of a virtual rally. These numbers count just as much and offer those who cant make it a chance to be counted on September 7

The current state of Midwifery Services

Things are looking grim for homebirthing within Australia!

I would have loved a homebirth - Eva's birth would have been perfect 'homebirth material'. Easy pregnancy, very easy labour, home after 4 hours *sigh* what could have been hey? My choices were limited due to the public indemnity crisis and where I was living at the time had no homebirth Midwives. For me, at the time, the option just wasn't logistically possible, sure there were ways around it, had I at the time had a strong enough conviction about it I surely would have put more effort into making it happen. It wasn't until I had my twins and we decided that our baby making days were over that I thought "shit, I'm not going to get the chance to birth at home now, fuck, I really wish I had of done that".

Imagine this, you are a woman who has had a previous elective cesearean birth (no I'm not bagging you out - this is about birth choices), you wanted one, you saw a private obstetrician, you got one, it was a wonderful birth, perfectly timed, went to plan and you are thrilled! BRILLIANT, YOU got the birthing choice YOU wanted. Your birth was PERFECT!!

Now, imagine this, you are a woman who would like to have an elective cesearean as your planned method of birth. You shop all over town to be told 'sorry, current legislation prevents us from undertaking elective cesearean births!'. Can you imagine the outrage?

Apply this scenario to homebirthing and we're on the same page!

Article by Jo Hunter

Written by Jo Hunter yesterday 24th June 2009

Today Nicola Roxon introduced two Bills to Parliament.


1) Health legislation amendment (midwife and nurse practitioner) Bill 2009

This Bill is about accessing Medicare and PBS, there is nothing currently written in this Bill that discuses eligibility - there is no comment within it at present that states anything about homebirth. However, in her speech she openly stated that there will be no MBS for Homebirth.


2) (and this is the clincher) Midwife Professional Indemnity (commonwealth contribution scheme) Bill 2009

This Bill excludes midwives from providing intrapartum homebirth care.

THIS IS A SAD SAD DAY FOR THE WOMEN OF AUSTRALIA!


Here is the press release from Homebirth Australia


Deaths will increase with new announcements

Homebirth Australia today slammed the exclusion of homebirth from insurance schemes for midwives announced by the Health Minister Nicola Roxon in parliament today.

"Effectively two pieces of legislation will outlaw midwives providing homebirth care from July 2010" said Justine Caines, mother of seven and secretary of Homebirth Australia.

"Women will continue to homebirth, but will now do so without the assistance of a qualified professional." said Ms Caines. "The result will be an increase in deaths for mothers and babies, this is certain. It is absolutely impossible to understand the government's position on this, other
than to say that they have bowed to political pressure from medical lobby groups."

The National Maternity Service Review received submissions from hundreds of women wanting access to homebirth services. The vast majority of homebirth services are provided by private practice midwives. Removing this option is likely to end access for most women to homebirth.

Ms Caines called on all ALP members to declare their view on a woman's right to self determination of her health care needs. "If the ALP is so hell bent on preventing women from accessing homebirth as an option I ask all ALP members to publically state their position on this. It appears that having a Health Minister who is a woman, a recent mother, and a lawyer understanding consumers' rights, is not proving to be an advantage for women. Removing women's rights to the point where we are back providing care in dark alleys or in back rooms is ridiculous in 2009."

Friday, April 17, 2009

Homebirth IS safe - in case you didn't know....

Hopefully the following study will encourage the ACM to vigorously defend the position and interests of Independent Midwives. I would be great if opinion could finally sway to consider HB as being 'mainstream' rather than 'radical fringe'...

MEDIA RELEASE

The opinion that hospital birth is safest for all women and babies has finally been overturned with the publication of the world's largest study of planned, midwife attended home births.

The study, published in the British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology (April 15th 2009), included over half a million, low risk, planned home and hospital births in the Netherlands over seven years and compared numbers of babies dying and being harmed during the births. The Netherlands currently has the highest home birth rate in the western world (30%) and a caesarean section rate that is more than half Australia's (14% vs 31%).

Over three hundred thousand women had planned homebirths attended by midwives in this study. No significant differences were found in numbers of babies dying during labour, during the first 24 hours after labour or up to seven days after birth between planned low risk birth at home, attended by a trained midwife and those who planned to give birth in hospital. There were also no differences in numbers of babies being admitted to a neonatal intensive care unit following the birth. Previous studies have been limited by small sample numbers of births and this study has now achieved adequate numbers to show differences very rare events.

We have known for many years mothers have lower intervention rates and higher satisfaction rates when giving birth at home, but there has remained a cloud over the impact on babies' outcomes. This cloud has now been lifted. This study adds to others, which established planned home birth attended by professional midwives was safe for low risk women. It confirms that homebirth services properly networked into mainstream care are safe for babies.

The Australian College of Midwives calls on the Government to reconsider its silence over homebirth and work with health professionals to implement safe, supportive systems of care that will facilitate women's choice of birthplace. Over 400 submissions to the National Maternity Review from consumers, the majority requesting greater access to homebirth cannot be ignored any longer.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Thank you, thank you, thank you!!!

Sending out a big THANK YOU to all those in my network who have referred me, as a Student Midwife, to their friends, family and colleagues.

I am now well on my way to filling my [University dictated] quota for Follow-through experiences for 2009.

A special thanks to Bec and Jasper and Anna, Andrew, Angus, Addie and baby (still un-named divine tiny 2 day old boy) for inviting me to participate in the most wonderous experience that is BIRTH!!

If anyone who resides in TOWNSVILLE and is due to birth in October or November is interested in learning more about the Student Midwife program, please feel free to send me a message or leave a comment.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

My first follow through experience

I'm still waiting to speak to the Mum to get her permission to publish details, but I was so very honoured and thrilled to be invited to a birth this morning. It was a caesarean in the end (undiagnosed breech with ROM @ 40+2), so a bit of an unexpected outcome for Mum, but her and baby are doing well. I, of course, cried again at bubbies first cry. It's just a joyous feeling I wonder if it will ever go away. In a way I hope not, but I don't want to be a blubbery mess everytime I deliver a baby.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Birth Choices - Petition to save MIPP and homebirthing options

It doesn't matter where you actually would choose to birth, it doesn't matter if you would choose and Obstetrician and c/s in a private hospital over an independent Midwife in your home. If you believe in human rights, free choice and in particular a woman's right to choose where and how and by whom then we'd love for you to use your voice.

http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/australianhomebirth/

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Insight - Birth

Missed it? Catch it here http://news.sbs.com.au/insight/episode/index/id/56

Maternity Services Review

As a Midwifery Student and obviously as a future Midwife it is hard to NOT be political. So for all my fellow students here is an easy to read article by Bruce Teakle - Maternity Coalition President. It discusses the main issues of the Maternity Services Review and discusses why independent midwives (MIPP's) could become an illegeal practice.

The Maternity Services Review Report: no more homebirth?
Bruce Teakle 8 March 2008

The recently released report of the Federal Maternity Services Review proposes some promising reforms. It could, if implemented in the most positive spirit, bring huge breakthroughs in many areas of maternity care.

The Report recommends improving women’s access to midwifery care and information about pregnancy and birth. It proposes culturally appropriate care for indigenous women, better support for women in pregnancy and postnatally, and more collaborative relationships between caregivers.

Its ultimate goal for Australian mothers is “safe, high-quality and accessible care based on informed choice” (page iii).

Australia has waited a long time for the reforms proposed in the Review. However, there is a dark side to the Report.

The Report proposes an end to women’s access to midwifery care for homebirth, except possibly within state-run services. If the Report’s recommendations are followed, homebirth midwifery could become illegal in 2010 with the introduction of National Registration of health caregivers.

The full Report can be downloaded from this website:
http://www.health.gov.au/internet/main/publishing.nsf/Content/maternityservicesreview
Below are some key points, with quotes from the Report, to help women who want to lobby for their right to access safe, legal homebirth in Australia:

1. Women choosing homebirth are a trivial minority:
A strong point is made of the small number of homebirths which occur in Australia:
P16: shows a graph of declining numbers of homebirths in Australia from 1991 to 2006.
P16: “Homebirths account for a very small number of births in Australia. In 2005, homebirth accounted for 0.22 per cent of all births in Australia,28 compared with 2.7 per cent in England and Wales,29 2.5 per cent in New Zealand,30 and 0.6 per cent in the United States.” 31

P20: “New Zealand maternity data for 2004 found that, while 4.5 per cent of mothers had planned a homebirth, only 2.5 per cent actually experienced a homebirth.”

The reasons for the small Australian numbers are not explored, in particular the great difficulty most Australian women have accessing information or care for homebirth.

No comparison is made with other minority choices, such as caesarean section on request, and there is certainly no consideration of banning these choices.

The Reviewers acknowledge the high number of individual submissions from women who desired greater access and funding for homebirth. Despite this, it appears the Reviewers have been more responsive to the input of those who want to control women’s choices.

2. Homebirth will not be retained as a choice for women:
The Report is very clear that it does not support reforms which increase or fund women’s access to homebirth:
Pp20-21: “In recognising that, at the current time in Australia, homebirthing is a sensitive and controversial issue, the Review Team has formed the view that the relationship between maternity health care professionals is not such as to support homebirth as a mainstream Commonwealth-funded option (at least in the short term). The Review also considers that moving prematurely to a mainstream private model of care incorporating homebirthing risks polarising the professions rather than allowing the expansion of collaborative approaches to improving choice and services for Australian women and their babies.”

P21: “While acknowledging it is a preference for some women, the Review Team does not propose Commonwealth funding of homebirths as a mainstream option for maternity care at this time. It is also likely that professional indemnity cover support for a Commonwealth- funded model that includes a homebirth setting would be limited, at least in the short term. It is likely that insurers will be less inclined to provide indemnity cover for private homebirths and, if they did provide cover, the premium costs would be very high. Indemnity issues for midwife care more broadly are considered in Chapter 6.2.”

The Report proposes Commonwealth support for Medicare and indemnity insurance for midwives, but only working in non-homebirth practice. Midwives working outside these restrictions would not be able to legally practice, due to impending reforms:

P53: “For privately practising midwives, it is not currently a requirement in most jurisdictions to have professional indemnity cover in place before registration is granted. However, this situation is expected to change under the proposed new National Registration and Accreditation Scheme.”

The consequence of all this is that homebirth practice by private midwives (most homebirth care) would not be insured, and would be illegal under national registration laws, scheduled to take effect in July 2010.

State-run homebirth services (currently operating in NT, NSW, SA, and WA) might also be forced to close, if non-homebirth maternity services attract Commonwealth funding (through Medicare for midwives) but homebirth services do not.

3. Scientific evidence does not inform the recommendations regarding homebirth:
Although some reference is made to scientific evidence on some issues in the report, no reference is made to evidence regarding the outcomes of homebirth. It appears that medical opposition alone informs the Review’s position:

P21: “The Review also considers that moving prematurely to a mainstream private model of care incorporating homebirthing risks polarising the professions rather than allowing the expansion of collaborative approaches to improving choice and services for Australian women and their babies.”

4. The safety of women birthing without a caregiver can be overlooked

P21: “Of concern to the Review Team is the number of submissions and other evidence that suggests a small number of Australian women are choosing homebirths without the support of an appropriately trained health professional. Accordingly, as with any other maternity care model, the Review Team considers that appropriate standards, monitoring and evaluation should be integral components of any service involving homebirth.”

Women choosing to birth at home without a trained caregiver will not be helped by “standards, monitoring and evaluation”, because they are outside the system. The Review Team appear not to understand that these women are within neither a “maternity care model”, nor a “service involving homebirth”.

Maternity Coalition’s experience is that most women birthing at home without a trained caregiver do so because they are unable to access midwifery care at home, and unwilling to use hospital-based services. It is frequently a choice made in desperation. The way to help these women is to provide them access to a high standard of midwifery care in their preferred venue.

The Reviewers overlook the likelihood that the loss of homebirth midwifery care will push more women into unattended homebirth. This would ensure an absence of standards, monitoring or evaluation of any homebirth outcomes.

5. Medical extremists will become more cooperative if they are given a veto on women’s choices

The proposed reason for preventing homebirth midwifery is that it “risks polarising the professions”. The implied strategy seems to be for Government to restrict midwifery practice, against scientific evidence, against the principle of women’s informed choice and against the safety of determined homebirthing women. The presumed intention – for less collaborative doctors to become more respectful of the evidence, principles of informed choice, and women’s perspectives on safety; seems a highly unlikely outcome. The Reviewers reinforce a subordinate position for midwives relative to doctors by proposing to restrict midwifery practice in line with the prejudices of less collaborative doctors. This undermines the relationships they hope to enhance.

The Government must make it clear that the needs, interests and autonomy of women come first. Healthcare policy and services should not be corrupted by the prejudices of health care professions, which prosper on taxpayer funds.

Fear or leadership?
The Minister, Nicola Roxon, is aware that significant modernisations of the healthcare system have historically been met with protest, threats, and predictions of disaster by extreme medical voices. Reforms of Australia’s maternity care system will always provoke this sort of reaction. Those reforms include normalising midwives’ access to public funding and insurance, and women’s access to options including homebirth.

It appears that the Reviewers have conceded to fear of extreme medical voices, over the interests of women. Hopefully the Minister, who is directly accountable to women, will be braver.

Speak out now!

The Review Report has been prepared by Department of Health staff, to advise the Minister for Health, Nicola Roxon. The Minister will decide which of the Department’s advice she will take. If there is enough community outcry about the proposed loss of homebirth, the Minister may decide to act in the interests of choice.

Every Australian has a Federal Member of Parliament (MP), whose job is to represent their interests. Every person who cares about maintaining homebirth choice should contact their Federal MP, preferrably by both letter and with a personal visit.

To find contact info for your MP:
Go to http://apps.aec.gov.au/esearch/ and enter your locality in the “Search Federal Electorates” window.

In the next window, click on the name of your electorate for more information.
On the electorate page, click on “profile and map”.

For contact info for your MP (“Current Member Details”), click on the “Parliament of Australia Website” link.

Write to your MP and tell them how important it is to you that women can choose homebirth. Ask them to contact the Minister for Health on your behalf. Recognise the good sides of the Review, and expect them to help you.

Meet with your MP. Phone their electorate office and ask for an appointment, to talk about the Federal Maternity Review. Take some friends from the same electorate. Tell them why women should have choice.

Your MP is expecting a letter or visit from a mother, not a professor. Tell them why birth and choice are so important to you. Talk about scientific evidence or policy processes if you want, but you are the expert about your own story.

Friday, February 13, 2009

It's all around

This week has left me feeling a little hollow, low, deflated, certainly not on an up.

A mother has lost her child is such tragic circumstances. She is grieving the most unimaginable grief only to be contacted by someone claiming the child is "still alive". Why? What is the benefit?

Some sick, twisted individuals have been lighting fires that have claimed lives and homes in the hundreds. The cost of life is unmeasureable. But this alone isn't enough, the looters and profiteers and scammers and scum start to prey on the goodwill of others. Is there no goodness left out there at all?

My Grace, who is a kind gentle soul, had a free dress day at school today. For a gold coin donation she could wear anything she wanted to school with the money raised going to the Victorian people affected by bushfire. She asks "Mummy, what good will my $1 do, that's not enough", so I try to explain to her that it's not just her $1, but its everybody's $1 that will make a difference to all the little boys and girls who have no toys or clothes or house or food. She asks "but what difference will all the dollars make if they don't have a Daddy anymore?" :(

Friday, February 6, 2009

Sign for Britt

I'd like to ask all my friends to go to http://stevefielding.com.au/ and sign the petition for Britt Lapthorne and her family. I don't want to go into it, but Britt's death personally affected someone I love and I'd like to help in anyway I can. So please sign so that other families will never have to go through what Dale, Elke and Darren have!

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

My Sparkling Student

Paul rang me in a flurry this afternoon - he forgot to tell me that Grace was receiving a Sparkling Student award at school and that I should attend assembly at 2pm. I worked the late last night and he collected the children from school and forgot to pass on this vital info. I guess this really wasn't a problem, in fact, I didn't want to miss it at all, although it did peeve me because it was late notice and my day had already consisted of next to no study.

I got the children ready, jumped in the car, put it into gear and nothing, not a thing, the car lurched forward and stopped, then in reverse it lurched back and stopped! I started having horror visions of very expensive gearbox type shenanigans for my 2005 Black Kia Carnival (Mindy Black).

In a flap I ran over to my very lovely and accommodating neighbour and spoke to her to which she offered me her car and to look after Eva, Joseph and Elizabeth in return for picking up her 3 children Jack, Ally and Finn (who also attend SCCS).

I raced over to school, just in time for assembly to start and see my bubba Gig get her Sparkling Student award (awwwww). I could see her looking around and then I pushed on through to get a pic, she was super excited to have me there.

Then the text came, Elizabeth had poo'ed everywhere and poor Sharon had the thankless task of cleaning it all up. Bless her and all that her cotton sox hold is all I can say (bottle of wine en-route)!

On the way home Jack treated me to his rendition of TNT (an 8 year old who loves a bit of ACCA!) and got me to swing past the dip which is currently 2.4m under water.

As it turned out, in all this rain and poor road conditions over the last few days, Mindy Black's handbreak had seized and my strapping handsome husband fixed it all for me.

So, here she is, Southern Cross Catholic School's Prep 2 Sparkling Student for Working Independently - Grace Regina Wilton.

Monday, February 2, 2009

It's official

So here it is, a badge that says it all...

The MIDDLE Wife

A very funny email sent to me from my Mummy...

The 'Middle Wife' by an Anonymous 2nd grade teacher

I've been teaching now for about fifteen years. I have two kids myself, but the best birth story I know is the one I saw in my own second grade classroom a few years back.

When I was a kid, I loved show-and-tell. So I always have a few sessions with my students. It helps them get over shyness and usually, show-and-tell is pretty tame. Kids bring in pet turtles, model airplanes, pictures of fish they catch, stuff like that. And I never, ever place any boundaries or limitations on them. If they want to lug it in to school and talk about it, they're welcome.

Well, one day this little girl, Erica, a very bright, very outgoing kid, takes her turn and waddles up to the front of the class with a pillow stuffed under her sweater.

She holds up a snapshot of an infant. 'This is Luke, my baby brother, and I'm going to tell you about his birthday.'

'First, Mom and Dad made him as a symbol of their love, and then Dad put a seed in my Mom's stomach, and Luke grew in there. He ate for nine months through an umbrella cord.'

She's standing there with her hands on the pillow, and I'm trying not to laugh and wishing I had my camcorder with me. The kids are watching her in amazement.

'Then, about two Saturdays ago, my Mom starts saying and going, 'Oh, Oh, Oh, Oh!' Erica puts a hand behind her back and groans. 'She walked around the house for, like an hour, 'Oh, oh, oh!' (Now this kid is doing a hysterical duck walk and groaning.)

'My Dad called the middle wife. She delivers babies, but she doesn't have a sign on the car like the Domino's man. They got my Mom to lie down in bed like this.' (Then Erica lies down with her back against the wall.)

'And then, pop! My Mom had this bag of water she kept in there in case he got thirsty, and it just blew up and spilled all over the bed, like psshhheew!' (This kid has her legs spread with her little hands miming water flowing away. It was too much!)

'Then the middle wife starts saying 'push, push,' and 'breathe, breathe. They started counting, but never even got past ten. Then, all of a sudden, out comes my brother. He was covered in yucky stuff that they all said it was from Mom's play-center, (placenta) so there must be a lot of toys inside there. When he got out, the middle wife spanked him for crawling up in there.'

Then Erica stood up, took a big theatrical bow and returned to her seat. I'm sure I applauded the loudest. Ever since then, when it's show-and-tell day, I bring my camcorder, just in case another 'Middle Wife' comes along....

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Cyclone Ellie and the week that was

I had the most awesome week! My Mum was here, my beautiful Miss 5, Grace, started school and shines so bright every day, parenting has seemingly got so much easier with only 3 babes at home during the day. My marriage is healthy and I love my man to bits and I'm about to embark on some of the most AMAZING birthing experiences at the invitation of some beautiful expectant Mum's.

The weather at the moment is rainy to say the least. Today we took a walk up to the Ross River Dam as they currently have the spillway open. On the landing of the spillway Elizabeth did the most entertaining Marilyn Monroe impersonation that had us in stitches.

Cyclone Ellie is bearing down on the FNQ coast, it was all a bit surreal heading to the supermarket today. Not for anything in particular, but felt like a bit of a mosey on out of the house. Annandale Central was MANIC with people stocking up on water and torches and candles and, and, and....I had to quietly giggle at the chaos. Although I must say, Miss Ellie, nothing can dampen my spirits and should you happen upon us, you'll find us quietly bunkered down in the loungeroom watching Beauty and the Beast on the portable DVD, and me most likely reading my Pharmacology text by torchlight!

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

First day of school

Well there it is, my first 'baby' off to school. A bit of an emotional day, but overall Grace is so very ready to be off into the big wild world. Found myself being very reflective over the day and remembering snippets from her birth. It certainly doesn't seem like 5 years since she was born, but indeed it is and its been a wonderous journey. Thank you Grace Regina for choosing me to be your guiding light.


I love you bubba Gig to the moon and back *mwah*

Sunday, January 25, 2009

How things have changed....

Life has been so busy, kids, study, husband, house, work - christmas came and went and in a few days my eldest daughter, Grace, will start school for the first time.

In amongst this time, one of my lifelong amibitons began to take form and on 15th Jan I was accepted by the University of South Australia to study in their Bachelor of Midwifery program. I worked so hard to achieve this and I am elated that I am finally on the path toward my dream.