Midwifery Profession: Pros And Cons
Support for the Midwifery Profession: Pros and Cons The tradition of
midwifery virtually disappeared in Canada during the early part of this century.
Several generations of women gave up childbirth at home to the medical
profession. They did this in the name of safety and pain relief, or simply
because the option of being cared for by a midwife no longer existed. Midwifery
should be re-instated as a legal and honourable profession. With healthy
pregnancies and under normal conditions, women should give birth at home with
the professional assistance of a midwife. The most common argument against home
births and midwifery are perpetuated by the medical establishment. As a
profession, they openly oppose to lay midwifery, and as Dr. William Hall,
president of the College of Physicians, said, he and the college oppose home
births because they feel it is unsafe. (Ramondt, 1990) Undoubtedly, the medical
profession is correct in protesting home births in certain cases. Some
pregnancies are difficult and some births are problematic. It is not difficult
to concede that there are times when sound medical intervention is a necessity
and a blessing. To insist, though, that every birth requires a hospital setting
and the attendance of a doctor with ten years training is, as many experts in
the field agree, rather ludicrous. A study done by Dr. Lewis Mehl (cited in
Barringtonm, 1985), matched a population of 421 women attended by physicians
with 421 women attended by midwifes at home. The midwife sample fared far better
with significantly less fetal distress, birth injuries, and infants needing
resuscitation. The former head of the International Confederation of Gynecology
& Obstetrics, Dr. Caldero Barcia, goes as far to state that, iatrogenia
(doctor-caused illness) is the main cause of fetal distress (Barrington, 1985,
p. 122). Furthermore, the routine of use of medical procedures initially
developed to protect high-risk mothers and babies are often used by doctors
simply as preventive measures. An episiotomy (cutting the perineum) is done in
80% of hospital births. Midwives use it less than 1% of the time.
Labour is
induced 40% of the time in hospitals; whereas, midwives never induce births.
Cesarean sections are performed in 16.3% of hospital births while they rate for
midwifery is only 307% (Hopkins, 1990). Some doctors will argue the comparison
of the rates ignores the reality that hospitals deal with most of the high-risk
births. According to Dr. Malcolm Brown, a health care economist at the
University of Calgary, however, the high rate of cesareans done in hospitals is
because, doctors find it convenient and they make money on them (Ramondt, 1990).
Physicians also collect extra fees for inducing labour and for giving spinal
blocks. These realities make it questionable whether or not to use these
procedures are used in only high-risk situations as originally intended. As
well, giving birth at home offers parents and opportunity that hospitals cannot
give. At home they are free to create an atmosphere of their own choosing for
the birth. These greatly increase the chance for both parents to have a
meaningful and personal experience. There is comfort and convenience in having
the midwife come to them in surroundings that are familiar and emotionally safe.
Eleanor Barrington (1985) states that studies suggest that a mother's biting
experience relates to the baby's motor and cognitive development at two and six
months of age (p. 122). Feeling good about the birth experience would appear to
enhance the mother/child relationship and, consequently, the child's
development. This is a consideration that midwives take seriously and is
reflected in the quality of care and support that they offer throughout the
entire experience. Finally, a home birth presided over by a midwife is, in the
long run, less costly. Alberta Health Care pays physicians $284 for a delivery.
This does not include costs for hospitalization, pre- or post-natal care, or any
additional costs that may arise out of inducement of labour, cesareans, spinal
blocks, or other services. The cost for an average hospital bed per night is
$450. With the average stay for a birth being three to seven days, the cost to
the taxpayer is very high. Midwives, on the other hand, charge between $400 and
$1000 for a package that includes pre-natal care, labour and delivery, and
post-natal care. Richard Plain of the University of Alberta argues that using a
costly doctor to preside at a natural event like childbirth is like, requiring a
Ph.D. in mechanical engineering to grease your car (Ramondt, 1990). And so,
parents should make themselves aware of the facts and statistics pertinent to
the allegations made by the medical profession that home births are unsafe. When
the myth of safety is dispelled with the facts, it is not difficult to see that
giving birth at home with the consistent and professional care of a midwife
offers many advantages over a hospital setting.
Bibliography
Barrington, E. (1985). Midwifery is catching. Toronto: NC Press. Hopkins, S.
(1990, September 24). Is delivering a baby a crime? . Alberta Report. pp. 46-49.
Ramondt, J. (1990, September 14). Midwives less than expensive than doctors'.
Calgary Herald. P. B6
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