Czech
Republic prepare
for EU by banning midwives
PRESS RELEASE
December 13, 2003
The Chamber of Deputies of the Parliament of the Czech Republic
passed the Act on Non-Medical Professions in the third reading
yesterday. The
majority of Czech MPs decided that in our country the independent
profession of midwife should not exist in the future and that
after the EU accession of the Czech Republic women should be referred
exclusively to the monopolist care of doctors when selecting the
caregiver during pregnancy, at birth
and after birth and that midwives should be subject to medical
indication.
"The parliament decision is hardly understandable" says
Ivana Königsmarkova, the chairwoman of the Czech Association
of Midwives. "If the Act is passed in the Senate as well,
no midwife who is not a pediatric nurse at the same time will
be acknowledged competent to perform her profession
independently without medical supervision because the Act stipulates
one-month internship on neonatal units. But according to the current
legislation a midwife is not allowed to work on such units.
The approved version of the act is in
conflict with the international definition of midwife, with WHO
recommendations as well as with European directions and will result-when
adopted in the wording proposed-in the act preventing the free
movement of Czech and foreign midwives' labor force and also mutual
recognition of
qualification which was repeatedly criticized by the EU Commission.
I do not believe this is a definite decision," says Königsmarkova.
The MPs decided on the liquidation of independent midwives' profession
despite the results of the public opinion poll from 2000 by STEM
Agency
revealing that 20 % of Czech women giving birth for the first
time and 25% of mothers with children under 1.5 years of age see
the medical model of
obstetric care as unacceptable. If these women do not have the
right of choice after the adoption of the act it is to be expected
that many of them will not observe the law as they consider it
wrong.
"If women all over Europe have the right of free informed
choice why should not Czech women have the same right after the
EU accession of our
country?" asks Olga Gajicova, the executive director of Aperio
- Health Parenting Association. She adds: "The Aperio office
is often contacted by women inquiring about the services of private
midwives and seeking socially oriented, individual care without
unnecessary interventions for their
pregnancy. If the lawgivers are deaf to these women's needs the
issue is likely to be judged by the International Court in Strasbourg."
More information:
Aperio-Health Parenting Association
Truhlárská 20
110 00 Praha 1
phone/fax: +420 222 317 867
aperio@aperio.cz
www.aperio.cz
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