Goodbye
2003 A bad year for
midwifery and birth in Ireland!
©
Marie O'Connor
Dear
friends
Irish tradition, has it that January 6 is "Little Christmas"
or Nollaig na mBan (the Women's Christmas) (note that women are
allocated the lesser feast, in the spirit of the patriarchy!).
So, Happy Little Christmas, everyone!!!
The growing medical opposition to midwifery-based maternity care
seen in Ireland seems to be part of a worldwide trend, which has
been documented most recently in the Czech Republic, France and
Britain. Here is a very brief summary of the Irish experience:
2003 was the year when
the Government decided to centralise hospital medical services,
closing nearly half of the country's 22 maternity units; these
closures are now imminent.
Hospital consultants declared their opposition to midwife-managed
maternity care in hospitals without obstetricians to "supervise"
them
The Supreme Court ruled against home birth mothers, declaring
that they had no legal entitlement to a home birth service from
the State
Home birth has therefore ceased to be part of the public health
system.
Indemnity insurers advised their general medical practitioner
members not to accept home birth mothers as "patients",
thus denying them access to free mother and child services as
per their legal entitlement.
Dublin and Cork maternity hospitals refused to accept all referrals
- other than emergencies - from independent (self-employed) midwives
Cork hospital doctors refused to work with midwives under contract
to provide home birth services to the State.
A statistically worthless "study", now discredited in
MIDIRS, trumpeting the "dangers" of home birth in Dublin
was published in the medical press
Dublin maternity hospital consultants declared war - in the media
- against the Region's independent home birth midwives.
Despite strong demand, the Western Health Board continued to refuse
to reinstate its suspended home birth service.
Finally, despite a crippling shortage of midwives, the first course
in "direct entry" or open access midwifery ended without
any prospect of a follow-up course ...
Incoming health legislation means an opportunity to lobby politicians
to restore home birth as part of the public health system. This
is part of a wider effort - to end legal, structural and regulatory
discrimination against midwives, while at the same time campaigning
to get women's right to choose how to give birth recognised as
forming a central part of feminism, knowing that human rights
for women in childbirth can only be achieved through securing
equality for midwives
Meanwhile, very best wishes for Nollaig na mBan!
©
Marie O'Connor
National Birth Alliance
|
6th
January 2004
Goodbye to a bad year for midwifery and birth in Ireland!
6th November 2003
Greens Pledge to Amend 1970
Health Act to Ensure the Right to Homebirth
5th November 2003
Supreme
Court Homebirth Ruling is ‘Regrettable’ Says Gormley
5th November 2003
Supreme Court
decision highlights
need for reform
Joint statement of the
National Birth Alliance
& Homebirth Association of Ireland
4th November 2003
20-Year Homebirth Battle Ends
Tomorrow in Supreme Court
Turf war reaches Supreme Court
22 September
Junk research slammed by
ERHA Midwives
Truth or Fiction?: a review
of a new medical "study" on home birth in Dublin
5 September 2003
Rolling back the Bonner
and Kinder Reports
27 August 2003
The Hanley Report
20 August 2003
A system
without locks
14 May 2003
The pros and cons of
Caesarean section
8 May 2003
Irish Midwife a vanishing
species
27 March 2003
How the boys
Finally beat the girls
July 2003
Irish Medical Journal
Original Paper
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