lou said:
I watched the programme and I share most of the opinions on this thread and have really mixed views on the subject. What I would say though is that although I fully support a womans right to choose how to give birth I do think its a shame that the women who choose to free birth because they want to avoid medical intervention for negative reasons will not help to improve the current level of service and care that is available to woman who
do want midwives and proffessionals attending their labours and births. Also I think if a woman does not want intervention because they are of the opinion, because of previous experience or not, that hospitals and midwives are a bad thing and their labour and birth will be "taken over" maybe they need to look at the option of either learning to assert themselves and voice their wants and needs instead of allowing their body or situation to be taken over or at least having a birthing partner with them who can act as their voice for them to assure they are not taken advantage of when they are otherwise engaged in the act of giving birth. I had to sign a consent form so Isaac could have an assisted delivery, if I had been adamant that I didn't want an assisted delivery they would have had to basically stand by and watch me struggle to deliver a baby that was stuck in the birthng canal and in distress. I am sure I wouldn't have got him out on my own and we both very probably would have died. I do understand that free birthing is about state of mind and a lady birthing at home alone would be in a different mind set than if she was in a hospital but really what harm will it do to at least have a midwife or doula present? If you have a midwife attend and they are taking over and are rude or ruining the experience then tell them to kindly be quiet and keep away as much as possible. They aren't the bloody police for gods sake lol
Oh....and the only bit I raised my eyebrows at was the lady in america mentioning "orgasmic birth" wtf?
Lou I completely agree with you but not everyone is assertive and training won't help. During my birth with Seren I lost my control completely and couldn't have argued my way out of a paper bag which isn't like me, and my partner listens to medical people. I had one midwife adament I was to get into the bath, I was coping ok with the pain and didn't want to go but she would not take no for an answer. I ended up throwing up in the bath - the bitch had to clean it up lmao. With Cally I had spent the last few weeks of my pregnancy arguing for a homebirth, and even then I was very aware they would have refused me one if I went more then 10 days over even though I delivered Seren 13 days late with no problems. I am fully aware that I could have argued to have a homebirth but I was fed up of fighting with them and the situation was making me feel depressed, I was fed up of basiong my head against a brick wall. Unfortunetly alot (not all) of midwife teams operate a "my way or highway" approach - you saw that on the programme where the hospital refused to give one mum the homebirth kit as she was not having a midwife there which was petty.They may not be the police but they do hold a lot of power. A doula is not someone necessarily trained in childbirth, they are there for support not medical intervention so even with a doula there it would be an unnassisted birth.
I would like to think the medical profession here and in the USA look at the growing number of freebirths and think to themselves "what can we do to get people more confident in us, and how can we make the birthing experience more positive". However I will not hold my breath on that one. Though if there are any orgasmic births going I'll have one of them, beats an epidural