Article written by Lauredhel

Lauredhel is an Australian woman and mother with a disability. She blogs about social justice, reproductive justice, freedom from violence, the use and misuse of language, medical science, being disabled, her garden, and whatever else pops into her head.

Lauredhel also blogs at FWD/Forward (feminists with disabilities), scribbles at her personal dreamwidth journal Selective and Arbitrary, and co-moderates Hollaback Australia. She joined Hoyden About Town in 2007.

5 responses to “The WHO on Birth: the “Fortaleza Declaration” and “Safe Motherhood: Care in Normal Birth””

  1. kate

    I laboured at home for as long as possible and then in a bath at the birth centre, with dim lighting and my partner, and with the midwife popping in periodically to check on me. I didn’t have any vaginal examinations. I was in the birth centre for about three hours before my son arrived. The only thing that doesn’t conform to the code is that I was moved from the bathroom to my own room for the delivery because women at my hospital aren’t ‘allowed’ to give birth in the bath. Although of course sometimes they do, because babies don’t come conveniently to schedule, and some women are more obstinant about staying put. I had planned on refusing to move, but when the time came, I didn’t actually want to be in the bath anymore, and there was no room next to it. So across the hall I went. I did get to deliver in my own room, and then stay there over night. I could have stayed longer, but no one looked at me funny for wanting to go home after one night. It was Christmas Day, and as nice as the birth centre was, I just wanted to be in our own house with our own bed.

    I had follow up midwifery care at home, which was ok, but I think the breastfeeding support could have been better. There was no gap between discharge from the hospital and my first visit to maternal and child health (which included a lactation consultant).

    It really annoys me that I couldn’t get this level of care at just any maternity hospital, but had to shop around. It really annoys me that I had to prep my partner in the final stages of pregnancy so that he could act as my advocate if health workers started talking about what I would “have” to do, or what I was “allowed” to do. I’m inclined to think a doula/trusted older sister/mother type person is a good person to take for support/advocacy. Especially if you’ve been labelled “high risk”.

    As an aside: my son was born in the caul, and the midwife suggested my partner take a photo between contractions, which he declined because I’d told him “No naked birth photos”. I was too exhausted to speak, so I couldn’t interject, but I would have quite liked a photo. I couldn’t see from my position (birth stool, with arms and head on the side of the bed, midwife behind me) so I still have no idea what he looked like immediately after he was born. When the sac was broken he needed suction, which was explained to me, and quick, but I couldn’t see that either, and my body was too jelly-like to move.

  2. Katherine Cunningham

    These ones disturbed me,

    CATEGORY C: Practices for which Insufficient Evidence Exists to Support a Clear Recommendation and which Should be Used with Caution while Further Research Clarifies the Issue

    1. Non-pharmacological methods of pain relief during labour, such as herbs, immersion in water and nerve stimulation (2.6).
    8. Nipple stimulation to increase uterine contractions during the third stage of labour (5.6).

    (well maybe not the nerve stimulation one)
    Only because, when you look at them, we KNOW that they work, we may not know HOW we know, but we KNOW… tis the intuitive level that is so constantly negated that undoes us, imho. Really midwives have been using herbs for hundreds of years, granted we do need to know which ones, and we’re a long way away from those simple days when a midwife would walk down the road to check on us, picking her herbs has she walked out her cottage.

    I LOVE this bit though:
    * Obstetric care services that have critical attitudes towards technology and that have adopted an attitude of respect for the emotional, psychological and social aspects of birth should be identified. Such services should be encouraged and the processes that have led them to their position must be studied so that they can be used as models to foster similar attitudes in other centers and to influence obstetrical views nationwide.

    I’d love great big posters of it up on the walls of each hospital in this country!

    Thanks for posting these, I knew they were out there, but hadn’t found them.

    Love to read the review, in fact see the film, of the Business of being born! looks awesome!

    Katherine Cunningham’s last blog post..A Question of Potential

  3. Katherine Cunningham

    Perhaps that would be the gap between the theory and the practice, probably measurable in years, and something that they have measured. Hopefully it’s not too long!

    All I know, is that floating in the water while birthing made me feel so VERY held, safe and the warmth took an edge of the intensity that I felt when I left the water. Perhaps not for everyone, but I always felt so at home in water.

    Katherine Cunningham’s last blog post..Sexual stimulus

  4. amanda w

    This is very helpful for me, especially as I am getting used to the fact that children will be coming sooner than I previously thought for us. Thank you for posting — it gives me a bit of a springboard in beginning to research all of this for myself.

    amanda w’s last blog post..Boot straps

Switch to our mobile site