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Showing newest posts with label Australia. Show older posts
Showing newest posts with label Australia. Show older posts

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Healing Herbs - Great Gift For Mums!

One of the many treasured memories I have from my daughter's birth was easing into a warm herbal bath, lovingly prepared for me by my doula, Julie Bell. While I enjoyed the relaxing warmth and the beautiful scents, little did I know Julie's herbal blend were busy helping my very sore vagina heal.

Julie is not joining us for the birth of our second baby. At first I thought this meant no post-birth herbal bath, but I contacted Julie to find out how I could go about making my own herbal bags, only to discover that she has just started selling her special blend to the public!

Contents of your Post-Natal Herbal Bath sachet:

* Lavender - antispetic, analgesic and anti-bacterial properties

* Sage - astringent, antiseptic and anti-inflammatory properties

* Rosemary - astringent, anti-bacterial and anti-inflammatory properties

* Calendula - anti-septic, soothing wound inflammation, general wound healing

* Witch Hazel - an astringent, curbs bleeding and reduces inflammation

* Uva Ursi - astringent, anti-bacterial and antiseptic properties

* Yarrow - astringent and anti-bacterial properties; the anti-spasmodic effects reduce inflammation. A superior remedy for wounds and cuts.

* Ladies Mantle - astringent, and helps protect healing elastin fibres

* Chamomile - analgesic, anti-inflammatory, antibiotic, and anti-inflammatory properties

* Comfrey - astringent, soothing and healing effects. It reduces inflammation and controls bleeding. It is a superb wound healing herb, particularly effective in slow healing wounds and to help repair tissue damage

* Shepherd's Purse - astringent, anti-septic and useful to reduce bleeding and bruising

* Celtic Sea Salt - helpful in soothing, cleansing and healing of wounds.

For more information on the use of common herbs, go to:
Ageless Herbal Encyclopaedia

Disclaimer: This information is of a general nature and does not constitute medical advice. It is not intended to diagnose or treat any condition.

After Julie makes up her sachets, all you have to do is throw it in your tub!

For more ideas for how to use the herbal sachets or how to get some for yourself or a loved one (what a great blessingway gift!) check out Julie's website: http://melbournedoula.blogspot.com/2010/07/post-natal-peri-care-kit.html
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Tuesday, July 27, 2010

The Latest On Aussie Homebirth: VOTE GREEN!

To update readers about the new maternity service regulations in Australia, I give you the words of those much better informed than I:
"After months of suspense, the Determination defining "collaborative arrangements" was quietly signed into law by the Governor General on 16 July, without notification to stakeholders. The Determination can be downloaded from this link.

The Determination provides 4 options for collaborative arrangements. Each option requires the midwife to have some form of permission from a doctor, before a woman can receive Medicare rebates.

The minimum form of permission is an "Arrangement - midwife's written records" (section 7 in the Determination). This option requires a named doctor of a specific type to acknowledge "that the practitioner will be collaborating in the patient’s care", and that the named doctor has received copies of a hospital booking letter and a maternity care plan.

These requirements will make it very difficult for women to access Medicare-funded care from midwives in private midwifery practice. We don't expect midwives in private midwifery practice (working for themselves, not a doctor) to be able to find private doctors who are willing to enter collaborative arrangements with them. In some cases this may be possible under very specific conditions. However it is unrealistic to expect that private doctors will collaborate in the care of women planning homebirths."
In an open letter to the health minister, the national president of Maternity Coalition summarised the problem with "collaborative arrangements" thus:
  • Control of care is taken out of the hands of women, and given to doctors.
  • Defacto “parallel regulation” of the midwifery profession, with doctors setting conditions for Medicare-funded midwifery practice.
  • Anti-competitive influence on the health care market, giving one group of providers control over consumer access to another group of providers of the same health care service.
  • "Collaborative arrangements” cannot be made with hospitals, even though most private midwives consult and refer to hospitals rather than individual doctors.
  • The requirements do not improve “safety”, “access” or “continuity” for Australian mothers."
She went on to urge the health minister to demonstrate real commitment to maternity reform by addressing:

  • that the requirements for permission from a doctor be removed from the Medicare for midwives legislation (Collaborative arrangements for midwives), thus ensuring that women’s choices are protected;
  • that women's rights to informed consent (including right of refusal) are expressly recognised in all codes, guidelines and frameworks relating to midwifery practice;
  • that a long-term solution be sought for women to continue to have access to midwife-attended homebirth;
  • that the Federal Government provide strong leadership to ensure jurisdictions provide mechanisms for visiting rights for midwives in public hospitals.
Maternity Coalition appeals for urgent action to be taken so that there is some chance of the reforms meeting the stated aim “to increase access and affordability of midwifery services” for Australian women. It is simply not possible for the reforms to deliver for women while a medical veto over access to midwifery care remains in place. The definition of collaborative arrangements must recognise women’s right to reproductive self-determination."
Midwives Victoria blogged about the safety and qualitify framework outlined in the maternity reforms, revealing that:
"Women with a singleton pregnancy, cephalic presentation, at term and free from any significant pre existing medical or pregnancy complications are those identified in the ACM guidelines as clearly meeting criteria for midwifery led care.

When PPMs are the primary carers for women who fall outside of these criteria, the consultation and referral pathways must be documented and followed. Clearly articulated and documented plans of escalation and collaboration are integral to provision of safe high quality care leading to positive outcomes for mothers and babies."
No surprises there. Multiples are explicitly excluded from eligibility for midwifery led care, and most other variations of pregnancy and birth could fall under: "any significant pre existing medical or pregnancy complication" depending on who the care-provider and her callaborators are (see this previous post).

Meanwhile, Greens Senator Rachel Siewert stated in a press release that "...the Greens will move a motion to disallow the collaborative arrangements regulation" as soon as the Senate sits next.

At no point in the last two years of this maternity reform battle has the health minister or Australian government bothered to listen to stakeholders like: homebirthing women, midwives in private practice and groups like Maternity Coalition. We've heard a lot of "choice" rhetoric and been fed false promises from the minister that no woman's self-determination will be taken away. But at the end of the day actions speak louder than bullshit and the government's actions have made midwife attended homebirth near impossible for many, many families.

Fuck the government. Fuck the rich obstetric lobby who have had their ears this whole time. Fuck "collaboration". VOTE GREEN and be done with these bastards!

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Saturday, July 17, 2010

Another Birth Centre Bites The Dust?

On July 15th the Gold Coast Birth Centre was shut down by one of Gold Coast Hospital's chief obstetricians, who acted without prior consultation. The closure came just two weeks after the Australian Government introduced maternity reforms which give doctors unprecedented control over independent midwives, restricting Australian families' access to homebirth.

Australians were quick to mobilise and speak out against this affront to birth rights. It's important to note the heavy involvement of homebirthing women in this movement. While homebirthers don't wish to use birth centres, we certainly know how it feels to have our choice ripped out from under our feet.

A protest rally attended by 300-500 people caused the birth centre to be re-opened over the weekend, with talk of the centre's future to resume on Monday (see Mum-Power Reopens Coast Birth Centre).

Yet, the supposed "Mother of all rallies" attended by over 2000 people at Parliament House on a cold and wet September day did nothing to save midwife attended homebirth last year! Why? My theory is that the Gold Coast Birth centre, like the overwhelming majority of Australian birth centres, is not free-standing and (as is made obvious by the fact that one obstetrician closed it down) is ultimately under the control of hospital power-holders. Homebirth attended by an independent midwife, on the other hand, was not under the direct control of hospitals or obstetricians prior to the maternity reforms introduced on July 1st.

In conclusion, the medical power-holders are willing to tolerate natural birth in Australia, so long as they are in control of when, where and who it happens to.

Save Gold Coast Birth Centre Facebook Page

Maternity Coalition's Press Release

Hundreds March To Save Gold Coast Birth Centre

Channel 7 Television Coverage Of Protest

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Saturday, July 10, 2010

Does Absence Make Cyber Hearts Grow Fonder?

Apologies to all my adoring fans who have been waiting, forlorn by their feed readers, for me to update this blog. I have an excellent, and rather fitting, excuse for my lack of writing during what has been a busy time for birth lovers in Australia: I'm pregnant.

While this was one very planned, long awaited second pregnancy, so far it has not been a pleasant journey. After a few short weeks of joy the sickness set in. As with my first, I have spent about ten weeks suffering chronic morning sickness, or hyperemesis gravidarum. The worst of it is over now and I'm currently enjoying mild morning sickness.

I've missed a lot of action while curled up in bed with my trusty bucket. A South Australian Coroner decided a child born not breathing and without a heartbeat, was in fact alive because a machine detected pulseless electrical activity. The Australian Labour Party ousted our elected Prime Minister and replaced him with our first woman Prime Minister. On July 1st the maternity reforms that spell the end of independent midwifery came into effect (see also). And an Australian celebrity's planned homebirth ended with a hospital transfer.

I look forward to sharing my thoughts on these events and more in the coming months, perhaps with a sprinkle of my own growing belly photos. But if it turns out that my posts are few and far between at least you will know why.

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Saturday, April 24, 2010

"But What Woman Could They Serve?" - Lisa Barrett On Eligibility

Lisa Barrett has shared an update about the eligibility criteria midwives face with the new reforms coming into force July 1st. She highlights that important questions (such as "what will so-called collaboration entail?') remain unanswered.

I believe Lisa says it best when she says:
"I’m sure there are midwives that will jump high enough to become eligible but what woman could they serve?"
These reforms really are a big step away from normal physiological childbirth options in Australia. Presently the easiest, most supportive and most certain way of achieving a vaginal birth after caesarean, a vaginal breech birth, a vaginal twin birth, an intervention free normal physiological birth etc is to stay at home in the care of an independent midwife. Women who do achieve such things in the hospital system do so against great obstacles and a lot of their birthing energy gets diverted towards fending for their rights. When being an eligible and collaborative midwife means not taking on women who fall into the aforementioned categories, what will become of those birth options and of those women? Either these women will be cajoled into submitting to unnecessary surgery (and the significant risks inherent to it) or they will be left with no other option than to go it alone or seek underground midwifery care (which puts themselves and the midwives they hire in danger in terms of State regulation and the law).

As I've been saying since talk of these reforms first began: they mark yet another nail in the coffin for normal physiological birth in Australia.

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Thursday, April 22, 2010

International Midwives Day: Melbourne Event

The following is from an email I recieved from a Maternity Coalition email list:

"Maternity Coalition Victoria is hosting a morning tea to celebrate International Midwives Day on 5 May 2010.

Please join us at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Melbourne from 11am to 12:30pm. We will be on the Western Lawn near the Children's Garden (enter through the Observatory Gate).

Everyone is welcome. Please forward this invite on to anyone you know who might be interested.

You can find details of the event on Maternity Coalition Victoria's new Facebook page"
The Facebook event page includes a picture with text stating "The world needs midwives now more than ever", so very true!

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Monday, April 19, 2010

Your Government, Removing Documents As Fast As Rights

Lisa Barrett has published another update about the future of homebirth midwifery in Australia. Lisa has seen the behind the scenes documents our government has written about plans for the future of our maternity services. Outlook bleak. To read her reflections:

Quality and Safety Framework For Eligibility

Government Insurance For Midwives (Snigger)

The Department of Health and Aging published a document entitled "Indemnity insurance - protection for midwives" outlining their plans for the future of midwifery. Within a matter of hours the site disappeared. Luckily Ms Barrett downloaded the original and has shared a copy on her blog:

Indemnity Insurance PDF

It will be very interesting to see what the new version looks like whenever it may appear. In the meantime I had a cynical little giggle to the following image a friend shared on her Facebook profile:


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Friday, April 16, 2010

A Glimmer Of Hope? Or Dust In My Eye?

After my update about the homebirth situation two of our independent midwives have posted updates of their own.

From Lisa Barrett:

"If at all possible most midwives will jump through the hoops to continue on the register, rendering it almost impossible, even with a right of refusal, for her to support the women who don't want to collaborate with the hospital, or put in place a plan for transfer that includes more than calling an ambulance and ringing the hospital in advance of arriving." (Read in full here)
Joy Johnston From Private Midwifery Services:
"We know that we will be required to have professional indemnity insurance that covers everything we do professionally, excluding homebirth.
What we don't know yet includes: Who will provide the indemnity insurance? What that insurance will cost? What 'excluding homebirth' means, precisely. When does homebirth begin and end, for the purposes of this insurance? What will we be required to do to access the exclusion for homebirth?...

As far as I know, insurance brokers who are looking into providing this special insurance product for midwives' private practices have not yet put any offers on the table publicly. The Australian College of Midwives has informed members that it has a product which will be available for a fee in addition to membership fees. The Australian Nursing Federation (Victorian Branch) has informed members that it is also negotiating a product suitable for members who are independent midwives." (Read in full here)
The other day a friend of mine posted the following quote on his Facebook wall and it gave me a little glimmer of hope:
"Every major movement for social change in our history was hopeless. Hopeless from the beginning, hopeless through the middle, hopeless up to the very end. But then, like a bolt out of a blue sky, a breakthrough. So our job is not to give up, give in or go away. Take action, speak clearly as you can, & trust the lesson of history: Truthful, nonviolent movements are destined to win." John Dear on Howard Zinn"
I know that homebirth will continue in Australia after July 1. If I really want to see a plus side in this entire ordeal I suppose I could say "look at all the publicity homebirth has received in the last year!" Getting the word out there that homebirth is an option has always been a bit of a struggle in medico-addicted-Australia, but in the last year average Australians have been exposed to the idea through the mainstream media (albeit not a great deal, but more than before these reforms began). Parties involved in regulating maternity services, politicians, journalists etc have been forced to see the diversity of homebirthing families. And I'm optimistic that the forthcoming Face of Birth documentary about homebirth in Australia will do us all a great service.

With Lisa and Joy I sit and wait to see what the next chapter has in store for us all...

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Thursday, April 15, 2010

"Face Of Birth" Aussie Birth Documentary

I'm really excited to share the following teaser for a documentary about maternity services in Australia. It looks as thought this doco focuses on homebirth and what the future of homebirth in Australia might be.

The film's website provides the following outline:
"In the Netherlands, one woman in three chooses to birth at home. In Australia this option is about to become unlawful… The Face of Birth is a one-hour documentary that seeks to examine the political, the professional and the personal stories behind what is at stake for women and their babies, and whether or not we all should care."
There's footage from last years' national rally and a really great sample of articulate homebirthing women speaking their truth:

I really loved Midwife Jan Ireland's comment:
"We don't lose many babies in Austrlaia, we're very lucky because we've got good nutrition, good social circumstances. But what we do lose are a lot of marriages, and a lot of relationships, and a lot of people's mental health after childbirth."

To find out more about the documentary check out the website: http://faceofbirth.com

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Friday, April 9, 2010

Update On The Future Of Australian Homebirth

On March 16 The Senate passed the Health Legislation Amendment (Midwives and Nurse Practitioners) Bill 2009. While the health minister has been keen to highlight that these reforms mean Australian women will supposedly be able to choose their own midwife for pregnancy, birth and postpartum care for a birth centre or hospital birth (thereby fostering continuity of care) and that midwives will have access to medicare, we still lack a clear definition of the terms "collaboration" and "eligible midwife" as used in the Bill.

It is still unclear whether "collaboration" means doctors and independent midwives working on an equal footing or doctors having the power of veto over midwives (and the women who hire them). For those of us familiar with the workings of the current maternity system it is hard not to assume a cynical definition of "collaboration". As stated on the Private Midwifery Services blog:
"Even today, before any of these reforms come into effect, some doctors refuse to provide services, such as ordering blood tests, if they know a woman is planning homebirth attended by a private midwife. Women have been told by their GPs that the GP is not willing to accept the 'risk', from an indemnity point of view, of collaboration with a midwife. Midwives who try to make collaborative arrangements with local hospitals, establishing transparent and seamless processes for referral and transfer to hospital care when appropriate often face barriers and difficulties."
This does not fill homebirthers and independent midwives with much hope.

In Birth Writes (newsletter of the Victorian Branch of Maternity Coalition) Joanne Smethurst notes that "There is nothing in the Bills for homebirth – the Bills neither support nor outlaw homebirth." (April 2010: 2). She goes on to state that the health minister has assured homebirth lobbyists that midwife attended homebirth will remain an option for Australians, but just how easy that access will be remains unclear. Melbourne private practice midwife Joy Johnston said it best when she wrote on her blog:
"It's POSSIBLY a landmark day for SOME midwifery. But for midwives like me, who have chosen to be employed privately by women for homebirth or for other private midwifery services, the legislation gives us little to cheer about. Even the promise of Medicare and prescribing rights, to be implemented by November this year, appears to be so wound up in bureaucratic micro-management that we wonder if we will ever be able to meet the criteria. We are doubtful that the Medicare-funded midwife will be able to provide any service that is acceptable to clients, at the same time as providing a reasonable livelihood for the midwife."
To attempt to have your say (yet again) there is the option of sending your feedback to The draft National Guidance on Collaborative Maternity Care. This remains open to public consultation until April 27th.

You mean we have to write to the government AGAIN?!

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

ALP: The Freebirth Government

Dear Prime Minister Rudd and Health Minister Roxon,

I write to congratulate you on the great step forward you have taken on behalf of birthing women everywhere in Australia. Few politicians to date have shown such trust in women's innate power to birth their babies in an unhindered environment, as you have.

Most parties involved in debates about Australia's maternity system argue that birthing women need the presence of a medical professional during labour. The vast majority of Australian homebirthers have previously employed an independent midwife to attend to their medical needs during pregnancy, birth and the postpartum period to ensure if anything goes wrong during their homebirth they have skilled hands at the ready. You have taken a bold step forward on behalf of these women, giving them them the final push they needed to embrace unassisted birthing and finally experience the true power of unhindered labour.

By finally passing the controversial midwives bill which will give doctors veto power over "independent" midwives and prevent the overwhelming majority of these midwives from practicing (thanks to an inability to access indemnity insurance for homebirths) you have turned hundreds of homebirthers into freebirthers.

I understand that presently your government is receiving a lot of criticism from midwives, homebirthers and The Greens party for the work you have done to encourage Australian women to stop fearing their power and start freebirthing. But these critics lack your wisdom and fail to realise that evolution has perfectly designed women for birthing without the presence of skilled care providers, like midwives in private practice.

Yours sincerely,

A fellow freebirth advocate


For More:

Major Parties Unite Against Midwives and Homebirths

Senate Passes Controversial Birth Bill

*ALP (for international readers) is the Australian Labour Party, the geniuses currently in power.

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Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Rhea Dempsey on "Roles at Birth"

Rhea Dempsey is a birth attendant and counsellor with over thirty years experience working in women's birth spaces. This Friday (March 12) she is speaking about "roles at birth" at a Peninsula Birth Support gathering at Orwil Street Community House, Frankston. From their blog:
"For anyone with an interest in childbirth and questions about what role partners, lovers, mothers, sisters, cousins, midwives, doulas etc. should play in a woman's birth space, we have a real treat for you!"
For more information see Peninsula Birth Support's Facebook group and the Event page or email them at MCpeninsula@gmail.com.

"Peninsula Birth Support is a Branch of Maternity Coalition, a national umbrella organisation committed to the advancement of best-practice maternity care for all Australian women and their families. Our aim is to provide information about pregnancy and childbirth to the community and facilitate open discussion in a mothers group style setting." From their blog.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Happy IWD

For Australian women today marks their final International Women's Day (IWD) during which they have the freedom to choose where they give birth and who provides their health care during that time in their lives. This time next year the government will be making such choices for women and Independent Midwifery shall be a thing of the past.

I have spent my IWD enjoying the company of a good friend whose homebirth I attended last year. I've been privileged enough to become very close to this family and watch her children grow, almost daily. We have become second mothers to one another's children which means double the cuddles for everyone in our little community:
With the little girl whose birth I attended last year

For more on the progress (or regression, should we say) of the Australian maternity reforms, see:
Part 1 - Private Midwifery Services
Part 2 - Village Midwife
Part 3 - Midwives Victoria

Sunday, February 21, 2010

The Power Holders On: Midwifery In Australia

My Birth have uploaded footage to you tube about the fight to save homebirth midwifery in Australia. This footage is from a cabinet meeting held last week with the Prime Minister and the Health Minister where three citizens concerned about the future of midwifery asked the Prime Minister about the reforms.

Something I found frustrating was that the health minister repeatedly mentions the importance of "back-up arrangements" and midwives "working together" with doctors. This shows a lack of insight into the everyday workings of independent midwifery and homebirth. Homebirthers and their midwives already have back-up arrangements and work with hospitals and their staff to ensure safe outcomes. So far the government's intervention through these maternity reforms has indicated that they plan to change this by officially giving doctors within hospitals power over independent midwives and their clients, hence the voters in this clip questioned them about "veto power".

I became quite angry when Roxon urged Michelle McRitchie to "put yourself in the position of the government". Sorry, Nicola, isn't it the government's job to put itself in the position of the constituents and ensure our rights?! I found her to be quite insensitive at that moment, after McRitchie had explained to the health minister just how prohibitive these reforms will be for her personally.

For more information check out the My Birth website here:
http://mybirth.com.au/

The Minister for Women is going to appear on the Australian Broadcasting Company's program "Q and A" tomorrow night./ Please take the time to write a question on the show's website about the future of homebirth and independent midwifery. Click here:

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Birth Choices Rally


(ALP: Australian Labor Party/current political party in power in Australia)

On Thursday I was one of over 100 women, men and children rallying in Ballarat in the hope that Prime Minister Rudd might hear our voices while meeting there. Sadly Rudd was a no show, but for those who did make it to the rally it was a beautiful afternoon in the botanic gardens, children running free, and women sharing their birth stories and fears for the future of birth in Australia.

Justine Caines opened the speeches, sharing how far the movement has come. In particular I remember her mentioning that it wasn't so long ago that the very notion that midwives would be included in medicare was laughable to some, but in the last 12 months that has changed.
There quite a few speakers throughout the rally. The stand out speaker for me was Tami White, a mother who spoke about rights:
"I was left fearful that I would never have another child, or that if I did, my body would never be able to birth that child. My body had failed me.

In fact, my body had not failed me. The SYSTEM had failed me...

[snip]

Thank you for your time today. I will leave you with two final thoughts. The first: Human rights are only rights if everybody shares them. If only some people have particular ‘rights’, they’re not rights at all, but privileges. And, privileges can be taken away. Mine today....who’s tomorrow?

The 2nd is a quote from William Penn, a champion of democracy and a Utopian.

“Right is right, even if everybody is against it; and wrong is wrong, even if everybody is for it.

Removing women’s rights to bodily autonomy is wrong, no matter how many people are in support of it."

You can read Tami's entire speech on Facebook: click here.

Another really great speech came from Shae, a mother who has had one traumatic hospital birth and two homebirths. She spoke with great passion, sharing that she found it utterly ridiculous that a politician should "tell me what I can and can't do with my vagina and my uterus!"

More Photos

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Sunday, February 7, 2010

Australian Homebirth National Day of Action

Australian Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, will be in Ballarat Victoria on the 18th of February and so will a crowd of angry homebirthers who his government has wronged.

If you're free that day please join us in Ballarat dressed in green, white and purple to protest the government's decision to end independent midwifery in Australia.


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Tuesday, February 2, 2010

"The White Australia Policy...I mean The Maternity Services Review"

Gold Cost doula Claire Aslangul wrote the following after hearing the news that the health practitioners bill 2009 had been passed in The Senate and has graciously given me permission to share it:

The White Australia Policy...I mean The Maternity Services Review
How could I get those two Federal government initiatives mixed up?

Well, lets look at the two issues.

The White Australia Policy was a knee-jerk reaction to the "issues" the USA was having with it's negro population and was stimulated by the writings of Charles Pearson, National Life and Character; A Forecast. The governments biggest fear was the uprising of nations of colour, particularly Japan and the control of world finances slipping from the fingers of white men. Anyone wanting to reside in Australia who didn't look "white" had to sit an impassable dictation test.

The Australian Immigration Restriction Act, following Natal and the United States, incorporated a literacy test, in this case, a dictation test, that was so framed as to give Customs Officers maximum flexibility in ensuring that all undesirable immigrants would fail. Applicants could not prepare for this test, which required them to write out, at dictation, any prescribed passage of fifty words in any European language. The American emphasis on understanding the constitution and the importance of education to citizenship had disappeared altogether. In 1908, for example, the following dictation test was given in Western Australia:

"Very many considerations lead to the conclusion that life began on sea, first as single cells, then as groups of cells held together by a secretion of mucilage, then as filaments and tissues. For a very long time low-grade marine organisms are simply hollow cylinders, through which salt water streams’."

The aim in Australia was not to ‘discriminate against illiteracy’, as Cabot Lodge had recommended, but to discriminate against non-whites,

The propaganda sold to the masses was if you can't understand the law, how can you abide by it? We are protecting our citizens by making sure only those that are literate can enter. It wasn't illegal for "coloured folk" to enter Australia, they just had to jump through impossible hoops. Many sighed a sigh of relief and slept soundly in their beds at night knowing the government was there too look after their safety...thanks Mr Deakin!

The Maternity Services Review is probably a knee-jerk reaction by doctors where pesky women are complaining about their birth rapes and choosing to birth outside the system. As of the start of this year OB's are loosing out on the massive pay outs from medicare they have been receiving so in order to reclaim the loss of income they need to raise their patient numbers. Enter the new midwives bill; OB's can control what midwives do and probably claim for the work they do (if in fact they do work with midwives) and women can birth at home in a "collaborative care arrangement".

The Dictation test of the birthing woman will include: No previous c/s, no breech, no multiples, no babies born prior to 37 weeks nor after 42 weeks, no GBS, no GD, no BMI over 25 or under 20. You will be classed as high risk until you can jump through every hoop to prove you are not. There is no choice in which antenatal test you want and which you don't, if you can't prove you are low risk who can anyone trust you to birth your baby.

It will never be illegal to birth your baby at home, but through the processes of BDM it will be almost impossible to do it without some sort of legal implication.

Since when is it ok for the government to decide how, when and where a woman uses her vagina? This is a serious breach of human rights, just like the dictation test.

Today I am ashamed to call myself Australian!

Claire Aslangul
Thank-you Claire, for giving putting the rage, despair and disappointment many Australian families are feeling presently.

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The Day Independent Midwifery Died

It is a very sad day for women, babies and families in Australia. The rich and powerful obstetric lobby has had another victory and turned the powers that be in this country have turned a blind eye to the medical evidence that homebirth is safe. The Senate has recommended that the health practitioner bills 2009 be passed. This is the bill which gives doctors veto power over midwives, enabling doctors to determine who can and can't have a homebirth. For more about this bill see here.

From now on Australian women who want the independent midwifery model of care during pregnancy and birth will have to board an international flight. This island belongs to obstetricians.

For more about the Senate report see here.

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Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Protesting Continues For Australian Homebirthers

Today over 100 parents (and their children) gathered at the Victorian office of the Australian Medical Association to protest the associations latest attack on homebirth. The rally comes after the head of the AMA wrote an editorial about a new study of homebirth conducted over 16 years. Dr Pesce misrepresented the study's findings claiming that death is "seven times" more likely during a homebirth than a hospital birth (see here). In fact the results of the study showed homebirth to be a very safe option for Australian women (for more see here).

Melissa McFarlane of Maternity Coalition as MC


Children playing in an inflated birth pool


Richard Di Natale speaking in support of homebirthers

Highlights from the protest included two stories of postpartum hemorrhage from the same woman, one in hospital and one at home where the hemorrhage was detected earlier and healed faster! And learning that the AMA provide Australia's current political party in power (The Australian Labor Party) with $27 000 annually (approx). While 27K is not exactly big money when it comes to the rich power-holders in Australian politics, it's nothing to be sneezed at. Afterall, no consumer advocacy group can afford to be so generous...perhaps if we could our birth rights would not presently be under attack!

© 2007 - 2010 Sarah Langford - Ilithyia Inspired | No reproduction without docmentation of permission from blog author and/or providing full bibliographic details including a link to the exact page quoted.

All opinions expressed on Ilithyia Inspired belong to the author, unless otherwise stated and should not be confused with the official views of any of the organisations with which the author is associated, including but not limited to: Australian Breastfeeding Association, International College of Spiritual Midwifery, and Maternity Coalition.

All the opinions expressed on this site are the author's, unless otherwise stated, and are independent from the Australian Breastfeeding Association and International College of Spiritual Midwifery | Any information provided on this site should be used as an introduction to ideas that hopefully inspire further research and education elsewhere. Information and opinions provided on this site should not used in place of professional medical advice.

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