Showing posts with label systems thinking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label systems thinking. Show all posts

Saturday, 18 July 2026

Continuity of midwifery care is an ecological model of healthcare

I've been thinking more and more about the distressing, heartbreaking and avoidable tragedies for mothers, babies, their families and their communities in the various reports from the UK.  I've also been thinking about the fixation on 'normal birth ideology' and the idea that individuals are to blame for the horrific morbidity and mortality exposed in these reports, rather than highlighting how the system needs to change. I've lamented that the 'system is broken', but I'm realising that saying the system is "broken" implies that it has failed to do what it was intended to do. Many of the characteristics we now criticise in maternity care: fragmentation, hierarchy, surveillance, standardisation, control and efficiency, are not accidental. They arise from a worldview that has historically privileged control over relationship, production over care, and certainty over complexity. The maternity care system reflects patriarchal values and assumptions that have shaped institutions over centuries.

 What if maternity care reflects our relationship with the living world?

I am proposing another idea. Perhaps the maternity scandals are not only telling us something about healthcare. Perhaps they are revealing something much deeper about our culture. Across the world, we have inherited systems built upon a particular way of seeing the world. A worldview that values certainty over uncertainty, control over relationship, measurement over meaning, and production over care. It is a worldview that has delivered extraordinary scientific and technological advances, but it has also encouraged us to see living systems as something to be managed rather than understood and valued.

The natural world has long been treated this way. Rivers have been straightened. Hills levelled. Forests cleared. Wetlands drained. Predators eliminated. Landscapes divided into parcels that can be measured, controlled and exploited. Complexity is often viewed as a problem to be simplified, rather than a source of resilience. Wildness is regarded with suspicion because it cannot always be predicted.

Women's bodies have frequently been approached in remarkably similar ways.

Pregnancy becomes a condition to monitor. Labour becomes a process to manage. Birth becomes a production line with predefined timelines, protocols and performance indicators. The extraordinary intelligence of physiology, the intricate orchestration of hormones, emotions, relationships and environment, is often reduced to a series of variables to control.

Yet physiology is not a machine. It is an ecosystem.

Like every ecosystem, it responds continuously to its surroundings. A forest cannot be understood by measuring a single tree. A coral reef cannot be understood by studying one fish. Likewise, birth cannot be understood simply by monitoring cervical dilatation, contraction frequency or fetal heart rate. These are important, but they are only fragments of a much larger living system. Birth unfolds within an ecological network of hormones, relationships, emotions, history, culture and environment that interact continuously with one another. Modern science is increasingly confirming what experienced midwives have always observed: physiology is exquisitely sensitive to context. Oxytocin is influenced by safety. Stress hormones respond to fear. Labour can accelerate when a woman feels protected, or slow when she feels observed, threatened or alone.

The environment is not merely the backdrop to birth. 

The environment becomes part of the physiology itself. This is why relationships matter so profoundly. A trusted midwife is not simply another member of the workforce. She becomes part of the woman's physiological environment. Her calm presence can reduce fear. Her familiarity allows subtle changes to be recognised early. Her relationship creates the conditions in which women feel safe enough to labour, ask questions, express uncertainty, and trust their own bodies.

Continuity of midwifery care is therefore much more than a model of service delivery.

It is the deliberate creation of the ecological conditions in which physiology is most likely to flourish. This way of thinking also helps explain why so many dedicated midwives find themselves working in ways that do not reflect their own values.

People adapt to the systems they inhabit.

When success is measured primarily through efficiency, throughput and compliance, relationships inevitably become secondary. Time spent listening appears unproductive. Knowing a woman deeply becomes an unaffordable luxury rather than a cornerstone of safe care. Compassion is squeezed into the spaces left between competing demands. It is hardly surprising that many midwives experience moral distress. They entered maternity care to care for childbearing women, yet often find themselves working within structures that reward the management of processes more than the nurturing of relationships.

The same worldview that has contributed to ecological degradation also shapes the way many societies organise maternity care. Both assume that living systems perform best when they are tightly controlled. Yet ecology teaches the opposite. The healthiest ecosystems are not those subjected to the greatest control. They are those with the greatest diversity, adaptability, connection and resilience. Their strength lies in relationships. Human beings are no different. Birth is one of nature's most sophisticated biological processes. It evolved, not in brightly lit clinical environments governed by clocks and protocols, but within relationships, communities and environments that promoted safety, connection and trust. This is not an argument against medicine. Medicine is one of humanity's greatest achievements and has transformed the survival of women and babies when complications arise. The question is not whether medicine belongs in maternity care. It unquestionably does. 

The question is whether medicine should define the entire philosophy of maternity care. 

When intervention becomes the organising principle rather than the response to need, we risk treating every birth as though physiology is inherently suspect. Perhaps that is the deepest lesson emerging from the maternity inquiries. Not that physiology has failed. Not that women have failed. Not that clinicians have failed. But that we have created systems shaped by assumptions that privilege control over connection, hierarchy over partnership, and surveillance over trust. If we genuinely want different outcomes, we may need more than organisational reform. We may need a different story about birth itself. One that recognises birth not as a process to be controlled, but as a living ecological event requiring knowledge, humility, relationship and respect. Because how we treat birth ultimately reflects how we understand life. If we continue trying to dominate living systems, whether forests, rivers or women's bodies, we should not be surprised when those systems lose their resilience. But if we learn to work with them instead of against them, supporting rather than controlling, partnering rather than overpowering, we may discover that the future of maternity care is inseparable from the future of our relationship with the living world.

 Every woman needs a midwife.

Not simply because she may need clinical care. But because every living system thrives through relationship. And some women need doctors too. Not as controllers of physiology, but as valued partners when physiology asks for more than nature alone can provide. That is not a compromise between two philosophies. It is the wisdom of recognising that both nature and medicine are at their best when they work in relationship rather than in opposition. 

The recognition that continuity of midwifery care is an ecological model of healthcare and one where women and babies are safest is an idea that sits at the intersection of maternity care, systems thinking, ecofeminism, salutogenesis, physiology, and relational care, aligning contemporary complexity science and ecological thinking with the physiology of birth rather than treating continuity simply as a service model.