Monday 13 June 2016

Midwives, exhaustion and safety

A recent survey of midwives and maternity support workers in the UK, found that the majority were stressed because of their workload and fearful of making mistakes because of exhaustion. Over half of those surveyed had observed errors and incidents which could have caused harm to women and their infants. These stressors are not restricted to the UK. I hear similar concerns from Australian midwives.

This situation is untenable for the midwives and the women and families in their care. 

 

It's about time governments and funding decisions reflect and respect the vital importance of childbearing to the fabric of society and fund maternity care appropriately. 

Better staffing levels are required. 

Staffing of maternity services decisions need to be made in acknowledgement of: 
  • The increasing complexity of maternity care
  • The fundamental requirement for adequate time for antenatal visits
  • One-to-one care from a known midwife in labour 
  • The need for adequate postnatal care
Only when these aspects are factored into the staffing model can we ensure that women of all risk and their infants get the care they deserve and the care which keeps them safe. 

Midwifery Continuity models for women of all 'risk' are what's required. 

Whatever model of maternity care is provided however, there must enough staff to provide the service safely - safely for women, their infants and safely for the midwives.

Midwives are dedicated professionals and consistently go above and beyond to care for women and their infants. That dedication should not be exploited. The current practice of staffing to the bare minimum, putting midwives on call after they've already had a full day at work in case there's an increase in activity, coupled with the ever-expanding list of mandatory education and competency requirements means the demands on midwives are creating a pressure cooker environment.  

Running midwives 'ragged' is not good government or health service policy. 

Appropriate and adequate funding of maternity care is essential.

We have a duty of care as a society to care for midwives and other maternity health care providers so they can care for the women and families they work with in the best possible way. 

The future depends upon it. 





Sunday 6 March 2016

Fads, birth and safety

A 'prominent' Perth obstetrician and president of the Australian Medical Association (WA) Dr Michael Gannon, was reported as saying that "an “obsession” with skin-to-skin contact between mothers and babies after birth is a fad that is putting newborns at risk of death and serious injury".  His comment appeared in the article 'Skin-to-skin' fad blamed for deaths of babies published in The West Australian online newspaper 5 March 2016.

The coroner is investigating the death of a newborn at the Fiona Stanley Hospital. The article suggested that the baby is thought to have died 'after the mother fell asleep while holding or breastfeeding the baby'.

The AMA president rightly raised concerns about drug affected, exhausted women:
"New mothers are often exhausted by a long day in labour and there are the side effects of opioid drugs, epidurals or c-section"

However, he also criticises what he calls a
" new obsession amongst mothers and midwives with immediate skin-to-skin contact after birth ... which "stemmed from taking whatever possible measures that might lead to small increases in the number of women who breastfeed"

Far from a fad, skin-to-skin contact for women and their newborns at birth and beyond is a well-researched instinctive behaviour. This instinctive behaviour has been shown to not only improve breastfeeding success, but also, combined with breastfeeding attempts, reduce the rate of primary PPH, along with enhancing the sense of safety and attachment for the newborn and her mother. There are implications for the newborn's microbiome and there is some evidence that skin-to-skin experience reduces mothers' stress levels.

The doctor is reported to have said, in response to the claims for skin-to-skin, that:
 “I think that gets over-interpreted. Babies, instead of being in a safe environment like a warming crib, are being left on their mother’s chest”

Now the attitude that a newborn is better off in a warming crib than with its mother is the nub of medicalisation of the childbearing process and the disconnect between the use of technology and our humanity.

The medicalisation of childbirth is a done deal. Whilst physiological birth is appealing from both an evolutionary and capacity building perspective, the reality is the majority of women in the western world, are already heavily socialised into accepting and wanting medicalisation. Whilst choosing and embracing medicalisation and interventions, women are drawn to the idea of having their newborns with them skin-to-skin from birth and in the main, to breastfeed them. There is even a push (excuse the pun) for 'natural' and 'self-assisted' surgical births. Midwives are drawn to 'keeping things normal' and whilst supporting women in their choices; they are also drawn to facilitating skin-to-skin for the woman and her newborn at birth.

There is no doubt that 'drug affected, exhausted women' are vulnerable, as are their newborns, to the creation of potentially asphyxiating situations. A review of Apparent Life-Threatening Events in Presumably Healthy Newborns During Early Skin-to-Skin Contact  highlighted the issues for six babies left prone, unsupervised by a midwife or other health professional, on their mothers' abdomens. 

The reality is that midwives are increasingly having to care for postnatal women who are 'drug affected and exhausted'. The current staffing levels are woefully inadequate to care properly for these 'drug affected and exhausted women' together with their newborns.  Some people suggest recruiting partners or other family members to observe the newborn who is skin-to-skin with its mother, but that's a cop-out. 


Often partners and others don't know what to look for and the bottom line is, the woman and infant's well-being is the responsibility of the institution that provides the 'care'. 

Whilst a decrease in medicalisation of birth would be ideal, that ideal will need a revolution in society's attitudes. In the meantime, what the good doctor and the AMA should be arguing and agitating for is not a separation of a mother and her infant, but for women and their infants to be treated with the profound respect they deserve and adequate midwifery staffing levels so that women and their infants can benefit from best practice and have the support and expertise of the midwife's presence to ensure that experience is a safe one.

Dr Gannon and the AMA need to understand that it is not skin-to-skin experience at birth that is putting newborn babies at risk.

What's putting newborns and childbearing women at risk is the rampant, unfettered medicalisation of childbearing that pervades modern maternity services coupled with ridiculously inadequate staffing levels - that situation is lethal.



The mother whose baby died at the Fiona Stanley hospital deserves our heartfelt love and support, kindness and respect - not blame for her baby having skin-to-skin and breastfeeding at birth - she was doing the very best she could for her baby.

If the little one is found to have succumbed because of airway obstruction, then our society has failed her and her family.  Our society does not value childbearing women enough to provide adequate staffing levels and midwifery expertise to be their guardians through their most vulnerable time. 





Tuesday 1 March 2016

Educational Videos about childbearing & newborn care

Global Health Media has a rich, diverse repository of educational videos about childbirth & newborn care. 



Videos are a powerful way to teach and these videos provide accessible and accurate life saving education about the provision of basic health care for childbearing women and their infants.
Their site states: Our mission is to improve health care and health outcomes in resource-poor areas by developing videos that “bring to life” basic health care information known to save lives.

Their videos can be downloaded in a variety of languages which makes them accessible to health workers and families in diverse areas. They are looking for people who can translate the videos into other languages.

I’ve spent time exploring their site, finding out about the people involved and how they work. Their passion, dedication and desire for safe motherhood and newborn health is exemplary. Please explore their site, share their videos and support them in whatever way you can.