Dear Reader
If you have read the other blogs that I write, you will know that midwives are worried about being reported when we go with our clients to hospital.
I would like to reassure you that I, and midwives with whom I work, are continuing to practise in a way that we believe is consistent with contemporary evidence and best practice.
Please take strength from the message of Spring. These little Bonsai trees bring great encouragement. There is new life and hope.
Joy
This blog was initially set up to support women and midwives through the Australian government's reform of maternity services in 2009-2010. Since 1 July 2010, when the reforms came into effect, a few midwives continue to practise privately, attending women and their babies, providing the full scope of primary maternity care in homes, and enabling women to make informed decisions when and if medical intervention is needed.
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Saturday, August 13, 2011
"Needy" mothers
A colleague who works in a hospital midwifery unit made a comment something like this:
"Continuity of care sometimes makes the mothers more needy."
The thought of the 'needy' mother - the woman who needs a lot of help/care/attention/support - caused me to reflect and question my own assumptions and beliefs about women, particularly those in my care.
A further layer of this reflection was my questioning, "Does continuity of care every make mothers more needy?"
In theory,
Maternity care that is centred on the woman seeks to provide the best available and most timely intervention for those women who experience complications and needs that present a real threat to their wellbeing or their babies' wellbeing.
Maternity care that is centred on the woman seeks to promote physical and emotional resilience within individuals and within families.
Maternity care that is centred on the woman seeks to provide a trusted partner - a midwife - who accompanies that woman through the maternity experience, and who has the expert knowledge and skill to promote, protect and support the natural processes, and to identify complications.
As a result of this reflective journey I have concluded that continuity of midwifery care/ caseload/ known midwife does not make a woman more needy. However, the woman who is feeling needy/ vulnerable/ unsupported may turn to her known and trusted midwife for more support than she may have sought from a midwife who is a stranger to her.
Thankyou for your comments
The thought of the 'needy' mother - the woman who needs a lot of help/care/attention/support - caused me to reflect and question my own assumptions and beliefs about women, particularly those in my care.
A further layer of this reflection was my questioning, "Does continuity of care every make mothers more needy?"
In theory,
- Midwifery care is woman-centred.
- Centred on the woman, the mother-baby unit, who is like the heart of the flower.
- Each woman, regardless of her situation, her beliefs, her culture, her wellness, her illness, her wishes ... the petals, stem and roots of the flower.
- Each woman, regardless of her neediness - the external and internal threats that are like pests and disease to the flower.
Maternity care that is centred on the woman seeks to provide the best available and most timely intervention for those women who experience complications and needs that present a real threat to their wellbeing or their babies' wellbeing.
Maternity care that is centred on the woman seeks to promote physical and emotional resilience within individuals and within families.
Maternity care that is centred on the woman seeks to provide a trusted partner - a midwife - who accompanies that woman through the maternity experience, and who has the expert knowledge and skill to promote, protect and support the natural processes, and to identify complications.
As a result of this reflective journey I have concluded that continuity of midwifery care/ caseload/ known midwife does not make a woman more needy. However, the woman who is feeling needy/ vulnerable/ unsupported may turn to her known and trusted midwife for more support than she may have sought from a midwife who is a stranger to her.
Thankyou for your comments
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)