Saturday, March 14, 2009

Homebirth In Australia ILLEGAL in 2010

The guts of this is that there has been a Maternity Services Review Report in Australia and it has recommendations which suggest Home Birthing (with an independent midwife) will be illegal from mid 2010 onwards.

Lisa J.Image via Wikipedia


Freebirthing (no midwife) and those birthing on the side of the highway because the funding has been taken out of rural hospitals and maternity services will not be charged.......but that is another rant all together...

The main issue surrounds the requirement for all midwives to have professional indemnity insurance to be able to register to practice, unfortunately NO insurance company offers PI insurance to midwives in private practice, so they will not be able to register to attend births at home.

Please consider joining the facebook group and writing to every member in the parliment.... and PLEASE look ( and sign) at this important petition:

"Save Private Midwifery and homebirth choices"
http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/australianhomebirth?e

FACEBOOK


articles on it are:

NINE MSN

The Australian

Homebirth Ban

I cannot put it any clearer than two activitists who have written the following letters - so many thanks Bruce Teakle and Sarah Langford - I have copy and pasted your emails and plonked them right here... thank you for your words and passion - I really couldn't have said it any better....

Sarah says ( amongst other things...)

The latest maternity services review in Australia is removing the rights of Australian women by refusing to publically fund home births, thus restricting the availability of home birth to many Australian families. Further the review proposes to force independent midwives to be part of a national registration scheme. This registration will include mandatory professional indemnity insurance for all midwives, the alternative is to practice midwifery unlawfully.

In order for midwives to access professional indemnity insurance they must work within a "collaborative team", however no definition of "collaborative team" has been provided in the review. It is possible that "collaborative team" could mean not working independently (as many homebirth midwives do) in which case insurance would not be available to these midwives and their decision to attend homebirths could lead to prosecution and incarceration.

Witch hunts anyone??? will we also burn them at the stake??? ( ahh - thats me - Sarah didn't write that)

Of particular concern is the fact that the review clearly states that the recommendations regarding home birth were made based on presumptions of risk. The relevant medical evidence attesting to the safety of home birth were not considered when making these recommendations.

Ultimately this maternity services review has lead to The Australian Government furthering obstetricians' monopoly over maternity care and has prioritised the obstetric model of maternity care over the midwifery model, despite the fact that the midwifery model is the safer model for the majority of women. By further empowering the already powerful players in Australia's maternity system, The Australian Government has aggressively restricted the rights and freedoms of birthing women. Perplexing behaviour for a government committed to raising the national birth rate!

The review is little more than cultural propaganda which discriminates against midwives in private practice and families who wish to birth at home and therefore infringes upon the human rights of Australian citizens. Activists around the world will not stand for this!

The Maternity Services Review Report: no more homebirth?
Bruce Teakle 8 March 2008

The recently released report of the Federal Maternity Services Review proposes some promising reforms. It could, if implemented in the most positive spirit, bring huge breakthroughs in many areas of maternity care.
The Report recommends improving women’s access to midwifery care and information about pregnancy and birth. It proposes culturally appropriate care for indigenous women, better support for women in pregnancy and postnatally, and more collaborative relationships between caregivers.
Its ultimate goal for Australian mothers is “safe, high-quality and accessible care based on informed choice” (page iii).
Australia has waited a long time for the reforms proposed in the Review. However, there is a dark side to the Report.
The Report proposes an end to women’s access to midwifery care for homebirth, except possibly within state-run services. If the Report’s recommendations are followed, homebirth midwifery could become illegal in 2010 with the introduction of National Registration of health caregivers.
The full Report can be downloaded from this website:
http://www.health.gov.au/internet/main/publishing.nsf/Content/maternityservicesreview
Below are some key points, with quotes from the Report, to help women who want to lobby for their right to access safe, legal homebirth in Australia:
1. Women choosing homebirth are a trivial minority:
A strong point is made of the small number of homebirths which occur in Australia:
P16: shows a graph of declining numbers of homebirths in Australia from 1991 to 2006.
P16: “Homebirths account for a very small number of births in Australia. In 2005, homebirth accounted for 0.22 per cent of all births in Australia,28 compared with 2.7 per cent in England and Wales,29 2.5 per cent in New Zealand,30 and 0.6 per cent in the United States.” 31
P20: “New Zealand maternity data for 2004 found that, while 4.5 per cent of mothers had planned a homebirth, only 2.5 per cent actually experienced a homebirth.”
The reasons for the small Australian numbers are not explored, in particular the great difficulty most Australian women have accessing information or care for homebirth.
No comparison is made with other minority choices, such as caesarean section on request, and there is certainly no consideration of banning these choices.
The Reviewers acknowledge the high number of individual submissions from women who desired greater access and funding for homebirth. Despite this, it appears the Reviewers have been more responsive to the input of those who want to control women’s choices.
2. Homebirth will not be retained as a choice for women:
The Report is very clear that it does not support reforms which increase or fund women’s access to homebirth:
Pp20-21: “In recognising that, at the current time in Australia, homebirthing is a sensitive and controversial issue, the Review Team has formed the view that the relationship between maternity health care professionals is not such as to support homebirth as a mainstream Commonwealth-funded option (at least in the short term). The Review also considers that moving prematurely to a mainstream private model of care incorporating homebirthing risks polarising the professions rather than allowing the expansion of collaborative approaches to improving choice and services for Australian women and their babies.”
P21: “While acknowledging it is a preference for some women, the Review Team does not propose Commonwealth funding of homebirths as a mainstream option for maternity care at this time. It is also likely that professional indemnity cover support for a Commonwealth- funded model that includes a homebirth setting would be limited, at least in the short term. It is likely that insurers will be less inclined to provide indemnity cover for private homebirths and, if they did provide cover, the premium costs would be very high. Indemnity issues for midwife care more broadly are considered in Chapter 6.2.”
The Report proposes Commonwealth support for Medicare and indemnity insurance for midwives, but only working in non-homebirth practice. Midwives working outside these restrictions would not be able to legally practice, due to impending reforms:
P53: “For privately practising midwives, it is not currently a requirement in most jurisdictions to have professional indemnity cover in place before registration is granted. However, this situation is expected to change under the proposed new National Registration and Accreditation Scheme.”
The consequence of all this is that homebirth practice by private midwives (most homebirth care) would not be insured, and would be illegal under national registration laws, scheduled to take effect in July 2010.
State-run homebirth services (currently operating in NT, NSW, SA, and WA) might also be forced to close, if non-homebirth maternity services attract Commonwealth funding (through Medicare for midwives) but homebirth services do not.
3. Scientific evidence does not inform the recommendations regarding homebirth:
Although some reference is made to scientific evidence on some issues in the report, no reference is made to evidence regarding the outcomes of homebirth. It appears that medical opposition alone informs the Review’s position:
P21: “The Review also considers that moving prematurely to a mainstream private model of care incorporating homebirthing risks polarising the professions rather than allowing the expansion of collaborative approaches to improving choice and services for Australian women and their babies.”
4. The safety of women birthing without a caregiver can be overlooked
P21: “Of concern to the Review Team is the number of submissions and other evidence that suggests a small number of Australian women are choosing homebirths without the support of an appropriately trained health professional. Accordingly, as with any other maternity care model, the Review Team considers that appropriate standards, monitoring and evaluation should be integral components of any service involving homebirth.”
Women choosing to birth at home without a trained caregiver will not be helped by “standards, monitoring and evaluation”, because they are outside the system. The Review Team appear not to understand that these women are within neither a “maternity care model”, nor a “service involving homebirth”.
Maternity Coalition’s experience is that most women birthing at home without a trained caregiver do so because they are unable to access midwifery care at home, and unwilling to use hospital-based services. It is frequently a choice made in desperation. The way to help these women is to provide them access to a high standard of midwifery care in their preferred venue.
The Reviewers overlook the likelihood that the loss of homebirth midwifery care will push more women into unattended homebirth. This would ensure an absence of standards, monitoring or evaluation of any homebirth outcomes.
5. Medical extremists will become more cooperative if they are given a veto on women’s choices
The proposed reason for preventing homebirth midwifery is that it “risks polarising the professions”. The implied strategy seems to be for Government to restrict midwifery practice, against scientific evidence, against the principle of women’s informed choice and against the safety of determined homebirthing women. The presumed intention – for less collaborative doctors to become more respectful of the evidence, principles of informed choice, and women’s perspectives on safety; seems a highly unlikely outcome. The Reviewers reinforce a subordinate position for midwives relative to doctors by proposing to restrict midwifery practice in line with the prejudices of less collaborative doctors. This undermines the relationships they hope to enhance.
The Government must make it clear that the needs, interests and autonomy of women come first. Healthcare policy and services should not be corrupted by the prejudices of health care professions, which prosper on taxpayer funds.
Fear or leadership?
The Minister, Nicola Roxon, is aware that significant modernisations of the healthcare system have historically been met with protest, threats, and predictions of disaster by extreme medical voices. Reforms of Australia’s maternity care system will always provoke this sort of reaction. Those reforms include normalising midwives’ access to public funding and insurance, and women’s access to options including homebirth.
It appears that the Reviewers have conceded to fear of extreme medical voices, over the interests of women. Hopefully the Minister, who is directly accountable to women, will be braver.
Speak out now!
The Review Report has been prepared by Department of Health staff, to advise the Minister for Health, Nicola Roxon. The Minister will decide which of the Department’s advice she will take. If there is enough community outcry about the proposed loss of homebirth, the Minister may decide to act in the interests of choice.
Every Australian has a Federal Member of Parliament (MP), whose job is to represent their interests. Every person who cares about maintaining homebirth choice should contact their Federal MP, preferrably by both letter and with a personal visit.
To find contact info for your MP:
Go to http://apps.aec.gov.au/esearch/ and enter your locality in the “Search Federal Electorates” window.
In the next window, click on the name of your electorate for more information.
On the electorate page, click on “profile and map”.
For contact info for your MP (“Current Member Details”), click on the “Parliament of Australia Website” link.
Write to your MP and tell them how important it is to you that women can choose homebirth. Ask them to contact the Minister for Health on your behalf. Recognise the good sides of the Review, and expect them to help you.
Meet with your MP. Phone their electorate office and ask for an appointment, to talk about the Federal Maternity Review. Take some friends from the same electorate. Tell them why women should have choice.
Your MP is expecting a letter or visit from a mother, not a professor. Tell them why birth and choice are so important to you. Talk about scientific evidence or policy processes if you want, but you are the expert about your own story.

3 comments:

Jodi Cleghorn said...

Just to clarify the point on homebirth being made illegal.

Next year for the first time there will be national registration for all nurses and midwives (rather than state based registration) With National Registration comes the clause that all nurses and midwives must have indemnity cover.

This isn't an issue for midwives and nurses working in a hospital - as the hospital has indemnity cover.

At the moment there is no insurance company (and believe me the Aust College of Midwives have been searching and in negotiations for at least the last two years) that will provide indemnity cover. They are a small group and they are also considered to be too much of a risk to take on - consider that against obstetricians that perform surgery (often unnecessary)

Early this decade when the Aust insurance industry crumbled with the collapse of HIH - the Aust Govt came to the rescue of doctors and obstetricians ... but midwives - sorry!

SBS Insight program last Tuesday night showed it for what it is - a turf war between doctors and midwives - with the Govt siding with doctors (they have medicare #s, indemnity insurance, a safe place to practise, freedom from bullying etc etc etc)

And the Australian public are as much to blame - seeking obstetric care without even realising what that means and that IT IS NOT the safest option for long risk women. The only safe care for ANY pregnant woman, is continuity of care with a midwife in a system that legitismises and welcomes the role of midwife.

Jodi Cleghorn said...

Homebirth will be made illegal - I got on my rant - because homebirth midwives, without indemnity insurance will NOT be able to register and thus not legally practise as a midwife.

The MSR has laid it down that they do not recommend homebirth being included in the models of care that the Govt should support and the Health Minister Nicola Roxon all but ruled out on Tuesday night the Govt providing indemnity cover for midwives until other arrangements can be made.

Neshamah said...

thanks so much Jodi - the more people who know about this the better - and we need people like you to rant.. really