Published
on July 7, 2002, Birmingham News (AL) Article ID: 446126
BIRTH
OPTION OF MIDWIFE SLIPPING AWAY
Ever
since my sister Jenny delivered my nephew, I knew that
if I had a baby, I would want a midwife to do the delivery.
To me, her story was incredible: no drugs, no episiotomy,
no invasive medical procedures at all, in spite of a
moment - a dropping baby heart rate remedied, not by
C-section, but by putting my sister on all fours - that
would have sent a traditional obstetrician running to
the operating room. In fact, Jenny was up and out of
her hospital bed in record time after my very healthy
nephew was born - in large part because of the expert
care she'd received from her certified nurse midwife.
So when I became pregnant with my first child, there
was no question who I wanted to take care of us; Truus
Broner, a certified nurse midwife at UAB Family Medicine,
later joined by Joyce Weichmann, CNM, who eventually
helped me deliver my sweet Lucy a little more than a
year ago. When I was pregnant, my sister was reflecting
on her experience with her CNMs, and she told me they'd
since dismantled the program at the hospital where she'd
been. "I'm just glad I'm done having my kids,"
she said.
Suddenly, I wish I could say the same.
Losing
choice
As a result of diminishing residencies, attendant budgetary
effects and the as-yet unwillingness of UAB to adequately
fund the program, UAB Family Medicine is slated to terminate
its OB practice in October, and the practice of the
last certified nurse midwives in northern Alabama.
What does this mean for the women of Birmingham - and
all the women of northern Alabama, for that matter?
It means that in a city that prides itself on offering
a virtual buffet of medical options to its citizens,
our choices of childbirth caregivers have dwindled from
two to one.
In other words, we will no longer have any choice about
the kind of childbirth experience we want to have.
But why a midwife? Images of witchy old women hovering
over bloody kitchen tables may come to mind. In reality,
certified nurse midwives have all the expertise, training
and experience of any OB; they do routine gynecological
care and all prenatal care, as well as deliver babies.
Plus - unlike most OBs - they operate under the belief
that a woman can, and should, as much as is medically
feasible, guide her own childbirth experience. Admittedly,
most women today are more than content to put that control
in someone else's hands. But for those of us in Birmingham
who haven't been, there have been midwives to listen,
work and stay with us as our children were born.
None of this is to say that one needs to have a midwife
to have a positive childbirth experience; in fact, the
majority of women in town choose traditional OBGs. And
that's fine; that's what having a choice means. But
midwives are an option that many women prefer and that
they will seek out, even to the point of forsaking the
medical profession altogether and hiring a lay midwife
to facilitate a home delivery. Certified nurse midwives,
though, offer all the benefits a license and modern
medicine can provide, including insurance coverage and
hospital privileges. And for those of us not comfortable
with the back-ally birth, Turus and Joyce offered an
opportunity to have our babies the way we wanted to,
but in a hospital - just in case.
Stay different
UAB is working hard to distinguish itself in an increasingly
competitive medical market, making much of its ability
to provide all the medical options any patient could
ever want or need. But unless it financially empowers
UAB Family Medicine to continue its excellent midwife
prenatal / birthing program, the days of having any
choice about how to have a baby in Birmingham are rapidly
coming to a close. Ironically, the only thing that's
made giving birth at UAB unique among other area hospitals
was the opportunity to work with a certified nurse midwife.
Unless UAB puts its money where its mouth is, its maternity
ward really will look like everyone else's. How shortsighted,
how terribly sad for those of us wanting a kinder kind
of birth.
Linda
Frost, Ph.D., is an associate professor of English at
the University of Alabama at Birmingham. For your turn
at "My Turn," mail your 600-word commentary
to Editorial Page, P.O. Box 2553, Birmingham, AL 35202;
e-mail us at epage@bhamnews.com;
or send a fax to 205 325-3345. Please include your telephone
number.
|