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What is this?This is for people wanting better access to better birth care. It is intended to be a guide to advocating to your political and bureaucratic servants what you want. It is being distributed now to support the National Maternity Action Plan campaign currently underway. Why?If we want to improve this situation and get access to the sort of birth care we want, we are going to have to go out of our own comfort zones and do the things necessary to make political change. A big part of this is to communicate with the politicians and bureaucrats who should be serving us better. The purpose of this guide is to help you do that. The success of the current campaign being organised around Australia depends on the active involvement of the grass roots of the birthing community. To succeed in achieving reform will require every supporter to make themselves heard. Politicians need to know that there is a problem before they will support the NMAP as a solution. We have to ask for what we wantWhat do we want?I can't tell you what you want, but the common messages are that women want:
These elements are commonly held to be part of the Midwifery model of care, as opposed to the Medical or Obstetric models of care, which emphasise having doctors in charge of a team of carers, whose focus is on preparing for possible complications. Midwifery care by a woman's choice of midwife, in a woman's choice of place of birth, is freely available from the public health systems in Britain, Netherlands, New Zealand and many other countries. Publicly funded home birth schemes are operating in Western Australia, ACT and South Australia. What we want is available to many women in other places. The short way of saying this is that we want midwifery models of care in homes, birth centres and in hospital. What have we got?Women in Qld currently have nearly no choices in birth care. The hospital services available do not respect women as being able to make decisions for themselves about birthing, and have unacceptable rates of intervention and consequent injury. The most recent statistics available for Qld are for the calendar year 1999, that is 2 1/2 years ago. In that year 24% of Qld births were by caesarean, another 9% were by forceps or vacuum. That means 1/3 of babies were delivered surgically, not including the large proportion of mothers and babies who were given artificial hormones (to start or speed up labour), anaesthetics, or episiotomies. Given persistent stories from hospital workers that intervention rates are rising steeply, who knows what the numbers are now. Qld consumers are being treated like mushrooms by Qld Health. The only figures on birth interventions available to consumers (the people at the sharp end of the knife) are well out of date, and only give averages for the state. Figures on individual hospitals - very important for informed choice making - are only available for public hospitals on payment of a $120 fee, and private hospital statistics are totally secret. Qld Health is unable to identify any process by which these figures are reviewed in order that problems may be responded to. Unaccountable and out of control. Birth centre care is not available by choice, due to the tiny number of places available in Qld's 2 state run birth centres. Groups all over the state have been asking for birth centres in local hospitals, but have been left frustrated. What makes birth centres different is that they (usually) offer a "midwifery model of care". This is care in which midwives are the lead carers, and medical assistance (from doctors or obstetricians) is only used if a complication arises which is outside the competence of a midwife to deal with. Most desirable is if the woman has one or two midwives giving her "continuity of care" through the whole pregnancy, birth, and postnatal process. Hospitals all give care to birthing women from midwives, but the midwives are generally subservient to doctors, change with the shifts, and rarely have met the woman before the birth. In hospitals midwives have to conform to the medical model determined by doctors. Conditions for independent midwives have become so unacceptable that homebirth care is all but unavailable. Midwives have no access to indemnity insurance, are treated hostilely in hospital transfers, and complaints against them result in the Qld Nursing Council's harsh investigation process. So far, attempts to discuss these problems with the state government have fallen flat. They are comfortable with their intervention focussed policy, and prefer not to change. Our job is to make change happen. Who is responsible?There are a lot of people responsible for the current situation, including us. Probably no-one wants women to have a bad disempowering experience. The main attitudes we have to deal with are:
To get service, we have to tell our servants what we want. All of the "powerful" people who are responsible for arranging the system are our employees, who are paid by our taxes, and whose work is determined by the outcome of elections we vote in. It's easier for them if things stay the same, but they will respond to the public if they have to. The PoliticiansExcept at elections, the peak decision makers are politicians. Each of us have 2 members of parliament, one federal and one state. These members know that they are directly elected by us, and that they may be elected or not by a margin of only a few votes. They want to be your best mate, so you will tell your friends and you'll all vote for them. Your members of parliament are responsible for representing you in the government. If you have a problem, you tell them, and they should try to resolve it. In return, they want to be seen to have been helpful, so voters in their area (their constituents) are more likely to vote for them. Your state member is the one who is most important in the birth reform game. Most of the delivery of health services is by your state government. Your federal member is also important. Issues like funding, and obtaining indemnity insurance for midwives need federal government support. It's good to tell both of them what your concerns are. Finding who your MP isTo find out who your members of parliament are, you can phone the Australian Electoral Commission, whose number is in the phone book. In SE Qld the phone number is 3227 6444. When you phone the AEC, give them your address, and ask:
Don't worry if you're a Kiwi, or otherwise not enrolled to vote. They won't ask. Write them a letterThe first and easiest way to make yourself heard politically is to write a letter. It is useful to tell them what you want, and is also an act of creative self expression and power which has a positive effect on yourself. It's good to write to both your state and federal MPs. If you are short of time and energy, start with the state MP. Tell them:
It's your letterRemember, you don't have to be a professor of obstetrics to write to your MP. Don't write what you don't feel or you don't know. It's a good opportunity to have your own knowledge challenged, and clarify your ideas or do some research, but your MP is more interested in your opinion than how clever you are (just look at government policies). AngerAnger can get us motivated to start our political involvement, but it can sap our power. Showing anger can put you in a powerless position by drawing attention to your emotions rather than the substance of what you are saying. Remember you probably wouldn't change places with your MP for anything, and they are a person like you. Write with the assumption that you will be listened to respectfully, and it will be more likely. The next stepWriting your first letter to your MP is only a first step. You can email or post your letter. Either way, it's a good idea to phone up and ask if they've received it after an appropriate time. If you can do it, it's good to arrange a visit to them at the same time. Meeting and talking with your MP is very useful to you. It is interesting and empowering for you to meet them, and it helps them to make the issue real, and make your determination more obvious. Meeting your MPYou can easily get an appointment to meet your MP, it's their job to be accessible to you. Just phone their office, and tell their secretary that you would like to arrange to meet your MP. They will want to know what you plan to talk about, and will find a time in the MP's diary. If you plan to take a friend or someone from a support group, tell them who is coming. It's good to take support, mostly for your own confidence, but it also shows bigger numbers and gives two or more heads to see what's going on and answer questions. Meeting your MP requires the same preparation as writing a letter, and sending a letter first is very helpful. The letter explains what you want, and the meeting makes sure they read the letter and understand your concern. Going along and showing yourself as a real person will be a much stronger memory to your MP than just another letter. Your MP wants you to love them. Don't expect to be given a hard time and have to know every detail about birth physiology and the state health system. Hopefully they will be interested enough to ask questions, but it won't be an exam for a medical degree. Get some facts ready for obvious questions, but be prepared to get back to them with the answers you don't have. Dress straight. Like you're going to church, not the hellfire club or Aquarius festival. Don't mention vaccination, home schooling or conspiracies by drug companies. Don't be too hard on doctors and obstetricians - it helps to recognise that they are a useful tool sometimes. In a minority of births medicine can save lives, but in most births it just makes it harder for women and babies. Be straight - don't distract them from the issue you have gone to speak about. Deal with one diversity at a time. It makes it easy for them if they can dismiss you as a whacko. The birth issue has all the evidence on our side, the only thing against us is that the people it matters most to are busy raising the next generation. The biggest issue for many people, including MPs is fear. Many people believe that birth is a life and death struggle which should only happen in an operating theatre under the control of a team of medical specialists with a truckload of machines. Luckily for us there is no evidence to support this myth, and a wealth of scientific evidence against it. The best available evidence shows that for a healthy woman with access to hospital backup, birthing at home is as safe as in hospital. If anyone challenges this, ask for evidence. If you are asked for evidence (a good thing to be asked) then do some homework and provide them with some. Ask for help from someone in the birth groups if you like. Going through the systemHealth care is the responsibility of the Minister of Health. Your MP is likely to read and acknowledge your letter, and pass your letter on to the Minister. You should eventually get a reply from the Minister. The Qld Minister for Health is currently Wendy Edmond, who is strongly committed to obstetric hospital birth care. She won't be there forever, and part of our task is to get prepared for a better Health Minister. The Fob OffOur experience so far is that the reply you receive will be a complete fob off. This will be written by an officer of the department, who probably doesn't know much about the issue, but can cut and paste paragraphs from previous letters replying to other citizens. It will probably use plenty of long words and refer to various policies and reports you are expected to be unfamiliar with, and is intended to take the steam out of you. They don't expect you to reply, and if you don't, then they will think that you are satisfied with their reply and the matter is over. Persist!Be kind, and realise that this is just them doing their job. If they changed policy every time they had a letter about something, government would grind to a standstill. So, be ready to respond to the fob-off. For this, it's good to get some help if you aren't sure of the facts. Show your letter from the minister to people who are familiar with what it's talking about, and find out what the letter means. Then reply to the minister and tell them you aren't happy with their response. Tell your MP you weren't happy too. Send them a copy of your letter to the Minister. Tell your MP about what's happening every time you can. Keep the issue alive and on their mind. Remember, these people all get a hundred letters and emails a day. Yours can easily get lost if you forget it. If you don't get replies, phone up and ask about it. Persist! You are the citizen and customer. They are accountable to you. Other points
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