21 Oct

Book Review: Why Human Rights In Childbirth Matter, by Rebecca Schiller

This is a small book that should have a massive impact. Doula and human rights campaigner Rebecca Schiller is a great advocate for this important subject, bringing to it eloquence, experience, and a deep understanding of the issues faced by women in childbirth. She is almost uniquely positioned to present the case for human rights in childbirth.

The book is presented in two sections, the smaller second section being a clear and useful guide to women’s rights in birth, with a FAQ approach and a comprehensive set of information.

The bulk of the book examines the matter in more detail, starting with an exploration of the context in which women give birth, both in developed and developing parts of the world. She provides a very good explanation of the Human Rights Act and how it applies to birth, with several compelling examples. This is the first book where I have ever read every one of the real life quotations.

I found that the chapter on Feminisms of Birth particularly resonated. Schiller’s discussion of the political dilemma of campaigning to improve women’s experience, without polarising people into different camps, was enlightening and helpful. She concludes, of course, that the ultimate aim must be respectful, compassionate and individualised care based on the best available evidence, but trusting every woman to make decisions about what happens to her own body.

If you have ever pondered the real meaning of consent, or witnessed a non-consented procedure, or been asked to consent to something you did not fully understand, this book will be meaningful to you. Absolutely everyone involved in birth needs to be aware of the contents of this book, above all the women heading into the system, whatever that system is in their part of the world. Human rights in childbirth really do matter, and Rebecca Schiller is a hero in her tireless advocacy.

[Disclaimer: The publisher Pinter & Martin sent me a free review copy of Human Rights In Childbirth. You can get a copy here, with 10% discount using the code SPROGCAST at the checkout.]

19 Jun

Book Review: Optimal Care in Childbirth, by Henci Goer and Amy Romano

This dense and fascinating book presents a huge amount of evidence and a highly articulate argument for a physiological model of birth, starting from the premise that pregnancy and birth are healthy, normal experiences for the majority of women, and only where risk exists, does medical management become appropriate.

This approach fits nicely with my own philosophy of pregnancy and birth, and is well-supported by short analyses of the research in each chapter. Other reviewers have pointed out that the evidence is somewhat cherry-picked, as is always the way in the context of books on birth. It seems to be categorically impossible to have a truly objective reading of the evidence on this subject, and few people with any real knowledge seem to occupy a middle ground on the spectrum from hardline birth skeptics who can only allow the medical model, and advocates of straightforward physiological birth. Both groups tend to be very blinkered about research that contradicts their point of view.

Optimal Care in Childbirth gives a good insight into the source of this deep opposition between the two philosophies. Within the medical model, pregnancy and birth are presented as intrinsically dangerous and difficult. The historical background to this assumption is well documented. In the 21st Century western world, overall levels of risk, particularly to the mother, are very low; and this results in a narrow focus where almost the sole positive outcome to be achieved is a live baby and mother. Strategies are therefore devised to minimise the maximum potential risks, and preventative procedures become routine. This leads to an assumption that the medical approach is the norm, which has a knock-on effect on the research available. The more women who give birth by caesarean section, for example, the greater the belief in the medical community that birth is difficult and dangerous, and the more deskilled midwifery becomes.

There is no doubt that childbirth is complex, variable, and human; and the outcomes of childbirth are soft, complex and variable too. Goer and Romano define the optimal outcome as:

“the highest probability of spontaneous birth of a healthy baby to a healthy mother who feels pleased with herself and her caregivers, ready for the challenges of motherhood, attached to her baby, and who goes on to breastfeed successfully.” [p21]

However since the language and thinking of research is based in the medical model, the basic assumption is that non-intervention in childbirth equals risk, rather than the other way around. Optimal Care in Childbirth recommends reserving medical intervention for those women who would genuinely face greater difficulty without it, rather than protocols that offer it routinely in order to reduce risks that are already small.

The chapters of the book cover all the main topics of relevance to anyone working in childbirth (it is probably not a book aimed at pregnant women, who might get similar but more accessible information from Ina May Gaskin’s books). The chapters cover caesarean birth, induction of labour, care during labour, birth, postnatal care, and midwifery practice. Each chapter includes a mini-review of research and strategies for optimal care. It is a very practical book and an important resource for midwives, obstetricians, doulas and antenatal educators.