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having the baby? In the early Sixties when it came time for childbirth,
the doctor was in charge, and the mother was simply present. Delivery
was medically controlled, efficient, and "safe." As a
student nurse during that time at "Mr. Duke's" hospital,
Peggy Vincent cared for women who wanted to have their babies "their
way," rather than the way medical rules dictated. Vincent
listened to these women. In her view, mothers should have carte
blanche to behave the way their bodies dictated during childbirth.
Her career of rule-breaking-on-behalf-of-her-patients had begun.
In Baby Catcher, Vincent traces her personal journey to midwifery.
After Duke, she moved to Berkeley, California, where, in the context
of the Seventies revolution in women's health (the time of Our Bodies,
Ourselves), she established a birthing center at Alta Bates Hospital.
In the center, medical control decreased, and women had more control
over birth in a natural and supportive environment. Doctors who opposed
the birthing center believed that "no birth is normal until
after the fact." Following this experience, Vincent entered
nurse midwifery school, where the thinking was exactly the opposite: "Birth
is normal until proven otherwise."
Vincent shares unforgettable stories of birth in homes, boats, and
harrowing car rides, as she lovingly and expertly "catches" babies
for Berkeley couples. Her descriptions are warm, funny, and inspiring,
and her clinical judgment in delivering babies is astute. Whether
the mother is noisy or quiet, stoic or dramatic, Vincent is comfortable.
She answers calls in the middle of the night, travels to deliveries
in her VW bug, welcomes each woman's way of birthing, and shares
a celebratory meal with her families. Baby Catcher gives an insider's
view of the magic of birth when the mother is in charge, and it is
a delightful read.
Vincent was a leader in the revolution in maternity care. Her story
is one of listening to women, breaking the rules, and helping them
have babies in the way they desire, despite the predominant obstetrical
medical paradigm. However, in 1988, she was unable to renew her practice
insurance because of increasing reluctance by insurance companies
to provide coverage for midwives; by 1991, no insurance agency would
cover home births by midwives. Across the country, home births by
midwives all but ceased.
Vincent's book chronicles the influence of liability insurance and
its power to limit the practice of nurse midwives and the choices
of families. She takes the reader into the politics of health care
through a provocative and personal account of the difficulties midwives
continue to face in the United States. Her story is one of independent
thinking, expert care, courage, and the "labor of love." Today's
health-care system needs more Peggy Vincents.
--Mary T. Champagne
Champagne is dean of the School of Nursing at Duke.
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 ccording
to the National Center for Health Statistics, the United States
spends more money on childbirth than any other nation in the world,
yet it ranks twenty-second among nations in maternal and infant
mortality and morbidity rates. Author Catherine Taylor acknowledges
that international comparisons are tricky, but the presence of
universal health-care access is one key factor in the success of
every single country ahead of the U.S. on this list. The other
notable factor is the prevalence of midwife-attended births.
In 1990, the World Health Organization declared that birth is safer
for mothers and babies when using midwives for pregnancy and childbirth.
The Netherlands provides a striking example. Dutch babies and mothers
are the least likely to die or be injured in childbirth and the least
likely to require medical intervention. Midwives attend 70 percent
of Dutch deliveries, and, remarkably, a third of these are home births.
By comparison, 93 percent of U.S. women have their babies with doctors,
and 99 percent of births occur in hospitals.
Given these statistics, and her own less-than-satisfying experience
with the birth of her first child, Taylor set out to learn more about
alternative birthing options in the U.S. and to study the cultural
influences that led to the marginalization of midwife-assisted births.
Over the course of a year's research--most of it conducted in New
Mexico--she documents more than a dozen births and interviews a range
of private and hospital-based midwives and other experts about the
relative merits and hazards of delivering a child in a private birthing
center, a high-tech hospital, a rural health center, or at home.
Taylor even trains to become a doula, a birthing assistant who works
closely with midwives to help prepare mothers-to-be and their partners
for the birthing process.
With an engaging style and a discerning eye for human behavior, Taylor
carries us through the births she witnesses with a powerful sense
of drama and a steady compassion for the families and health-care
providers involved. Meanwhile, we learn of the author's own stress
about the best means of delivery for her second child. Leaning toward
home birth, she struggles between her culturally induced fears about
having the child outside a physician's easy reach and her desire
for personal control over a normal physiological process.
When her first son, Max, was born, Taylor's delivery was performed
in an un-named North Carolina hospital. She was a graduate student
in English at the time. Under the primary care of a nurse-midwife,
Taylor was subject to what have become common medical interventions--labor-inducing
drugs, preventive antibiotics, and, finally, a pain killer--all administered
according to standardized, time-based hospital protocols aimed at
ensuring a punctual march toward delivery. After a routine twelve-hour
labor, the process left Taylor disappointed, groggy, and surprised
by the midwife's only sporadic attentions and by her level of pain
in delivery despite the drugs.
As Taylor later came to understand, midwives who work in high-tech
hospitals must operate according to protocols that can turn the birth
experience into something akin to a production line rather than a
natural process in which each woman's physiological differences and
needs are honored as the birthing unfolds. When things don't go according
to schedule, "the cascade of interventions," as she calls
it, begins. At worst, a mother may undergo an episiotomy or forceps-
or vacuum-assisted delivery that can be difficult on the child, or
at the extreme, a Caesarian section--a procedure that has quadrupled
in use since the Seventies.
Helping women avoid these invasive techniques is generally a point
of pride among midwives, though in U.S. hospitals, such procedures
still happen at a much higher rate than in the twenty-one nations
ahead of the U.S. in the statistics. Moreover, Taylor suggests, the
common occurrence of these procedures only enhances the pervasive
notion in this country that birth is a dangerous and even pathological
event, dependent upon the medical establishment to render it "safe."
Hospital birth protocols may have grown stricter in recent years
because of malpractice threats, but, as Taylor argues, the medicalization
of childbirth was initiated at the end of the nineteenth century
when physicians (mostly male) began taking over the birthing process
from midwives. (She cites historian Judith Pence Rooks, whose research
shows that between 1918 and 1925, deaths of babies from birth injuries
rose by 44 percent.) U.S. physicians then began moving childbirth
out of the home and into the hospital, discouraging attendance by
midwives and other family members who had previously played a significant
role. Today, only fourteen states allow nurse-midwives to perform
home births; midwives who are not licensed are outlawed in ten states,
and twenty-four states have no certification process for them.
Though American midwives have continued to practice over the years
with and without certification, they mostly served indigent mothers
until the onset of the natural childbirth movement in the Sixties. "With
the rise of managed care in the 1980s," Taylor writes, "midwives'
excellent outcomes combined with cost-effectiveness increased their
availability and popularity." The Medicaid rate for midwives
is 65 percent of the rate that doctors get for deliveries.
In the last decade, midwife-attended births have doubled in the U.S.
Taylor sees this as a positive trend. Ultimately choosing to have
her second child at home with a midwife, she describes the event
as a happy rite of passage--a powerful contrast to the impersonal
regimen she experienced the first time around. "We need to rethink
the hospital as the main site for birth and doctors as the main attendants
for normal pregnancies and births," she concludes. By her own
story, Taylor makes a persuasive case.
--Georgann Eubanks
Eubanks '76 is a freelance writer who lives in Carrboro, North
Carolina.
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