Despite the gains the midwifery profession has made in Canada over the past 10 years, it still faces many challenges. Some provinces are struggling for funding and others for legitimacy. Many doctors and nurses now consider midwives colleagues and may recommend midwifery care to their patients or choose it for their own births. However, in some communities, individual health care professionals may feel hesitant or even hostile about midwifery, the women who practise it and their clients. Access to midwifery training is an issue for women who live outside major centres where education programs are based, or in provinces with no midwifery education programs at all. First Nations and Inuit midwives still face great challenges around training and regulation.
Advocates fight for funding on a yearly basis, even in provinces where midwifery has been established for years. Malpractice insurance remains one of the most difficult issues for midwives and for health care ministries; the premiums increase exponentially, at one time jumping by more than 400% in a single year.
The consumer movement so integral to the formation of professional midwifery remains strong in some parts of the country, while in others, having slept through the post-legislation years, it is waking up to the new issues of the day.
In some areas, midwives’ increasing comfort with medical technology is causing concern. For example, will allowing midwives to administer epidurals change the core values of midwifery or will it support choice and continuity of care? Will schools continue to graduate midwives who are comfortable with homebirth, the roots of midwifery, and who are committed to care that is truly woman-centred?
A poster we spotted in practices around Toronto aptly proclaims midwifery to be “the oldest and newest profession.” Rich in history and with a solid philosophical stance, Canadian midwifery is still defining itself, one mother at a time.
Midwifery in Canada:
75% of the world’s children are born into the hands of midwives. How does Canada compare?
The result is a radically different picture of midwifery care depending on where you live in Canada and many barriers to accessing midwifery care.
Province | Legislated | Funded | Fee for service | Home/Hospital/ Birth Centre | Education Program |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alberta | Yes | No | Yes | Home/Hospital/ Birth Centre | No |
British Columbia | Yes | Yes | No | Home/Hospital | Yes |
Manitoba | Yes | Yes | No | Home/Hospital | No |
Newfoundland and Labrador | No | No | No | Hospital (remote areas only) | No |
New Brunswick | No | No | No | Home | No |
Northwest Territories | No | No | Yes | Home | No |
Nova Scotia | No | No | Yes | Home | No |
Nunavut | Partially (one pilot project in 2002) | Partially | No | Birth Centre (only on Rankin Inlet) | No |
Ontario | Yes | Yes | No | Home/Hospital | Yes |
Prince Edward Island | No | No | Yes | Home | No |
Quebec | Yes | Yes | No | Birth Centre | Yes |
Saskatchewan | Yes | No | Yes | Home | No |
Yukon | No | No | Yes | Home | No |
Why we need accessible midwifery care across the country:
Barriers to Universal Canadian Midwifery Care:
1) Lack of government support (legislation)
In provinces without legislation, very few midwives practice because of the difficulty of practicing in a quasi-legal way, and because of the difficulty in earning a living. In unlegislated provinces, the few midwives practicing cannot order routine blood and urine tests, or serve women whose particular pregnancies, or personal beliefs, would make a hospital birth a better option.
2) Lack of government funding
In provinces without legislation, or those where midwifery is legislated but not funded, women must pay for their midwifery care themselves. Even with the common practice of accepting payment on a sliding scale geared to income, many women cannot afford the cost of a midwife, leaving those already marginalized by society (the poor, new immigrants, young mothers) without access to midwifery care.
3) Lack of midwives
In provinces where midwives are legislated and funded, midwives are highly sought after and many mothers who seek care cannot be accommodated.
4) Lack of training opportunities
In order to get more midwives, you need to train more midwives. Though Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia offer university training for midwives, the aspiring midwives in other provinces need the opportunity to train in the areas where they currently live and work. Entering the existing programs is not feasible for many potential midwives, and ultimately means fewer midwives entering those already midwife-hungry provinces where the profession is already established.
5) Lack of intra-professional understanding
In our own care, we have benefited from respectful relations between midwives and physicians. However, there are many cases – some well-documented – of midwives being treated as lesser professionals by doctors and nurses. When this happens, women’s care is compromised.
In some legislated areas, individual hospitals grant – and deny – privileges to individual midwives. Should a hospital decide not to make privileges available to a midwife, she can be left unable to take clients who choose to birth in hospital, leaving these women without care, or forcing them to accept medical care instead.
6) Inability to practice in a home setting.
Some medical professionals still refuse to acknowledge the safety of homebirth, and campaign against allowing midwives to catch babies at home, and stalling or altering the move towards legislating midwifery. This despite studies showing homebirth is a good option for many mothers and babies, including a recent study by the Canadian Medical Association.
What Still Needs to be Done?
Lobby the federal and provincial governments for:
Miranda Hawkins and Sarah Knox are the authors of the recently published, The Midwifery Option: A Canadian Guide to the Birth Experience (Harper Collins, 2003). For more information, visit www.midwiferyoption.ca
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