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  1. I have had two home births with domiciliary midwives lined up. The first was so laid back she was late and I learned later this was normal for her. She knew I had quick labours for my previous two births yet she did not leave home when we phoned her and when she did start she deviated to hospital to pick up sterilised equipment. So she missed the delivery. It was fortunate that my mother, a maternity nurse, was in attendance. I didn’t get the midwife’s ‘help’ again.

    My next concern is the publicity over botched births with Midwives at fault.

    I think midwives should get adequate funding but I wish the system would give more support to GPs to take on births. Years ago this was how it worked. Today skilled GPs and skilled midwives should both work with childbirth.

  2. No. These are the people whose historical politicking helped drive family doctors out of obstetrics, and gynecologists back into the hospital system to avoid the politics of practising obstetrics. They need the doctors back. It won’t happen, but I’d be backing having GP’s back, and women having better choices.

    We had a system which worked well. Our infant mortality rates were the lowest in the world. I’m no Greta, but how dare they conflate themselves with the people who mothers and babies do need when things do go wrong.

    ‘The Unfortunate Experiment’ was published circa 1987. Phyllida Bunkle wrote tediously about the look in some damn doctor’s eyes – maybe they gleamed – looking at her, and her breast abscess. I cannot recall if it was before or after this that all white male obstetric practitioners became baddies, and they were chased out by the midwives. From memory, I think Bunkle’s bad breast happened on a Sunday, and chances are that gleaming eyed doctor-monster had been up all night.

    I was working with a bunch of mad women librarians, and probably the only one not to have been arrested for trespass at an airport; the relentless demonisation of hospital doctors continued day after day as an obsessive feminist issue; there was a bulging clippings’ file maintained on it.

    Not all men are baddies – only about half of them – but when it comes to the gestation and birth of babies, I’d be wanting the best qualified, best trained practitioner that I could get, and I’d put up with a jerk – I don’t have to actually like the guy/guyess – to get the best.

    Nice politically correct mums now boast that they’ve delivered babies without a doctor, or a man in sight.
    It’s been said to me two three times. Why, in the context of midwives, doctors can now be seen as the enemy in the way that criminals regard the police, I’m not sure, but it should not have happened; it was fueled by paranoiac feminist nutters. It depended on, and it assumed scenarios where nothing ever goes wrong for a baby or mother, which is not always the case.

    I won’t be signing this petition; the parameters appear too unwieldy, and the whole issue needs to revisited by experts with medical training in the primary field of obstetrics.

    I suggest that the NZ model which Alison Eddy says other countries aspire to, is not as good as the one which it replaced.

    1. Thank you Christine Stewart, a more powerful compelling story than mine. We both want doctors back, involved in childbirth. Unfortunately many nurses (not just midwives) seem to put themselves above doctors who have more rigourous scientifically advanced training than they have. Leave out gender as a factor. I had two brilliant doctors for my first two births, one male, one female. Plenty of capable male nurses around but are there any male midwives?

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