What IS the difference
between a Midwife and a Private Birth Attendant?
Registered Midwives:
midwifery was legislated under the B.C. Health Professions Act in 1995.
The College of Midwives was formed as a disciplinary body and the first
registered midwives began practise in January of l998. By law, registrants
of the College have exclusive title to the word "midwife".
The BC College of Midwives of B.C. has a testing process, protocols
and practice guidelines which members must follow.
Private Birth Attendants:
Some women who were midwives prior to the formation of the College chose
not to become regulated. To comply with the legislation and meet the
public demand for alternatives to the medical model, a new profession
of Traditional Birth Attendant or Private Birth Attendant emerged.
Many Private Birth Attendants have years
of experience and they can provide more individualized care in response
to the family's wishes and unique circumstances. They are paid privately
by the consumer and not restricted by professional protocols, malpractise
insurance restrictions or hospital committees. Some of the differences
between registered midwifery and traditional birth attendants are:
1. Registered Midwives must maintain
hospital privileges, provide the choice of hospital or home care, and
work collegially with doctors. Private Birth Attendants are home birth
attendants and only go to hospital if medical care is warranted.
2. Registered Midwives may not continue
to care for women at home who have an overdue pregnancy (past 42 weeks
gestation), a baby in breech position, or emotional problems. Private
Birth Attendants can use their discretion to individualize recommendations
that are appropriate for each pregnant woman.
3. Registered Midwives work in "teams"
and there is no assurance that the midwife you prefer will be able to
attend your homebirth. Traditional birth attendants make a commitment
to have continuity of care with the family's attendant of choice.
4. Registered Midwives do not cook,
clean, do laundry, do labour support, massage, etc. They instruct the
family to hire help or have relatives do these service chores. Families
planning a homebirth with Registered Midwives often hire a doula. Private
Birth Attendants take pride in serving all the needs of the birth including
providing water tubs, hoses, inflator pumps, etc and putting up the
equipment for a water birth and cleaning it/taking it out when the birth
is complete.
5. Midwives are authorized to use antibiotics,
narcotics, sleeping medications, Vitamin K and a number of other pharmaceuticals.
Private Birth Attendants usually carry only an anti-hemmhorhage medication
(oxytocin) and they use herbal or homeopathic remedies as needed.
6. If a transport from a home birth
occurs, registered midwives continue to provide primary care to the
woman in the hospital within the guidelines of practice of the hospital.
A Private Birth Attendant, on the other hand, becomes a "consumer
advocate" in the hospital but medical management of the birth is
done by the physician on call. With both Registered Midwives and Private
Birth Attendants. Reception by hospital staff can vary from very supportive
and welcoming to outright hostile and obstructive.
7. Clinic visits with registered midwives
are in offices. Traditional Birth Attendants do clinic visits at their
own homes. Registered Midwives are taught "professional boundaries"
and Traditional Birth Attendants are more likely to remain family friends
long after the birth of the baby.
It is essential when choosing a Midwife
or Private Birth Attendant that you become as educated as possible with
regard to all aspects of choosing home birth and the practices of the
person you will choose to assist you during this extremely important
process.