Edmonton Journal

Midwives to get their own college

Profession­al body planned for new year

- Sheila Prat spratt@edmontonjo­urnal.com

Alberta’s midwives will have their own independen­t profession­al college in the new year, a final step into mainstream medicine.

Only a handful of midwives practised in Alberta 20 years ago, some doing home births. They were registered, but working without medicare funding.

Today there are more than 70 working in the province, including about 25 in the Edmonton area, which is a large enough group to set up a college with its own disciplina­ry procedures, Health Minister Fred Horne said.

“I really congratula­te them; this is an important step,” he said.

“Midwives are part of the team and today’s medicine is all about working in teams.”

Joanna Greenhalgh, spokeswoma­n for the Alberta Associatio­n of Midwives, said the group is pleased with the emergence of the college. She characteri­zed it as a sign of the importance of midwifery and the profession’s commitment to public safety and standards.

In 2009, midwifery services were funded by provincial medicare and given full hospital access.

The move was important to allow midwives to offer birthing services in a variety of sites, she said.

It’s also important “to establish good (relations) with doctors and nurses,” she said.

Midwives deliver about two per cent of the babies in Alberta, the associatio­n said. About 50 per cent of births attended by midwives occur in hospitals.

Due to the large size of medical practices today, women cannot always be sure their own doctor will be able to attend a birth, Greenhalgh said.

That makes a midwife a more attractive option.

They practise with only one other partner on each expectant mother, and college regulation­s will limit the profession to teams of four who can “share care” to ensure pregnant women will know their midwife.

Mount Royal University in Calgary offers a fouryear bachelor’s degree in midwifery.

The new college body will continue to have oversight from the Health Discipline­s Board for a period of time before full independen­ce.

Six other provinces and two territorie­s offer publicly funded midwifery: British Columbia, Saskatchew­an, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia, Nunavut and the Northwest Territorie­s.

In 2012, the province authorized an independen­t college for naturopath­s, though it did not agree to fund treatment.

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