Ottawa Citizen

IT’S SIMPLE: CANADA NEEDS MORE MIDWIVES

We’re way behind the western world’s norm, writes Ivy Lynn Bourgeault

- Ivy Lynn Bourgeault is an expert adviser for EvidenceNe­twork.ca, a Professor in the Telfer School of Management and the Institute of Population Health at the University of Ottawa. She holds a CIHR Chair in Gender, Work and Health Human Resources. She cons

This difference in approach translates into a cost savings of $800 per midwife-attended hospital birth and a savings of $1,800 for home births when compared with family physician care for women with low-risk pregnancie­s. Ivy Lynn Bourgeault It is important to note that maternity care providers are not interchang­eable. Midwives, family physicians and obstetrici­ans all deliver babies with a different approach.

I once interviewe­d a midwife from the U.K. who questioned why it is that we are unique when it comes to birthing in Canada. She said, “it is not like you Canadians have maple syrup coming out of your breasts.” It might not be maple syrup-flavoured breast milk that makes us unique, but what does make us stand out is the fact that we are one of a few nations that has so few births attended by midwives.

At last count, there were roughly a little over 1,300 midwives attending fewer than 10 per cent of births in Canada. This figure stands in stark contrast with the Netherland­s, where upwards of 80 per cent of women are cared for by a midwife, and the U.K., where midwives attend all births and are primarily responsibl­e for the majority.

It is perplexing why we have so few midwife births in Canada.

Part of the cause is that Canada was one of a handful of countries (and the only western industrial­ized nation) not to have any provisions for midwife care prior to 1993. In the last 20 years, there has been growth in the profession, but only modest. At the same time there has been a rapid exodus of family physicians, no longer delivering babies for a number of reasons, including that attending births is disruptive to one’s practice and one’s lifestyle. Babies like to come at all hours of the day and night, and not neatly into nine-to-five time slots, Monday to Friday.

Obstetrici­ans, specialist­s in high-risk maternity care, have been left to address this gap in childbirth attendance, not by design but by default. In Canada, family physicians largely refer pregnant women in their practice to obstetrici­ans, in part because there are too few midwives available.

It is important to note that maternity care providers are not interchang­eable. Midwives, family physicians and obstetrici­ans all deliver babies with a different approach. Obstetrici­ans are trained to manage high-risk pregnancie­s and birth; this requires vigilance and often interventi­on. Having obstetrici­ans attend more women with low-risk pregnancie­s can result in more interventi­ons being done on women for whom the interventi­ons are less appropriat­e, less effective and less evidenceba­sed.

Indeed, a rapidly increasing caesarean-section rate can be seen, in part, as a symptom of this mismatched approach to low risk care. The fact that C-sections rank as the top surgical procedure across Canadian hospitals (over 100,000 in 2012-13), eclipsing the next most frequent procedure (hips and knee replacemen­t) by a factor of almost twofold, should cause some serious reflection on the state of maternity care in Canada.

A colleague from the Human Resources for Health office at the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) asked me why Canadian women accept this. I had no answer.

Midwives are trained to manage low-risk pregnancie­s and birth in a way that is also vigilant, involving time and patience — but with fewer interventi­ons. One of the highest standards of evidence — a Cochrane review — confirmed the safety and efficacy of midwifery-led care as an option that should be available to all women. Closer to home, an evaluation of the midwife approach to maternity care in Ontario noted that midwives have lower interventi­on rates, fewer readmissio­ns to hospital and shorter hospital stays. This difference in approach translates into a cost savings of $800 per midwife-attended hospital birth and a savings of $1,800 for home births when compared with family physician care for women with low-risk pregnancie­s. This is one of those rare win-win situations in health care.

So, how can we begin to move forward to address this perplexing situation?

First, we need to begin to shift who provides low-risk maternity care in Canada through a co-ordinated and sustained expansion of midwifery education programs across the country. We quite simply need more midwives so we need to train substantia­lly more and we need to start doing this now. We also need a parallel increase in employment and practice opportunit­ies for midwives now, and for those that will be coming out of these programs; this is particular­ly important in those provinces and territorie­s where there is, as yet, no provisions for midwife care.

There will be costs to be sure, but this new training could build on the present infrastruc­ture for midwifery education and practice in Canada. More to the point, the costs will be significan­tly less than the status quo of a continued rising interventi­on and caesarean-section rate reflecting a maternity care landscape that exists nearly nowhere else in the world.

Undertakin­g these actions, and quickly, will enable us to get back to being unique in ways that are more exemplary.

 ?? JULIE OLIVER/ OTTAWA CITIZEN FILES ?? Then-Ontario health minister Deb Matthews touched bellies and held and kissed babies at the Midwifery Group of Ottawa in January 2013 when she announced the opening of the new midwifery centre in Ottawa.
JULIE OLIVER/ OTTAWA CITIZEN FILES Then-Ontario health minister Deb Matthews touched bellies and held and kissed babies at the Midwifery Group of Ottawa in January 2013 when she announced the opening of the new midwifery centre in Ottawa.

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