Showing posts with label Doulas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Doulas. Show all posts

Saturday, February 20, 2016

Maternal Materialism
Denise Bolds MSW, CD(DONA)
February 18 2016


What is happening in society when it comes to marketing pregnancy and maternity is a dependence on gadgets and concepts based on capitalism.  It is a billion dollar business.

                        The prospective mother is given the opportunity to shop with a ‘gun’ pointing to items she desires as part of her baby registry. I’ve witnessed prospective moms have baby registries over 100 pages long. What is happening to women and pregnancy when it comes to materialism and capitalism?

This buying frenzy is the result of apprehension, anxiety and uncertainty. If the mother-to- be is provided with the proper human-to-human support, she will learn to trust herself that she is capable of taking care of her baby as well as have autonomy in her maternal experience.

Many women utilize baby registries once they find out they’re pregnant. It is implied by society: the more material gadgets a pregnant woman possesses, the better mother she should be. Many mothers-to-be pick out their breast pump before the baby is born, before she learns about breast-feeding or hand expressing.  It is often a misconception: having a breast pump ensures breast-feeding success. What is not mentioned are numerous women experiencing trauma using breast pumps as a result of rushed pumping, not using a good match of pump or being poorly fitted.

Baby registries include gadgets that are supposed to help the mother recover and recuperate: get her back to work within the six weeks of her standard maternity benefit.  The market targets faster, better, easier with less thinking about what’s in front of the mother (her baby) and more on how efficient she is.

Another newfangled must-have: a ‘Boppy’ pillow. New mothers swear by these to help them breast-feed their babies.  I have witnessed mothers have a meltdown if she forgets her Boppy pillow at home. These pillows are often brought to the birth. I’ve witnessed the same with mothers who forget breast pump attachments at home; they are at work getting ready pump and they can’t.  There isn’t any thought of hand expressing; no thought of holding the baby with her own two arms. I have observed more challenges of mothers attempting to breast-feed using the ‘Boppy’ pillow. The ‘Boppy’ makes moms sloppy = the mother’s posture curls around the baby and the pillow placing mother and baby in misalignment; setting them up for breast-feeding failure and trauma.

Items that is supposed to enhance mothers care of her newborn baby actuality diminishes her ability of her using her critical thinking as well as the use of her natural instinct. When a mother is so occupied making sure she has all the gadgets and gizmos, resulting in her baby registry being over 100 pages long; she is distracted from her body, her pregnancy and her baby; her natural ability as a mother is devalued. Not to mention the disposable debt incurred, resulting in the ‘birth’ of a new business: maternity consignment shops.

A mother-to-be does not need a product gun and a hundred-page baby registry to be a successful mother; she needs human-to-human support in the form of childbirth education, lactation education, pregnancy and birth options, a birth doula and a postpartum doula.

It is the woman who possesses consumer power in America.  A pregnant woman who is soon to be a mother does not need a ‘reward’; she requires representation, support, empowerment and simplicity. 


Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Talk To The Hand: Agencies - Doula Services Are Not Free


Denise Bolds MSW, CD(DONA)
December 15, 2015

The question above of doula services remains a heated debate and is a chronic occurrence… The scenario: low income women who are also without resources are pregnant… Agencies repeatedly and mistakenly request the intervention of a doula for ‘free’.

This request is a blatant hypocrisy in reducing maternal health disparities involving low-income women; mainly women of color/culture. In the USA there are evidence-based models verifying the benefits of birth doula intervention during labor and birth. Many believe doula support is a luxury; this is possible in some cases. For low-income women of color/culture the support of a doula can be a matter of life and death.

Black women and their black babies have the highest rate of infant mortality, fetal demise, low birth weight, maternal death, and poor breastfeeding rates than any other ethnicity/race. The majority of grievances about 'free' doula services are from white women. Many who gripe have no concept or education of the history of the chronic decimation of women of color/culture when it comes to maternal health outcomes. People are certainly entitled to their opinion. However, it's a matter of life and death when agencies knowingly request ‘student’, free or volunteer doulas when evidence shows the benefits of having a certified professional doula support a birth.

Low-income women of color/culture have higher incidences of birth trauma, experience epigenetic inheritance as well as medical care disparities. Period.

Agencies requesting student, free or volunteer doulas repeatedly commit acts of exploitation: to call upon uncompensated, unsalaried services of doulas when the solution is as evident as the evidence agencies utilize to obtain funding to operate is a form of prostitution. Agencies have the capability to request funding, the doula and the mother do not. Physicians, nurses and midwives are not approached in this manor; why are doulas? Doulas are certified, follow a professional model and many possess advanced college degrees. Doulas are on call 24 hours, 7 days a week for their clients, they use gas in their transportation, they invest in education that is not free, they pay for liability insurance; in a nutshell – doula support is not free. There was and is a sacrifice either monetarily or otherwise made by a doula to support a woman in childbirth. It maybe a surprise to many, but doulas pay mortgages/rent, utility bills, car payments, gas, food, childcare and more.

Agencies possess grant writers, as well as designations that can result in the allocation of budgets offering compensation, salaries and adequate stipends to doula providers. Continuing to request ‘free’, volunteer, student doula services devalues the doula profession. By offering the pregnant woman (client) ‘free’ student, volunteer doula services results in the client being further stigmatized and reluctant to engage in this empowering service. It also breeds suspicion and mistrust as well as perpetuates the stigma of learned helplessness. Many of these agencies are directed or managed by white women who have had supported births themselves. The knowledge is present; the congruence is not.

The intervention of a birth doula with a low-income woman of color/culture is a life saving action: advocacy, education, support and awareness supports both mother and baby to bond, for mother to be able to feed her baby and to heal from birth; to alleviate oppression that can result in life threatening depression. Imagine how many lives can be saved if mother and baby did not give up in the medical system that can be maternally hostile.

One solution is very simple: agencies, put in an adequate budget for professional doulas. Evidence shows how invaluable this service is. The outcomes are diversely positive across all spectrums of maternal health. Until the education of maternal health disparity is universally and correctly disseminated, until agencies incorporate appropriate funding that adequately compensates doula services; the mis-education, mis-direction, and mis-allocation of services will redundantly continue with women and babies dying in the United States of America.

Agencies know better, it’s time to do better. In order for negative statistics to decrease such as high cesarean section rates, poor breastfeeding rates and stronger families; funders must include proper allocation of doula services to agencies requesting funds.  Talk to the hand agencies. Let the revolution begin.

As for the term ‘student’ doula, I don’t know what the hell that is. Once a doula receives proper training, she can support births and be compensated accordingly. Is this done with ‘student’ lawyers, doctors and nurses? I don’t think so.