maternity, midwifery, pregnancy, Uncategorized

UK Maternal Deaths Up 59%—This Is a Crisis

MBRRACE 2024

Maternal mortality in the UK rose by 59% from 2013 to 2021. Even excluding COVID, it’s still up 37%—and the spike started before the pandemic.

MBRRACE 2024

So what’s going on? Staffing shortages? Not really—vacancy rates actually dropped. Obesity? Up just 8%. Gestational diabetes? Rising, but data’s patchy. Meanwhile, Black women are nearly 3x more likely to die, and Asian women and those in deprived areas are 2x more likely.

MBRRACE 24

The leading killers? Blood clots, suicide, and sepsis. And guess what increases clot risk? Amongst other things – C-sections (up 53%) and long hospital stays—like those caused by induction of labour, which rose 43%. Nearly 4 in 10 births are now surgical, despite WHO saying rates above 1 in 10 don’t improve outcomes. Sepsis rates tripled. And mental health? 79% of women report birth trauma. This isn’t just bad luck—it’s systemic. If I were Baroness Amos, I’d be listening to the families living this nightmare and the MIDWIVES that can make this better.

Because a 59% increase in women dying in pregnancy, childbirth and up to a year after is not acceptable.

References

Further Reading

Uncategorized

Florence and the Terrain

Florence Nightingale is all about Terrain Theory  

“All disease, at some period or other of its course, is more or less a reparative process, not necessarily accompanied with suffering: an effort of nature to remedy a process of poisoning or of decay, which has taken place weeks, months, sometimes years beforehand, unnoticed.”  Florence Nightingale, 1859.  

If that’s not terrain theory, I don’t know what is!  

I should have, really, written a post explaining what terrain theory is, as it has been on my list of things to do for at least 18 months. But life, and especially doing a midwifery degree, has gotten in the way (just a little bit!), so instead I’m just going to give the briefest possible explanation and refer you to the work of a couple of others who can explain it much better than I can.  

Terrain theory is about maintaining homeostasis in your body by eating well, thinking well and doing well (to miss-quote Dr Ulric Williams). Germs as objects of contagion, indeed, contagion itself, have not been proven, by following the correct scientific method, to cause illness. When one takes care of one’s terrain, any illness encountered (for it’s not about a complete absence of illness), can be dealt with swiftly and effectively without use of pharmaceuticals. It puts the focus of responsibility on the individual and doesn’t lay blame on any outside factors such as germs, viruses or pathogens.

Relying on a ‘doctor god’ to diagnose and validate your symptoms, without getting to the route of the issue, only serves to disempower you and bury symptoms under additional ‘side-effects’. Being responsible for your own health is an empowering process and one of the best gifts you can give yourself. When you realise that contagion isn’t a thing, you no longer fear it. Which is one of the most liberating occurrences I’ve ever experienced. I encourage you to explore the work of drsambailey.com and drtomcowan.com (amongst others) to gain a better understanding.  

Anyhoo, back to our Florence. I’m only a third of the way through her Notes on Nursing,  published in 1859, and I’ve been highlighting many, many paragraphs relating to terrain theory and her scepticism of germs and contagion. I think one of my favourites so far is “Is it not a fact, that when scarlet fever, measles, or small-pox appear among the children, the very first thought which occurs is, “where” the children can have “caught” the disease? And the parents immediately run over in their minds all the families with whom they may have been. They never think of looking at home for the source of the mischief. If a neighbour’s child is seized with small-pox, the first question which occurs is whether it had been vaccinated. No one would undervalue vaccination; but it becomes of doubtful benefit to society when it leads people to look abroad for the source of evils which exist at home.”  

Although I do undervalue vaccination (see dissolvingillusions.com/graphs-images), I love that she ends this quote with imploring people to look within themselves and their environment rather than “abroad for the source of evils”.  

Florence is credited with sanitary reforms in hospitals in England and overseas, based on her observations during the Crimean War. In Notes on Nursing, she deplores “Bad sanitary, bad architectural, and bad administrative arrangements often make it impossible to nurse” and  that “Badly constructed houses do for the healthy what badly constructed hospitals do for the sick. Ill-informed medical men aid in sustaining the delusion, by laying the blame on “current contagions.”” Another perfect example of her understanding of terrain theory.  

The book is also reminding me of my time as a healthcare assistant in a general hospital. I have never been a fan of the healthcare system and if you had told me twenty years ago that I would be working in a hospital (let alone training within the very same system), I would have laughed in your face (I knew, in the early noughties, when searching for a career, that I wanted to be able to help people to help themselves. I also knew, that to do that, being a nurse or a doctor was not the way I wanted to be able to help people. And then I found aromatherapy, phew!). However, needs must, and as my mum says, no experience is wasted.  

I remember my very first day on the ward as a healthcare assistant, on a cold, dark, December morning. The healthcare assistant I was shadowing walked into the bay of five patients and immediately turned the fluorescent lights on. She didn’t introduce herself, she didn’t see if anyone was awake, she didn’t even announce that she was going to turn the lights on. She just did it, and I was horrified. I couldn’t believe someone could be so disrespectful, so uncaring and so thoughtless. I had, mercifully, had very little experience of hospitals before working in one, and I just found it all so undignified and anathema to what I know is required for the body to heal. I cried in the car all the way home after that first shift.  

Which brings me to another point Florence makes passionately “Never to allow a patient to be waked, intentionally or accidentally, is a sine qua non of all good nursing.” Sine qua non means an essential element. I wish all healthcare professionals, and I include midwives and doctors, regarded this as a sine qua non. I’m aware that there are times when it is essential to monitor patients closely, but I’ve seen far too many examples of patients being woken up unnecessarily just for a box to be ticked.  

I could go on linking Florence’s book to terrain theory, and I’d like to think that I will revisit this and write about it again, but I don’t know when that will be and I hate to over-promise and under-deliver. So I’ll just leave you with this little gem to ponder over – “Is it better to learn the piano-forte than to learn the laws which subserve the preservation of offspring?” Or one’s own preservation?

midwifery

I’m now a student midwife!

And still enjoying seeing clients for aromatherapy, Indian head massage, reflexology and Ayurvedic yoga massages.

I started the course last month (September 2023) and am due to graduate in summer 2026. So far so good, although it is, inevitably, affecting my availability to see clients. However, I still love giving massage and have no plans to stop for the foreseeable future.

The course is divided into theory blocks of 6-8 weeks, and work-placement blocks of 6-8 weeks. During theory blocks, I’ll be attending university in the week, so I can take appointments for evenings and weekends, plus usually one week day per week.

On work-placement blocks, I will either be working 3/4 shifts per week in a hospital (and therefore will have 3/4 days a week available for appointments) or in the community, which will be Monday to Friday, 8am – 4pm, so will have evenings and weekends free.

I know that there will be times when appointments have to be moved, and I apologise in advance for any inconvenience caused. I will always give as much notice as possible and I appreciate your understanding in this.

The skills I will gain as a midwife, combined with the skills I already possess as a massage therapist, will enhance and deepen my offering to you, my clients. I see the midwifery degree as an extension of my current practice and can’t wait to combine both sides of my work.

Give me a call and I’ll get you booked in for a relaxing massage asap.

midwifery, Uncategorized

Access all areas

Phew, thank goodness that’s over! I’m pleased to say that I have completed my ‘Access to Higher Education for Health Professionals’ course and can now breathe a big sigh of relief.  The tutors warned us at the start of the course, in September last year, that it would be stressful, and they weren’t wrong. It’s the equivalent of doing three ‘A’ levels in one year and it has made me a horrible person to be around at times.

But now it’s over, and I am delighted, and very proud too, to say that I have achieved distinctions in every graded module. This means that I can start the Midwifery degree in September feeling much more confident in my academic abilities.  And I have been told by quite a few people that the access course is harder than the first year of university.  I guess I’ll have to wait and see about that.

For although I have many qualifications, none of them are recognised outside of the world of complementary therapies. And although I’ve always considered myself quite bright, I lost my way at the end of secondary school and managed to scrape through my GCSEs, but not achieve any higher (nationally recognised) qualifications, hence having to do the access course.

I do love learning and have continued to learn throughout my career. I am fascinated by how our bodies work and the more I learn, the more I become in awe of the human body. It has been a challenge to my holistic, non-pharmaceutical approach to health to reduce the body to cells, organs, systems, diagnoses and prognoses. Especially considering I have been delving into terrain theory over the last 18 months (more on that to come later), and have always believed that, given the right conditions, the body can heal itself.

I am excited to start the midwifery degree in September, and apprehensive too.  I fell in love with massage and essential oils 20 years ago. I fell in love with supporting women to breastfeed their babies seven years ago.  I don’t know if I’m going to fall in love with being a midwife, and I already know that I don’t like the system in which midwifery sits. However, what has kept me going through this access course, and what will continue to drive me through the degree is that the world needs midwives like me.  Watch this space…

Uncategorized

It’s oh so quiet…

I’ve been rather quiet on the blog front in recent months, as I’ve been studying since September. I’m doing an access course with Derby College so that I can start a midwifery degree this autumn. Midwifery feels like a cumulation of my career so far, in that I can pull from all the skills I’ve acquired as a massage therapist, volunteer breastfeeding supporter and care support worker. I’m looking forward to drawing on these experiences so that I can empower and hold space for women at a transformational time of their lives.

The first term of the access course has been tough. I’m a distance learner, so all the lectures are online, and finding my way around the software was the first challenge. Once I’d got the hang of that, getting into the flow of writing academically, learning how to correctly reference sources and going into enough depth to ensure I get the required grades has been an arduous task. I’m happy to say that I’m on target and I now know where the bullseye is. Although at times it’s turned me into a horrible person to be around!

So although I have a long list of blog posts that I would like to write about, it’s going to be a few more months (probably summer) before I have the headspace to put something down on paper. Or online, as the case may be. I still love my massage therapy work, and will always have time and space for aromatherapy, reflexology, Ayurvedic yoga massage, the list goes on. I’d like to do more with the Ayurvedic Yoga massage, including learning how it can be used in pregnancy, and I’ve been hankering after buying a tuning fork or two since my friend Emily reminded me of their healing power a year or so ago. That’s a whole other avenue to explore…

So much to learn, good job I love it!