MIDWIFERY TODAY
Nº 90 - Verão de 2009
Brazil is a huge country with different modalities of childbirth assistance in each region. We have 18 thousand of obstetricians, 6 thousand obstetrical nurses and 60 thousand traditional midwives. These midwives work in the rural area of the north of the country and the obstetricians are concentrated in the urban area.
Our c-section rates can climb up to 99% in private hospitals and at the
same time, if you need a c-section in the Amazon forest, the nearest hospital
can be two days away, by boat, crossing small and big rivers.
In Brazil we have a rate of maternal and perinatal mortality that puts us
in worse conditions than Tunisia, Thailand and Mexico, among others, and
very close to countries like Peru and the Philippines. Another relevant fact is
that for each registered maternal death, another woman suffers damages to her
health, often irreversible ones. Every year about 15 million women experience
severe complications related to the way they were assisted in childbirth
(Mirsk, In Santos, 2001).This tragedy can be avoided because it is intimately
associated to social injustices at all levels, to poverty and mainly to the lack of
a minimum warranty of their reproductive rights, as well as the lack of
implementation of an appropriate model of attendance to pregnancy, childbirth
and postpartum. (Santos,2001)
To have better outcomes in 1984, a Public Health program came into
existence, the PAISM. (Program of Integral Assistance to Women’s Health ),
and with this new paradigm fiercely introduced by the feminist movement, the
concept of natural vaginal birth started to be re-born in the urban areas.
A good example of this occurred in May 28, 2003 when the Minister of
Health signed two documents implementing specific strategies to reduce
Brazilian perinatal mortality rates. In these strategies, is included a financial
support to continuing educational programs for traditional midwives, as well
as specialization courses for nurses who want to become nurse midwives. This
means that Brazil has now the support of its government to promote natural
vaginal birth and the humanization of the assistance to women and children.
In the nineties, the Brazilian movement for the humanization of
childbirth grew. ReHuNa – The Web for Humanization of Childbirth and
Birth - a National NGO which gathers institutions and professionals working
in the field of childbirth and birth. It is a movement for the improvement of
childbirth and birth attendance. The resurrection of ABENFO – the Brazilian
Association of Obstetric Nurses, in 1992, its growth and social penetration
should also be mentioned.
The humanistic model is growing quickly and occupying new spaces in
the Brazilian national scenery. Today we have in Rio de Janeiro, under the
jurisdiction of the Municipal General Office of Health, resolutions, norms and
routines that assure the humanization of the attendance. Under this umbrella,
several hospitals have brought back the obstetric nurse in the laboring and
birthing rooms, have beautified their environment in order to offer a
differentiated attendance that represents a shift of paradigm toward the
humanization of childbirth. While the companion’s presence in the delivery
room is encouraged, routines such as enema and episiotomy have been
removed from the manuals of natural birth attendance produced by the
Ministry of Health (2001).
At the Conference in Fortaleza, (To Humanize Childbirth), attended by
2000 persons in the year 2000, we Brazilians experienced a wonderful and
empowering crosspollination that transformed and enhanced our work under
the banner of the humanization of childbirth.
Since this seminal Conference, Brazil has hosted a dozen of events,
featuring outstanding proponents of the relevance of pregnancy, birth and
breastfeeding for a healthy ecological society, like Michel Odent, Robbie
Davis-Floyd, Naoli Vinaver Lopez, Mary Swart, Laura Uplinger and Ina May
Gaskin. One of this occurred In 2002, the first Congress ~ The Ecology of
Childbirth- A Celebration of Life~ attended by 850 persons, launched the
ideal of the physiological and ecological birth as a means for the woman and
the baby to deeply experience a connection with themselves, their
environment and the cosmos. Such connection carries the power of
transforming the way we live. We consider that this expression Ecology of
childbirth represents and contains the whole idea of the relationship between
physiological childbirth and cultural, anthropological and cosmic events
together at work when a new human being is born.
In Oaxaca this year (2003), at the Midwifery Today Conference,being
together with traditional parteras from Latin America and also with
professionals many of the participants were able to realize that the knowledge
of the parteras needs to be protected and deserves to be rediscovered by
society at large. Meeting all of them made me feel like I was in Acre our
Amazonian. The energy of the group, is the same of the woman in the forest.
They way they love their work as a mission, the solidarity, their open heart
and the anxiety to learn with any new experience are all the same.
Birth professionals around the world, need to be aware that a good way
to have better birth outcomes is to reduce the number of interventions .We
need to reclaim the old skills that were once developed before the c-section
age, and we need to do it before it’s gone totally. In this aspect Brazil has an
important role to play due to its great number of traditional parteras and its
cultural relevance in Latin America.
Our next step will be: The 2 º Congress The Ecology Of Childbirth –A
Celebration of Live that will occur in May 27-30 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. We
have the pleasure to invite all of you to share ideas and ideals to transforming
the scene of birth to come to Rio de Janeiro and share your knowledge and
enthusiasm with participants from, Latin America, Europe, United States and
all the different regions of Brazil.
We are working hard to organize a Congress that can help our daily
mission. A Congress also plenty of samba, hugs, kisses and friendship..
We wish to have many of you in Brazil!!
Sejam todos Bem-Vindos!! ( You are all welcome!!)
Heloisa Lessa