ABSTRACT

This book investigates why women choose ‘birth outside the system’ and makes connections between women’s right to choose where they birth and violations of human rights within maternity care systems.

Choosing to birth at home can force women out of mainstream maternity care, despite research supporting the safety of this option for low-risk women attended by midwives. When homebirth is not supported as a birthplace option, women will defy mainstream medical advice, and if a midwife is not available, choose either an unregulated careprovider or birth without assistance. This book examines the circumstances and drivers behind why women nevertheless choose homebirth by bringing legal and ethical perspectives together with the latest research on high-risk homebirth (breech and twin births), freebirth, birth with unregulated careproviders and the oppression of midwives who support unorthodox choices. Stories from women who have pursued alternatives in Australia, Europe, Russia, the UK, the US, Canada, the Middle East and India are woven through the research.

Insight and practical strategies are shared by doctors, midwives, lawyers, anthropologists, sociologists and psychologists on how to manage the tension between professional obligations and women’s right to bodily autonomy. This book, the first of its kind, is an important contribution to considerations of place of birth and human rights in childbirth.

part 1|270 pages

Understanding the problem

chapter 2|21 pages

Giving birth outside the system in Australia

Freebirth and high-risk homebirth

chapter 5|21 pages

The rise of the unregulated birth worker in Australia

The canary flees the coal mine

chapter 6|17 pages

Identifying the poisonous gases seeping into the coal mine

What women seek to avoid in choosing to give birth at home

chapter 7|18 pages

The journey of homebirth after caesarean (HBAC)

Fighting the system or birthing in peace

chapter 11|20 pages

The modern-day witch hunt

chapter 12|15 pages

Birth trauma

The noxious by-product of a failing system

part 2|182 pages

Working towards a solution

chapter 14|26 pages

The role of the coroner in Australia

Listen to the canary or ignore it?

chapter 15|24 pages

Keeping the canary singing

Maternity care plans and respectful homebirth transfer

chapter 16|16 pages

Why Aboriginal women want to avoid the biomedical system

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women’s stories

chapter 18|13 pages

Anthropologist, midwife, researcher

A perspective on birth outside the system

chapter 21|23 pages

Conclusion

Keeping the canary singing into the future