Wednesday, October 2, 2013

925, A Poem

I don't walk across the earth,
the earth moves under me.
And, if you dare to ask,
then I will tell you who I be.
You won't like it,but I'll tell you
that I'm G-O-to the D.
The only thing I understand
is there's no Dina Marie.
So He is all that I see,
or maybe He is a She.
But, then again, possibly,
Al-Ahad, Al-Wahid
is just too much to describe
and would rather be called We.
And if I leave a legacy,
no matter what the story be,
please make sure you erase me.
Concentrate all your belief
on your own divinity
then expand it out of that
and make it everything you see.


-Anonymous

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

The Medicalization of Childbirth, a Lie among Many

April 22, 2012

Some Aspects of the Medicalization of Childbirth

            Childbirth and a woman’s related natural bodily functions have become increasingly medicalized and, to some degree, viewed as an illness or disease which must be dealt with accordingly.  This opposes the true nature of a woman’s body and its functions.  In this paper, I will discuss the reasons leading up to this type of birthing culture as well as discuss some of the consequences of this birthing model on Western women.   My intention is to highlight evidence suggesting that Western birthing culture tends to disempower women and disconnect them from their own bodies and their children uneccissarily.
            It appears that, during childbirth in a hospital of an industrialized nation such as ours, women are assumed to be incompetent and in need of help.  Often times, a woman is rushed to a hospital, desperate for “help.”  A baby is coming and she can’t possibly do it on her own.  She believes she needs medical intervention.  Of course, this notion opposes the thousands of years prior to hospitals or industrialization or the Scientific Revolution during which a woman’s body was doing its part to keep our species alive with or without the help of modern technology.  How could this fear and expectation of trauma and the absolute need for help come to be?
            Firstly, it is important to understand the concept of authoritative knowledge and to describe where our authoritative knowledge pertaining to childbirth and motherhood is derived from. Davis-Floyd, while introducing the notion, states:
 56 “The central observation is that for any particular domain several knowledge systems exist, some of which, by consensus, come to carry more weight than others, either because they explain the state of the world better for the purposes at hand or because they are associated with a stronger power base, and usually both.  In many situations, equally legitimate parallel knowledge systems exist and people move easily between them, using them sequentially or in parallel fashion for particular purposes.  A consequence of the legitimation of one kind of knowing as authoritative is the devaluation, often the dismissal, of all other kinds of knowing.  Those who espouse alternative knowledge systems then tend to be seen as backward, ignorant, and naïve… Whatever they have to say about the issues up for negotiation is judged irrelevant, unfounded…”
            Helman, while discussing “The Origins of Western Birth Culture,” brings up several points on which I will hinge a major part of the discussion of this paper.  First, in terms of where our authoritative knowledge about childbirth originated, he mentions the Cartesian “body as machine” view which “established the male body as the prototype for this machine.”  Of course, a woman’s body can never be a man’s body and therefore cannot live up to this standard.  We can clearly see that, as Helman mentions, “the female body deviated from the male standard, so it was regarded as inherently abnormal, defective, dangerously unpredictable and under the influence of nature, and in need of constant manipulation by men.”171
            300Cartesian doctrine encourages a conceptual separation of mind and body as well. The body is seen as a machine.  When the machine breaks down, a technician is called in to repair it.  As the standard for this particular machine is based upon the male form, and the female derivation from it considered substandard, inevitably a technician will be needed to fix those derivations.   One could then logically pursue the idea that pregnancy and childbirth, being in extreme opposition to the male form, signify extreme need for the help of a technician. The fact that a woman enters into medical care or supervision upon conception of a child and then that care ends after birth reflects this notion.  Pregnancy is the malfunction; technology and medicine are the solutions.  The child is separated from the mother, leaving them both in a state more closely resembling the male prototype and, thus, repairing the machine to a large degree. 
(303)The birthing process is treated, quite often, as an assembly line with the baby presenting as the end product and, perhaps, the mother as nothing more than a component of the assembly line or a by-product of the process even.   This is evidenced by the following quote from a fourth year resident who states, “We shave ‘em, we prep ’em, we hook ‘em up to the IV and administer sedation.  We deliver the baby, it goes to the nursery and the mother goes to her room.  There’s no room for niceties around here.  We just move ‘em right on through.  It’s hard not to see it like an assembly line.”
The labor, for instance, is expected to conform to hospital standards in order to produce the baby, just as a factory has standards by which it is required to operate in order to produce its end product.  In The Technocratic Model of Birth, Davis-Floyd says that “the less conformity a labor exhibits, the greater the number of procedures that will be applied to bring it into conformity… the natural process of birth is deconstructed into identifiable segments, then reconstructed as a mechanical process.”   (302) One physician stated “There was a set, established routine for doing things, usually for the convenience of the doctors and nurses, and the laboring woman was someone you worked around, rather than with.”  Shedding more light on this mode of thought, Mckay, explains the history behind  our traditional dorsal recumbent position in which a Western woman is expected to be in during the second stage of labor when she writes that it “is not based so much in psychological principles as it is on the needs and convenience of the obstetrician… this posture originated in the 1600s when Mauriceau, a French obstetrician proposed it as an alternative to the commonly used birthing stool… because Mauriceau disliked having to carry the woman to her bed after delivery.”   
Jordan discusses the fact that even a woman’s natural hormones which are used during childbirth have been replaced with synthetic ones.  Jordan notes that pitocin, a synthetic version of oxytocin, is often administered to speed up labor when the medical team prepares for the delivery and the woman’s labor slows down.  Administering pitocin has been shown to decrease the production of oxytocin which plays a major role in mother-child bonding, something pitocin cannot do.  Also, there  is evidence to suggest that during the first hour after delivery there are significant increases in oxytocin levels which begin with the expulsion of the placenta.  It would appear that this is a crucial time for initiating the bond between mother and child and that the four hour post partum observation of the child by hospital staff is depriving them of this natural process.  (nissen)  Therefore, we can also see that the institution, or factory, takes precedence over the individual- either mother or child. 
            303Parelleling the separation of mind and body is the separation of mother and child. The new member of society is first observed by medical staff for four hours while lying in a plastic bassinet before being placed back into the arms of his or her mother.  Tests are done, medicines or vaccines administered.  It seems that Helman summed this up quite accurately when he refered to the process as being baptized into technology. Not only is this completely unnatural in terms of bonding between mother and child, but this act alone displays one way in which “society demonstrates conceptual ownership of its product.”  Thereafter, the baby is seen by a pediatrician while the mother sees her own doctor for follow up and it is quite clear that the two are very separate beings at this point.  Six weeks later, the mother leaves medical supervision, the process of rectifying the problem of her body/machine malfunction is done, and the child goes on to be vaccinated and tested routinely for years to come until finally being “confirmed” into the religion of medical technology once making the move from their pediatrician to their physician as an adult.
            So what does all of this mean for the psyche of the Western mother?  What messages are these practices sending her?  One way to interperet this birthing culture is through the lenses of control and power.  In this model, the technicians, or hospital staff, are in control.  They are the ones aware of what’s going on and administering the help or fix which the mother needs.  The mother is neither perceived to be in control of the situation nor have the power to be.  She is neither the factory nor the product.  She is merely one component of the mass production of social members.  Her rite of passage into motherhood is not acknowledged nor is her personal accomplishment cited as an important function in the process.  Essentially, her power and her worth are stripped from her and she is disconnected from herself, her child and her social identity.
            This message can be contrasted with fieldwork done by Jordan on Maya in rural Mexico.  In these communities, women are accompanied by and assisted by the people present during labor which could include family members, the village midwife and other women with experience in childbirth.  Each birth is individualized through “a shared store of knowledge…demonstrations, and remedies… a joint view of what is going on in this  labor, with this  woman-plus-baby, is constructed in which everybody involved in the birth participates… there is no one in charge here… the store of knowledge required for conducting a birth is created and recreated by all participants.” (Davis-Floyd, 60).
            In this model of birthing, the woman in not disconnected from herself through the notions of assembly line production nor is she separated from her role in society.  The mother is not looking for help or a fix.   There is no technician taking specific control of her problem.  There is no dominant authority. She remains an individual, within an inclusive network of family, and a central aspect of the end product, woman-plus-baby. The individualization of the process avoids the concept of conforming to standard practice and, therefore, the perceived need for interventions to bring the labor and birth up to the desired standards.  Their culture establishes the experienced and/or those vested with personal concern for the mother-plus-baby as the ones possessing the authoritative knowledge necessary for the specific birth- including the mother herself.  Through this, the mother is empowered in her roles as a woman, individual, family member and community member, reinforcing both kinship and social bonds.
            The information covered in this paper could be eye opening to many health care professionals in the West as well as women as individuals.  In understanding the social messages being sent to mothers-to-be, medical staff can shift their expectations of women towards a more natural and empowering method of interaction with them.  One change that can be made, and absoloutly should be made is having patience during the labor.  As mentioned in the introduction, birth is a natural process which has been accomplished more often than not without the intervention of medical technology.  It is an atrocity that womens bodies are being expected to adhere to the schedules or convenience of medical staff who she perceives as there to help her. In America, there has been an obvious breakdown of kinship bonds which I, myself, have witnessed progressing during my own short life.  This progression could be slowed,  perhaps, beginning with the separation of mother and child if we begin looking them as connected both to eachother and their family as well as to the society at large- even during childbirth.  Education about childbirth should come from a multitude of knowledge bases which connect the mother to her natural spheres of influence and not only from a separate and somewhat anonymous medical community who is only present during the onset of mechanical malfunction.