Canada: 'closer to the goal of regulated midwifery across the country': Canadian midwives Kerstin Martin and Rosalind Lydiate provide an update on midwifery regulation in the provinces of Canada.

AuteurMartin, Kerstin

Kerstin Martin, RM, MA, President, Canadian Association of Midwives/Association Canadienne des sages-femmes, reported to ICM:

In the majority of Canadian provinces and territories today, the regulation and integration of midwives in the health care system is either established or underway. The western prairie province of Saskatchewan recently proclaimed its Midwifery Act in March 2008; Nova Scotia on the Atlantic coast has also passed legislation and expects to implement midwifery in 2008--bringing us closer to the goal of regulated midwifery all across the country. Considering that midwives were not legally recognised anywhere in Canada only 20 years ago, these developments represent tremendous and rapid change.

Saskatchewan midwives (and women) are delighted with these developments and look forward to the day when midwifery services will be available across the province.

Membership in the Canadian Association of Midwives (CAM), including students, now stands at 800--an increase of 50% within the last three years. In a country as vast as ours, however, these numbers are still very small. In many communities there are no midwives at all; in others midwives are so much in demand that 40% of women have to be turned away. With the exodus of family physicians from the field, primary maternity care is increasingly delivered by obstetricians (84% of all births in Ontario). Fewer than 10% of births in Canada are attended by midwives; home births constitute only 1-2%. The need for more midwives, especially in rural, remote and Aboriginal communities, is acute.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The regulatory, educational and systemic challenges of building the midwifery profession in Canada are immense, but so are the opportunities.

This last year alone, we have seen increased government funding to expand the capacity of university midwifery education programs in Ontario; federal government support for the development of midwifery policy and a national database; discussions about reciprocal accelerated educational tracks for nurses and midwives; the launch of a national registration exam; preparation of a multi-jurisdictional bridging program for internationally-trained midwives; and ground-breaking work by First Nations, Metis and Inuit midwives to create a national Aboriginal midwifery organisation under the CAM umbrella.

Midwifery in Canada continues to be an exciting and deeply rewarding profession as it gradually assumes a more central place in...

Om verder te lezen

PROBEER HET UIT

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT