Voice Your Opposition To Unethical Controlled Crying Study
Sign the petition to object to the conditions of the study on Infant Sleep Disturbance, which is being conducted by Kate Jackson at Flinders University.
We are concerned that the children involved in the study will be subjected to ‘sleep training’, otherwise known as controlled crying, cry it out or controlled comforting. This aspect of the study is inconsistent with Flinders University Ethics policy, which requires researchers to protect the rights of their experimental subjects.
The Australian Association for Infant Mental Health [2] does not support the practice of controlled crying stating that the technique “is not consistent with what infants need for their optimal emotional and psychological health, and may have unintended negative consequences”. If there is ANY concern that controlled crying could be harmful to infants, then the rights of the child are not being protected and the study should cease immediately.
Read more on the Controlled Crying Study and here is more information on the Controlled Crying Study
For more information on humane sleep resources, see here.
Welcome to Joyous Birth, the website and forums of the Australian homebirth network. We are a nation-wide group of consumers and birth professionals united in a love of birth and supportive of women’s right to access evidence based midwifery care.
Birth, like sex, can be an intensely exhilarating, intimate and empowering experience. The women who report feeling this way in Australia are most commonly women who have chosen to give birth at home.
Choosing homebirth:
Women who choose homebirth come from a variety of backgrounds and experiences. We choose our homes as the place to welcome our babies for many reasons.
Some of them are:
Continuity of Care
We see one primary midwife through our entire pregnancy, for monthly appointments of up to, or more than, an hour. Some midwives visit our homes each month, some will alternate between their office (often in their homes) and ours. She is our main carer through labour. Our midwife will visit a number of times in the weeks after the birth of a baby as well to monitor our wellbeing and that of our babies. She will also be on call through this time. Many women also like to have a doula or birth attendant as well. Some women choose to only have family members present at their birth.
We choose a model of care which asserts pregnancy and birth are normal physiological states not medical emergencies. Your midwife should promote and maintain an evidence-based practice. Regardless of the model of care you choose, remember to always remain a consumer and advocate for yourself and your baby.
Planning a vaginal birth after previous surgery is fraught with stress and difficulty in hospitals. Because homebirth midwives provide evidence based care, birth after caesarean is viewed no differently from any other birth. Our birthing potential is in no way diminished by previous caesareans and many women birth beautifully at home even after several surgeries.
High routine intervention rates in hospitals and birth centres have made birth potentially dangerous and traumatic for women and babies. Spontaneous, normal, physiological birth is the safest way for babies to be born.
We want to have complete control over the environment in which we birth without having to negotiate with strangers who have timetables and ideas about birth that don't match our own.
We choose to be active and proactive in how we labour and birth and learn as much as we can. We take the power of knowledge with us into birth instead of giving others responsibility for our care, choices and outcomes.
Natural birth is important to us and we see how difficult it is to achieve normal physiological birth in a medicalised setting. Midwives carry medical equipment the same as most birth centres but it is rarely required in an unhindered birth.
We choose to remove ourselves from the medical system which may have traumatised us and our babies at previous births or choose to avoid trauma with our first baby.
We believe that our maternity hospital system is in crisis partly because of an unhealthy emphasis on birth as a medical event and that the funds spent on unnecessary interventions and obstetricians would be better placed giving women access to midwifery care.
We choose to have the most personal, intimate moments of our lives take place in our homes where our children are conceived and surrounded by people we know, trust and love. This might also be very important to us if our children were conceived via methods like IVF which can be impersonal. We want to be the first person to hold our babies and have them on our bare skin from birth without any interruption.
we choose a midwife who is part of our local community network and who will sometimes continue to be an important and cherished part of our families after the birth of our children.
We want our memories of birth to be of hard work with passion and accomplishment. We remember how we first met our babies for the rest of our lives so we owe it to us, and them, for that to be on our terms and as beautiful as we can make it.
Siblings
We may want to have our children at the births of their siblings thus including them in the ordinary miracle of birth. This is a loving gift which will stay with them the rest of their lives.
Breastfeeding
Women who birth at home have greater support and better experiences with breastfeeding. We also establish breastfeeding from birth as our babies are not taken away from us and the hours after birth are crucial in this process.
We want our babies to enter the world gently, without harsh lights, unnecessary intrusive procedures and strangers. Our relationship with our children gets off to the best possible start when the natural processes of labour and birth are unhindered. Babies are designed to birth, they are not designed to cope with unnecessary drugs and surgery.
If you would like to write an article for Joyous Birth, or contribute your birth story, photo or experience, e-mail us! Please remember to use paragraph breaks and send your information in a Word Document, or your photos in jpg format. Send via e-mail to webmistress (AT jb).
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The world’s only forum devoted solely to home birth is right here, filled with energy, enthusiasm and information.
Women planning home births after previously traumatic birth can do so in private and a special forum is devoted to the needs of partners as well. Another closed area of the forum allows women to privately process and seek support for miscarriage and stillbirth.
Enter via the Sheela!
New Features
New Birth Trauma Section! Check out the featured articles looking at issues surrounding birth trauma.
"JB is the most caring, understanding, non-judgemental, and simply wonderful group I have ever been involved in. There is always an understanding ear to listen when you need to share, a helpful person ready to lend advice and offer their opinions/experience when you need a hand, and always just someone around when you need a chat. JB is the place for all birth and parenting support, and to make fantastic new friends!" - Lucky, mama to two boys and uni student.
“Since becoming a member of JB I have met many wonderful women, learnt so much, and had a lot of fun as well! Life has been a bit of a roller coaster (parenting a 7 year old, a miscarriage, a new pregnancy, living in a blended family and many other dramas) and I'm so grateful for all the support, advice, and encouragement from the women at JB. I would strongly recommend to anyone who enjoys talking about natural birth, home birth, parenting, and other general life chit chat join up and share their wisdom, tears, fears, and laughter with us!”- Meg, mama to a wonderful daughter and another baby on the way soon!
"Currently I am a member of the online forum Joyous Birth and a private online support group for women suffering from birth trauma: Accessing Artemis. My involvement in these groups has been incredibly rewarding and given me a special appreciation for the strength and dynamism of women in contemporary Australian society." - Sazz, academia nut.
“A wonderful place filled with much love, support and hope. Fundamentally focussed on empowering women to fully experience the joys of birth, baby and beyond through sharing information, nurturing each other, simplifying birth and getting back to the basics …. joyously and naturally.” - Deb, mama to two and soon to be doula-in-training.
“I've never been involved with online forums before but JB just made me feel so at home. I'm so glad I found this place, so much support from so many wonderful women with such a great sense of community. Not necessarily just for those planning homebirth but anyone that needs to heal after a traumatic birth experience.”- Sandy, mama to a daughter and another baby on the way!