International MotherBaby Childbirth Organization
  • HOME
  • IMBCI Initiative
  • Webinars
  • History
  • About
  • Contact Us

IMBCO's Loss of Two Advocates

8/31/2016

0 Comments

 
IMBCO is deeply saddened by the loss of our long time advisor Miriam Labbok, MD, MPH, IBCLC. With Miriam's extensive international experience with UNICEF and the Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative she provided IMBCO guidance in creating the IMBCI and supporting documents. To learn more about Miriam's legacy visit the World Alliance for Breastfeeding Action (WABA) link here.

Unfortunately IMBCO also lost another passionate breastfeeding supporter, Dr. Audrey Naylor who gave IMBCO permission to use her term "MotherBaby" in our document. Audrey affectionately and simply stated that you don't separate the mother and baby - it's "MotherBaby". You can read more about this dedicated teacher on WABA's page.
0 Comments

Participate in the 10 Step Webinars LIVE

8/9/2016

0 Comments

 
Each month we are hosting a live webinar featuring one of our 10 Steps of the IMBCI. You can join us by subscribing to our newsletter on our home page - have no fear we will only send you the invitation to join the webinar and a reminder. Our current live webinar schedule is:

Step 4 - September 12, 2016 at 3:00 (NY time) on Drug-Free Comfort Measures
Step 5 - October 10, 2016 at 3:00 (NY time) on Evidence-Based Practices
Step 6 - January 9, 2017 at 3:00 (NY time) on Avoiding Harmful Procedures
Step 7 - February 13, 2017 at 3:00 (NY time) on Enhancing Wellness and Preventing Emergencies
​Step 8 - March 8, 2017 at 3:00 (NY time) on Evidence-Based Skilled Emergency Treatment
Step 9 - April 10, 2017 at 3:00 (NY time) on Collaborative Care
Step 10 - May 8, 2017 at 3:00 (NY time) on Baby-Friendly


You can watch the currently published Steps on our home page or our YouTube channel.
0 Comments

IMBCI 10 Steps Webinars -                                                                                                        Step 1 "Treat Every Woman with Respect and Dignity"

7/2/2016

0 Comments

 
The IMBCO board of directors are in the progress of creating a webinar for each of the The IMBCI Ten Steps. Step 1 - Treat every woman with respect and dignity is complete and was enthusiastically received during the live webinar. The Step 1 archive can be viewed below or through our YouTube channel here. 
 
This webinar historically was launched 10 years after our historic TAG  (Technical Advisory Group) meeting in  Geneva, June 2006. At our TAG meeting global leaders and organizations provided input from the largest survey on birth and breastfeeding practices from 163 countries to create the International MotherBaby Childbirth Initiative (IMBCI) - 10 Steps to Optimal MotherBaby Maternity Services. This document is framed with respectful care and compassion.
 
We have IMBCI demonstration sites that are committed to improving care based on the IMBCI 10 Steps in Quebec, Austria, Brazil and India. In addition, there is a growing network of MotherBaby facilities, birth centers and providers who are making a difference in low, mid and high resource settings  including disaster zones where there is no running water or electricity.  

“This MotherBaby Model of Care promotes the health and wellbeing of all women and babies during pregnancy, birth, and breastfeeding, setting the gold standard for excellence and superior outcomes in maternity care. All maternity service providers should be educated in, provide, and support this MotherBaby Model of Care.”
​
0 Comments

The 10 Steps in Times of Crisis: A Webinar with Vicki Penwell

8/26/2015

4 Comments

 
Picture this: your home and country have been ravaged by a super typhoon; you are displaced, hungry, scared… and nine months pregnant! Living in a tent http://www.wiziq.com/online-class/3054942-respectful-quality-care-with-compassion-training-to-implement-the-imbci-ten-steps at a refugee camp your water breaks… now what?

For a pregnant woman finding herself in that situation, the options can be disheartening – and dangerous. Lack of resources and access to quality maternal and fetal care are a grim reality for displaced pregnant women. Scared and out of options, they are often forced to deliver their babies in suboptimal conditions. However, when this happened in the Philippines last year, Mercy in Action - led by Vicki Penwell - was quick to respond with midwifery care. But that’s not all! In the midst of this disaster zone (babies were being delivered in tents!), Vicki and her team conducted a 40-hour training on how to implement the IMBCI 10 steps in a disaster zone.  The IMBCI 10 Steps are a woman-centered, non-interventionist approach for labor and birth that promotes the health and well being of all women and babies during pregnancy, birth, and breastfeeding (you can read more about the IMBCI 10 steps here). Not only were babies being delivered safely by highly trained midwives, the mothers were given respectful, evidence based care. Amazing, right?

So, how does somebody pull off such an amazing feat? To find out, please join us on October 7, 2015 at 9 a.m. EST for a FREE webinar with Vicki herself! She will be discussing how she and her team of midwives were able to implement the IMBCI 10 Steps following the 2014 typhoon that hit the Philippines. This webinar is an amazing opportunity to learn more about the IMBCI 10 steps in depth and how they can be implemented in a time of crisis. The webinar is open to anybody interested in maternal health, midwifery, obstetrics, childbirth, humanitarian efforts, etc. All are welcome!

Don’t miss this fantastic and FREE webinar with Vicki Penwell and the International MotherBaby Childbirth Organization. To register click here: http://www.wiziq.com/online-class/3054942-respectful-quality-care-with-compassion-training-to-implement-the-imbci-ten-steps 

To find out more about Mercy in Action click here

And don’t forget to “like” us on Facebook!

4 Comments

News from Greece:  First National Action for MotherBaby Friendly Hospitals

9/17/2013

0 Comments

 
0 Comments

Happy International Week for Respecting Childbirth!

5/27/2013

1 Comment

 
Birth activists in many countries around the world celebrate the International Week for Respecting Childbirth in May every year to bring attention to a particular topic related to respectful and dignified care in childbirth for all women. The 2013 edition of IWRC is just wrapping up, held from May 20 to May 27 on the theme: 
Do Not Disturb... Birth in Progress
The IWRC was initiated in 2004 by Alliance française pour l’accouchement respecté (AFAR), a French non-profit society entirely free from philosophical, medical, religious and political lines of thinking. Since 2011 its coordination has been handed over to the European Network of Childbirth Associations (ENCA). IMBCI region and country representatives, especially in Europe, have been connecting the IMBCI: 10 Steps to IWRC and actively using IMBCI documentation to promote and advocate for respectful care.

In Greece, Maria Andreoulaki shared with us that events and demonstrations were organized as early as mid-April in prelude to the IWRC. The IMBCI: 10 Steps were central to these conversations. 

Lucie Ryntova shared that in the Czech Republic, the Active Motherhood Movement organized events geared toward informing women and their families about physiologic and respectful care during pregnancy, labour and birth, the postpartum period, and beyond...

Events celebrating IWRC 2013 in Quebec, Canada focused in on physiologic care in childbirth and even approached the theme quite literally with one session on "hands off" vs. "hands on" practice in the 2nd stage of labour (or the pushing stage).
Did you plan or participate in any activities for IWRC 2013? We would love to hear from you in the comments section below or on our Facebook page! 
1 Comment

Visiting the IMBCI Demonstration Site in Austria

4/15/2013

2 Comments

 
A few months ago, Debra Pascali-Bonaro, Chair of the IMBCO Board of Directors, visited our demonstration site at the Feldbach Community Hospital in Feldbach, Austria. Debra shares her thoughts and some images from her visit with us. Share your thoughts with us in the comment section below!
Picture
Each time I enter Feldbach Hospital and see their amazing birthing suites I have to ask myself why can’t other hospitals do this? Why have so many hospitals set up the room with the smallest bed one has ever had when you are the biggest in your life? When you are welcoming a new baby, why is there not room for your partner, husband, children or newborn to cuddle with you? Why are we creating so much separation at a time that we crave connection?

My heart sings in the birth rooms at Feldbach Hospital. The energy, the music, the lighting the birth ambiance is everywhere. The midwife comments on the view, the openness. Even in the Operating Room there are windows so the woman can experience birth as part of life, not afraid even in this sterile environment she is connected to nature, to the day.

Look around at these images, what does your community hospital room look like?

What would it take to make a change the built environment of your local hospital to an active space? To a welcoming space?  To a space that includes our families and provides a home-like environment in the hospital? 

Picture
Picture
2 Comments

IMBCO at the Human Rights in Childbirth Conference

8/10/2012

3 Comments

 
The International MotherBaby Childbirth Initiative: 10 Steps to Optimal MotherBaby Services was established in 2008 upon a foundation of basic principles that recognize women and children’s rights and access to healthcare as human rights. Although the UN Human Rights Council acknowledges maternal health as a human rights issue, physical morbidity and mortality remain the most cited results of rights violations. For example, the recently released US Country Reports on Human Rights Practices provide summaries of each country’s respect of human rights and highlight access – or lack thereof – re skilled prenatal, intrapartum, postpartum, and emergency obstetric care. Omitted from these reports, however, are the treatment of women and the circumstances surrounding childbirth.

“Who decides how a baby is born? Who chooses where a birth takes place? Who bears the ultimate responsibility for a birth and its outcome? What are the legal rights of birthing women? What are the responsibilities of doctors, midwives, and others  in childbirth? What are the rights and interests of the unborn, and how are they protected?”

On May 31st-June 1st, three IMBCO board members – Debra Pascali-Bonaro, Robbie Davis-Floyd, and Hélène Vadeboncoeur – joined some 300 participants and 50 panelists in addressing these questions and more at the Human Rights in Childbirth Conference (HRiC), hosted by the Bynkershoek Research Centre for Reproductive Rights at The Hague University of Applied Sciences, The Hague, in the Netherlands. The aim of the conference was three-fold. With an international focus, the organizers wished to to engage attendees in discussion on the implications of the European Court of Human Rights’ 2010 holding that women have a human right to choose the circumstances and location in which they give birth. Then narrowing in on the Netherlands, stakeholders in the obstetric system were convened for meaningful dialogue about the legal status, efficacy, and future of birth options in this country. Finally, the objective was also to publish a collection of legal and scholarly materials on human rights in childbirth, authored by conference participants.

Implications of the Ternovszky v. Hungary Holding
Over the past few months, the world – of birth professionals and activists at the very least – has been watching Hungary closely to see how the case of Dr. Agnes Gereb will unfold. Midwife and obstetrician, Gereb was taken into custody in October 2010 for reasons that are still unclear. Over the course of 20 years, she had functioned most of the time as the only care provider for home birth in Hungary, attending the births of over 3500 babies.

After Gereb’s arrest, faced with the difficulty of finding a provider who would attend her home birth, Anna Ternovszky, with the help of attorney Stephanie Kapronczay, brought her case to the European Court of Human Rights. Based on the European Convention of Human Rights’ Article 8, the ECHR ruled that the right to privacy includes “the right of choosing the circumstances of becoming a parent” in addition to the decision to become – or not – a parent and that “giving birth incontestably [forms] part of one's private life” (Ternovszky v. Hungary, no. 67545/09, 14 December 2010, pp. 22). What does this decision mean for birthing women in Hungary, their providers, and Dr. Agnes Gereb? Despite the Convention of Human Rights and the court decision officially applying as domestic law to all European countries, the regulation of home birth continues to be highly restrictive in Hungary. As for Gereb, she remains under house arrest.

While conference attendees were urged to consider bringing their own cases before domestic courts, in Europe, if out-of-hospital birth is not truly accessible for women, other ways of affecting change were also explored and discussed. On Day 1 of the conference, Robbie Davis-Floyd moderated Panel 2: Risk, Safety, Costs & Benefits: Weighing Choices in Childbirth, during which Hélène Vadeboncoeur mentioned the work on Respectful Maternity Care by the White Ribbon Alliance for Safe Motherhood and of course the International MotherBaby Childbirth Initiative. Robbie also described a successful care model, the all-risk Albany Midwifery Practice in London, which was shut down in 2009 after achieving a homebirth rate of 48%; she highlighted that is often the fate of such models as they fall victim to their own success.

On the morning of Day 2, Robbie gave a short introductory presentation on the Dutch system of maternity care, noting that although its high homebirth rates have caused others to call it a premodern vestige of the past, the Dutch system is in fact a postmodern vanguard of the future.

Robbie also noted that the Dutch system is in danger—the homebirth rate in The Netherlands, sustained for three decades at 30%, has fallen in the past three years to 20% due to many factors combining all at once. These include an effort by the Dutch government, in alliance with the medical and insurance industries, to move birth into tertiary care hospitals by shutting down many small community hospitals. Dutch law has long stated that midwives can only provide homebirth care when the home is no more than 30 minutes from the hospital. When nearby community maternity hospitals no longer exist, women lose the option for homebirth. On the positive side, Robbie noted, the Dutch government is building many birth centers staffed by independent, autonomous midwives close to or inside of hospitals to continue to provide the option of “out-of-hospital” birth.

Other central topics of the Human Rights in Childbirth conference that the IMBCI prioritizes included:

Evidence-based care and informed decision-making: In addition to presentations and discussion on some of the most recent evidence on childbirth practices, conference attendees participated in consensus building. Some results were that:
  • Women have the right to choice of birth place, manner, and birth assistants.
  • Women should never be forced or coerced to accept any medical interventions

A continuum of collaborative care: Debra Pascali-Bonaro, Chair of the IMBCO and a DONA certified doula trainer presented aspects related to continuous companionship of doulas and the importance of their support. The consensus among participants was that:
  • Partnership and collaboration should characterize all aspects of maternity care.
  • Midwives should be autonomous practitioners caring for autonomous women.
  • Women and midwives should not be criminalized for supporting normal birth.

The MotherBaby dyad: In a discussion on the rights of the baby, panelists mentioned a mother’s interest in protecting her child – rather than needing an outside authority to protect her child from her – and a baby’s rights to good circumstances surrounding birth, as well as to safety. In other words:
  • The rights of the fetus should never be placed above those of the mother because when they are, the mother’s own rights are always jeopardized.

IMBCO’s Commitment to Advancing Human Rights in Childbirth
Honored to have members of the Board attend the conference, the IMBCO is committed to advancing human rights in childbirth through the promotion of optimal MotherBaby maternity services. The first step of the Initiative: Treat every woman with respect and dignity, is at the very heart of our efforts. The other steps and respect for human rights of women and children naturally flow from respectful and dignified care when appropriate systems and support are in place. And it isn't the first time that the IMBCI and human rights have been discussed together!

It is through a vast network of supporters that optimal MotherBaby maternity services, as outlined in the Initiative, are being implemented. We now count 8 demonstration sites and 13 MBNets throughout the world, as well as 25 region and country representatives who advocate for improvements locally.

Actions for the Future
As the deadline for the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) approaches and we look toward post-2015’s potential ‘Sustainable Development Goals’, conference attendees called for a replacement of the biomedical model by the human ecological model. They propose that international guidelines on maternity care should be written with a human rights approach and that women’s needs and the physiologic process of birth hold a central position.

Did you attend the Human Rights in Childbirth conference, in The Hague or somewhere else in the world through the Webinar? What were your impressions of the conference? How might the discussions resulting from the conference affect MotherBaby care in your part of the world?

Visit www.humanrightsinchildbirth.com for more on the conference and resulting actions! 
3 Comments
    Tweets by @iMotherBaby

    Archives

    August 2016
    July 2016
    August 2015
    September 2013
    May 2013
    April 2013
    August 2012

    Categories

    All
    Conferences
    Demonstration Site
    Human Rights In Childbirth Conference
    Mdgs
    Step 1
    Step 3
    Step 5