I cut and pasted an article I read... I am fairly sure the author would be happy for this to be publsied (at least I hope so).... but I can confirm you can decline a vaginal examination (VE) .... to those of of you who don't know this - some women (not saying this is your case Milkybarkid) who can't stand "VE" can have been a victim of sexual abuse/rape in their past.... so don't be too harsh in judging why a woman really doesn't want a VE. Abuse is more common than we think.
Here it is :
Vaginal Examinations
An unnecessary intrusion
by Emma Lewis
An experienced midwife should not need to use vaginal examinations.
An inexperienced midwife should be learning how NOT to need them by not doing them.
Modern midwives are loosing the skill of knowing - they are busy doing.
Performing a vaginal examination communicates to a woman that the midwife does not believe in or trust natural birth.
A vaginal examination interferes with the body?s natural birthing flow. It is highly invasive and, many women feel, abusive. Myth information around vaginal examinations needs to be dispelled.
Women need to understand how utterly irrelevant such measurements are. It can take weeks to dilate a couple of centimetres and minutes to dilate the final ones. Or any combination.
This is not most women?s belief or understanding. Too many women at vulnerable times have had a vaginal examination, sometimes at their request (not understanding the irrelevance of the measurements) and have been told ?only? four centimetres dilated.
When they have been working hard, are struggling.... tired... hurting... this can be the final straw leading to requests for help which lead quickly to more intervention.
If a woman could truly understand how unreliable and unrealistic this gauge is.
For some women it is helpful to check themselves over the weeks, days, hours leading up to the birth of their baby. This way they learn the beautiful, gentle, subtle changes that are occurring. Softening. Thinning. They can feel movement. Progress.
A greater gift a midwife can bring is to encourage and support a woman to let go of measurements and expectations, centimetres and minutes into surrender. Go with the flow. A magnificent crash course for motherhood!
A mother will know if anything is not all right with the baby. Her baby communicates through her. A woman supported, listened to and in tune, will communicate this with the greatest of clarity.
No mother needs permission to push (ie allow baby to move down), from anyone other than her own body - through which baby clearly communicates.
?Wild woman, mother, midwife and healer? (beautiful chant gifted to women through Jeannine Baker)
We are all all of these.
We know.
This article was originally published in ?The Mother? magazine.