This is somethign I have been thinking about for a while but I was prompted to start this thread by a post on another thread (about breastfeeding).
My perception is that high-risk women are being completely let down by the system, their medical needs are being met but their holistic needs are being completely overlooked, while low-risk women are receiving much better all-round treatment. This seems mad to me and completely arse about tit - it's established that difficult births lead to higher rates of PND and lower rates of bfing - surely everyone needs all round care, but high-risk women especially?
My own experience bears this out - I have had two births with completely different experiences.
In my first pregnancy I was put into a high-risk protocol. I saw a different health professional for every single appointment, the only person I saw more than once was the (extremely busy) consultant who did my scans. I did not have a named midwife and the community phone was rarely answered so I had no-one to go to with my worries. I had to schlep over to the hospital for many of my appointments involving a very long commute and extremely long waits. During my labour I was attended by 6 different midwives, and was left alone for quite long periods. Afterwards DH was sent home and I was left alone on the ward and offered no help with breastfeeding. I received 2 post-natal visits from a midwife who again, I had never met before. We were all safe and well at the end of it but it was very far from ideal care.
My second pregnancy by contrast was a dream experience - I had a home birth and was able to have most of my antenatal appointments at home as well - far easier with a toddler to amuse and I could lie on the sofa and watch TV while waiting! I had a named midwife who I saw throughout my pregnancy, she was part of a small team and when she was away I saw one of her colleagues. They had regular coffee mornings so I was able to get to know the whole team. I had my midwife's mobile number and could call her at any time with any queries. When I went into labour I had met both my midwives before and the midwife who delivered my baby visited me afterwards for 21 days before signing me off.
The homebirth/hospital birth contrast may be extreme, but it's also almost invariably the case that the low-risk birthing centre is soothingly decorated, well-equipped, with en suite bathrooms and facilities for partners to stay, while the high-risk wards are Victorian, shabbily decorated with shared bathrooms and little support.
I don't understand why the NHS seems to think that low-risk women deserve soft lighting and one-to-one midwife care, while high-risk women should shut up, put their feet in the stirrups and be glad their baby is alive?
What does anyone else think?