I think there is a bit of a gap between our expectations of what a midwife should do and what NHS midwives can actually offer. I'm sure all midwives would love to be a character out of 'call the midwife' cycling from house to house, chatting, listening to all our various problems and generally carrying out the full caring role we imagine when picturing the 'perfect midwife' in our minds. But the truth is, I'm pretty certain that most midwives simply don't have the time to do all the nice little extras that make us feel cared for in that way. Instead they have to do the essentials, the stuff that keeps us and our babies alive.
My midwife is a nice person and clearly an expert in her field but she is very rushed and over-loaded. There simply isn't time for any chit-chat, and since I'm a fairly straight forward case I'm sure she'd rather spend more time with the higher risk pregnancies. But she has done all the essentials and I'm happy with that and I absolutely wouldn't want to do those things on my own.
I had some bleeding last week, called the maternity unit who saw me immediately did all the necessary checks. I was really impressed at how slick the service was.
I actually feel quite sorry for the midwives, it's a difficult job and they're so busy their role has been reduced down to doing the essentials which must feel awful when you've gone into a career specifically to care for people. They constantly get a bashing in the press when it's not the midwives who decide how many of them there are to go around, it's the NHS managers who are bound by funding determined at government level. It's the government you should be angry with.
The NHS is a free service, I personally think we should be grateful that it still exists, it may not when our daughters start having children.