Strollerderby

Two women found guilty of illegal midwifery

Posted by Brett Singer

Two women were found guilty of practicing midwifery without a licenseThis is a serious issue, but I have to say that the term "illegal midwifery" sounds like something out of a bad Shakespeare parody.

Now that I've gotten that out of the way, here's the story:

"Tonya McGlade was found guilty of Attempting Midwifery Without a License.  Linda McGlade was found guilty of Principal to Practice Midwifery Without a License.

"Prosecutors say the women helped Linda McGlade's other daughter-in-law deliver her baby boy.  She died of internal bleeding two days after giving birth back in 2004."

In other words, they attempted to deliver a baby without having a license to do so. Sadly, the mother died; the baby survived. This site has a lot more detail if you're interested (fair warning: it's very sad).

What I'm wondering is, just how prevalent is this practice? If someone decides to give birth at home without a trained person present (midwife, doctor, nurse, whatever) and nothing goes wrong, would they be prosecuted as well? Judging by what I've seen on Babble, home births are far more common than I realized. If I had to guess, I would say that a large percentage of these births are against the law. And something else: isn't the problem that the patient died and received poor treatment, rather than the midwife's lack of license? I mean, you can get a midwife license online. (CORRECTION: according to a commenter, that web site only offers the coursework; to get licensed you have to complete your training under supervision.)

Image/source: mysuncoast.com

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Comments

 

Cassie said:

I guess a trained midwife would know the signs of bleeding to death and an atatched placenta and would have gotten medical attention for the dying woman.  They just sound like really dumb people to me. Watching someone bleed to death is horrible.  She trusted them and they let her suffer and die over two days time.  How awful.

September 6, 2008 5:20 PM
 

Meredith said:

I recently had a great home birth. Trained midwives attending a birth are COMPLETELY different. It is sad and tragic what happened here, but to discount midwifes and the practice of home births - which are legal in many places and even covered by insurance- is narrow minded.

In the UK, there was a recent upset because it was discovered that only about 40% of women were offered home birth. Home birth statistics are very clear about the safety and effacy of a home birth with a mother who is healthy and had proper prenatal care and is working with a trained, experienced midwife.

FYI: most home birth transfers are non emergency and happen because the midwife recognizes a potential for a problem in the mother or the baby. I highly doubt a trained midwife would have had this happen. This is a tragic case, but it would be nice to see some good coverage of home births that aren't about somebody trying to do an illegal one or one of the few cases where things go wrong. Things go wrong in hospitals in the US - we have the highest mortality rates of any industrialized country - and less than 1% of those births are at home - so I highly doubt that home birth is to blame but it gets all the tragic press.

September 6, 2008 9:46 PM
 

tiffer said:

This story is about an untrained AND unlicensed midwife.  It sounds like it was really irresponsible of them to do this.  By the way, I don't think you can get licensed online to become a midwife.  That link you provided looked like it was to get a certificate, which I would imagine MUST be different than licensing.

September 6, 2008 10:25 PM
 

Heather said:

You are misrepresenting the site you provided a link for.  This site provides the academic coursework online but you are required to do the clinicals/hands-on training in your community, under the supervision of a certified/licensed professional.

September 7, 2008 6:29 PM
 

Laura Shanley said:

I've been writing about unassisted childbirth (UC) for many years and have never known anyone who has been prosecuted for having one. UC's are legal in every state except Nebraska where it is a misdemeanor for a father to deliver his baby in a non-emergency situation (it doesn't say anything about the mother catching the baby). However the couples I know in Neb. who have had UC's haven't been hassled.  The case in Florida is sad, but it can't really be classified as either a UC (as I define it) or a midwife assisted birth. The women weren't trained in midwifery, but they also didn't encourage the woman to listen to her body and trust her own instincts. The birthing mother knew something was wrong but told her mother that she was going to defer to her husband because he was the head of the household. Neither midwives or UCer's should be judged by this case.  Thankfully births like this are rare.  The majority of homebirths, both unassisted and midwife assisted are successful.

September 12, 2008 10:05 PM

About Brett Singer

Brett Singer is a writer and father living in Manhattan with his wonderful wife and two terrific sons (referred to here as Thing 1 and Thing 2). He writes about music for the Boston Phoenix, parenting for Babble and daddytips.com, and other topics for anyone else who will have him.

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