Jeannine Parvati Baker On Drugs, Drugwar
and Midwifery
by Dan Russell, webmaster@drugwar.com
Listen to this:
http://www.friendsofnan.org:
"On July 6, 2002, Nan Koehler of Sonoma
County, California, mother, grandmother, geriatric caretaker,
herbalist, agronomist, author, midwife (traditional birth attendant),
was arrested and jailed for "reckless child endangerment", "practicing
medicine without a license", and "administering a controlled substance
to a minor" (oxygen), carrying a maximum sentence of four years,
in connection with a birth she attended on February 28, 2000."
This is one of the most expert birthing teachers
in the country, a practitioner and writer with more than 30 years
experience. In reaction to the indictment, the city of Sebastopol,
California, proclaimed Tuesday, October 15, 2002, Nan Koehler
Day and Home Birth Day.
More on this case, and on this teacher's
respected body of written work, can found here.
Jeannine
Parvati:
"My support for Nan being free of legal
action is total, even fierce. I have two midwife friends, Abby
Odam and Gloria Lemay, who have been in prison or are presently
incarcerated for some of the same criminal charges against Nan.
What I have learned is contesting the alleged crimes is a probable
way to become "Joan D'Arc". Yet how can anyone plead guilty to
crimes not committed?"
I saw Preston comment on Midwife
Who Supplied Illegal Drugs Headed To Jail and dashed off a
note to Jeannine, asking for her comments.
Jeannine is another brilliant midwife, author
of Hygieia:
A Woman's Herbal; Prenatal
Yoga & Natural ChildBirth; Conscious
Conception: Elemental Journey Through The Labyrinth Of Sexuality.
Jeannine:
The challenge I have with this is that the
use of pitocin or methergine (medical synthetics to stop uterine
hemorrage) are dangerous and only licensed medical practicioners
are best advised to use it, especially at home. I think
this Amish midwife is actually a MEDwife.
Dan:
very interesting insight. so what safe medications
and/or practices are now prohibited that ought not to be? or are
the regs such a state-to-state patchwork that there is wide variation?
or has enough progress been made so that there is more home-birth
freedom now than previously? to what degree are the drug regs
still being used to deny home-birth freedom?
Jeannine:
'what safe medications and/or practices are
now prohibited that ought not to be?'
This question above you ask limits the truth.
First - "safe" is a red herring. Birth is
as safe as life gets. Next - Regarding homebirth, any regulation
is unwelcomed. Those laws that do exist, limit the use of controlled
substances, such as oxygen, pitocin, and other medical tools such
as delee suction devices, doplars, forceps and vacuum extractors.
As well they should: All of the above carry risk, require skill
and are unnecessary for spontaneous birth.
'or are the regs such a state-to-state patchwork
that there is wide variation?'
There is some variation. For example, in
Utah, there is proposed regulation of midwifery promoted by a
small faction of MEDwives connected to the one state friendly
midwifery school, just this last month. The proposed law sounds
benign - yet I saw through the loopholes. For 30 years, I have
watched how state by state, midwives let the medical monopoly
gain control over birth. They are seduced by the illusion that
licensure will provide immunity from legal and criminal harrassment,
greedily enticed by 3rd party reimbursements, malpractice insurance
and other "benefits" of becoming legal. Then, as one lawyer last
month giving testiomy at the meeting I attended with the Senator
from Orem, who is backing the midwifery proposal said, "This law
would let the camel into the tent. Once the nose was in, next
would come the head, then eventually the whole body so there wasn't
room anymore for a midwife to come into the tent to attend a birth."
This is not fantasy - check out the States who have regulated
or "legalized midwifery" - there are scant authentic midwives
left. The rest have got into bed with the state and are now what
I call MEDwives. And MEDwives need drugs, not mothers who give
birth.
'or has enough progress been made so that
there is more home-birth freedom now than previously?'
In one sense only, there is now more homebirth
- but not much. Nowadays 98+% of all births occur in hospital
in the USA - when I began my work as a midwife in the 1970's,
98% were having babies in hospital. So there are more babies born
at home - yet only proportionally. The stat is still the same
- only about 2% have homebirth despite all of the propaganda to
make midwifery more "available" by midwives becoming more like
doctors and getting licenses.
'to what degree are the drug regs still being
used to deny home-birth freedom?'
Once again, the question itself holds the
problem in place. There are no drugs exogenic needed to give birth.
Indeed, any drug is redundant. (See HYGIEIA: A Woman's Herbal)
Nature provides all that is required in birth - endorphins (opiates
for pain relief), oxytocin (to promote labor/expulsion of placenta
and curtail post partum henorrhage), prolactin (to not only make
milk but aid in post partum uterine involution), etc. All of these
lovely endogenous hormones are free drugs, unregulated by the
state.
Dan:
so the answer to my question: 'to what degree
are the drug regs still being used to deny home-birth freedom?'
is that that the drug regs are an effective
red herring, using the assumption that drugs are necessary for
home birth (what about a local anesthetic to mend minor ripping,
or traditional herbs falsely defined as drugs?) to put a legal
ring around midwifery.
When my wife ripped a little, the local midwife
here, fully qualified, couldn't even administer a local anesthetic
for the two or three stitches needed.
So we have medical issues, and political
red-herring issues, suffused with profound medical lies.
Does the indictment of Nan Koehler have a
political element?
Jeannine:
First, drug regulations do not inhibit our
freedon to choose where and with whom we give birth. It limits
the scope of the birth attendant's practice, that's all. Second,
all of the medical drugs under medical jurisdiction are wisely
regulated. If a pharmaceutical needs to be used in labor or delivery,
then it's best used where the probable other interventions will
need to be employed anyway - the hospital, for it no longer is
a spontaneous birth.
"is that that the drug regs are an effective
red herring, using the assumption that drugs are necessary for
home birth (what about a local anesthetic to mend minor ripping,
or traditional herbs falsely defined as drugs?) to put a legal
ring around midwifery."
"When my wife ripped a little, the local
midwife here, fully qualified, couldn't even administer a local
anesthetic for the two or three stitches needed."
Yes, this is a red herring. Though administering
a local anesthetic sounds benign, if not done properly, nerve
damage could occur. There are alternatives to stitching that midwives
know. MEDwives use needles, metal instruments, and drugs - not
midwives.
"So we have medical issues, and political
red-herring issues, suffused with profound medical lies."
I refer you to the extensive body of work
of Henci Goer who has unravelled the medical conspiracy to wipe
out midwives and homebirth. She is like the Dr. Mendelsohn of
the 21st century for revealing obstetrical myths accepted as consensual
reality.
"Does the indictment of Nan Koehler
have a political element?"
Is this a trick question? It's all
about politics - what if more women, mothers, gave birth as an
ecstatic celebration of female sexuality? Mothers who do will
often declare, "Now I can do anything!" What would the
world look like if half of our population felt empowered to make
a difference with their lives?
Dan:
so the legal misdefinition of whole herbs
as medical drugs falls under the heading of the 'the medical conspiracy
to wipe out midwives and homebirth,' n'est pas?
Jeannine:
It is a little more complex than that, Dan.
I gave a talk on WITCHES MIDWIVES & HERBALISTS at the Green Nations
Herb Gathering in NY just this last season. It took 90 minutes
to articulate the connection you reference above.
I tend to see the primacy of birth ritual
affecting people (if unconsciously) for life. Then what you just
wrote is the story I also tell. The history suggests that the
co-option of birth from midwives by medical men was co-arising
with the persecution of herbalists - for herstorically, we are
often one in the same: midwives are herbalists.
Yet whenever I spin a story with such obvious
"bad guys", I get suspicious. Life isn't black and white and when
it comes to birth and herbs, we have more than a full spectrum
of color.
I recommend the new book by Michel Odent
entitled, The Farmer and the Obstetrician, for its brilliant
deconstruction of the rise in agri-business along with hospital
birth in this last century and what to do about it now.
As Einstein said,"No problem can be solved
by the same consciousness that created it." For the most part,
mothers weren't forced into hospitals or into eating factory farm
foods. These changes away from homebirth and family gardens came
from an impulse to ease suffering in birth and feed the growing
populations - both noble motives, at least in intention.
As we know, the results from industrialized
childbirth and farming have been mixed. From something as simple
as homebirth and natural foods, we now have evolved to epidurals
and GMO's as standard fare.
Yet my point is that these things exist only
because they fulfill a need. My work in midwifery and herbal education
is to fill this need rather through a transfomation in consciousness.
There are no "good" or "bad" guys in this scenario - rather, the
way we have been thinking about birth and healing with plants
needs some adjustment.
Perhaps then we can reclaim our roots and
re-earth our souls by giving birth at home (and without the paid
paranoid) instead of in hospital with the masked man. Babies born
without trauma (AKA the normative obstetric and pediatric management
- or abuse of mothers and babies) are less violent, more connected
and kinder people, especially to their own mothers. This imprint
of respect and gratitude can extend to being kinder to the Mother
Earth. Whole babies can become whole adults who ideally will support
whole foods and herbs to sustain the original unity of consciousness
with our source.
___________________________________
Much more from this inspired teacher can
be found at freestone.org.
The political history of the medical monopoly,
as it relates to the Drug War, can be found in Drug
War: Covert Money, Power & Policy.
"Drug War brilliantly shows how
our healing relationship with plant allies came to be replaced
with the prevailing political agenda of drug propaganda. I recommend
this great book, which I personally couldn't put down as it engages
like a historical / political novel, for all schools of free thinkers.
It is the central text in our homeschool for my teenagers this
year!" Jeannine Parvati Baker