Birth injuries: the big strain on daily life

It's Birth Trauma Awareness Week 2022 (18-23 July), the theme this year is Physical Birth Injuries: diagnosis and treatment. Together with Birth Trauma Association UK (BTA) and Australasian Birth Trauma Association (ABTA) we conducted a survey, which focuses on diagnosis, treatment and impact of physical birth injuries. Our findings illustrate the major impact birth injuries can have on daily life, mental and physical well-being, relationships and intimacy.

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The abdomen, my tummy

‘One interaction can have two very different perspectives’, says Grace Anees. Think of a caesarean birth - and the different perspectives the doctor and mother hold in that moment. Grace shares about how she got familiar with both sides - as a medical student and as a woman giving birth. Her reflection is written down in a powerful poem. Could we sometimes close the gap a little between professionals and parents, she wonders?

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My trauma was triggered: here's what I did to help myself

Make Birth Better CEO Nikki Wilson is back leading the team after six months of maternity leave. She writes about how it went with baby #3. Nikki: “Trauma was not the overall theme of having our third. But in this post I want to share with you how birth trauma can leave a lasting imprint. When something feels the same as those dark and difficult days, I still have to work hard to re-wire those connections.”

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An open letter from LGBTQ+ birth professionals

There has been recent discussion about ‘trans issues’ within perinatal services. A collective of LGBTQ+ perinatal workers in the UK, would like to explain some of the issues. Most of the coverage surrounding inclusion for LGBTQ+ people in the birth world is written by and for cisgender heterosexual (cishet) people. They wrote an open letter (which we are reposting to show our support), not in response to one single event but as a means to have a voice.

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Maternity safety: what does it mean?

The theme of World Patient Safety Day 2021 is ‘Maternity safety’. The World Health Organisation (WHO) is urging for partners to, ‘Act now for safe and respectful childbirth’. Dr Jacqui Williams, Senior Midwifery Adviser (Education) at the Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC), reflects on what this means in the day-to-day practice of maternity professionals.

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My slanted scar: a story of love and pain

As the firstborn child from a large family, having children always appealed to Sarah. Only time could reveal when, how and with whom. Her story of becoming a mum starts with two suitcases and a one-way ticket, a sudden relocation and the whirlwind of a global pandemic. She shares how giving birth was simultaneously the most traumatic and joyful event of her life.

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