So what next for the Royal Couple? Well, just like any other
new parents-to-be, before any of the screening, bloods, ultrasound, place of
birth, type of birth choices they make, they might like to consider who
they invite to care for them; they may choose to have their care with a private
obstetrician, or they may choose to use their local NHS system, or they may seek
a known midwife to support them in their pregnancy; but they do have a choice over all of these. Essentially, having someone to talk to might
make negotiating all those choices a little easier!
If I was Kate’s midwife (as her midwife, I would call her
Kate, and she may call me Angela), I would spend time with her talking through
her options; in-between appointments (that would be in her own home, and at convenient
times, with appointment times that William could also come to) I would
encourage her to read widely; some books I might suggest to her would include ‘Ina May's Guide to Childbirth’, Childbirth without Fear: The Principles and Practice of Natural Childbirth
’ and ‘What Every Parent Needs to Know: The incredible effects of love, nurture and play on your child's development’, as well as giving her up to date information on nutrition,
screening and normal pregnancy ailments.
(I did google pregnancy books for
Royalty, but it just found the Royal Free in Hampshire!) We would drink tea together, share concerns,
and build a trusting relationship, and she would feel secure in knowing that
she would be well supported in her choices, and that on the big-day, someone she
knew would be at her side when her baby was born.
This type of midwifery care enables women to really make choices; we also know that
they are more likely to have a normal healthy pregnancy, a normal straightforward birth, more likely to
establish breastfeeding, and less likely to experience postnatal
depression. Pretty compelling reasons as to why one-to-one
midwifery care is so important, and why it is essential
that women know that this is the care they should receive as the norm, that they should be shouting loudly for, and that shouldn’t only be open to those
whose NHS trust is forward thinking, or those who can engage an Independent
Midwife like myself, and whose way of working is under threat.
The hype around the beginning of The Duke and Duchess’s
pregnancy will hopefully settle and they will be able to look forward to the
next 8 months or so (albeit it being very much the talk of the nation). Expecting
a baby, is for most people, a joyful, exciting event; but every
woman, whether it’s her first, second or subsequent baby, may still have the
same anxieties, the same pregnancy complaints’ and may have to make some of the
same choices that other mothers will – even
if she is a future Queen!