Paperbark and Pinard: A historical account of maternity care in one remote Aboriginal town
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Authors
Ireland, Sarah
Belton, Suzanne
McGrath, Ann
Saggers, Sherry
Narjic, Concepta Wulili
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Elsevier
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIM: Maternity care in remote areas of the Australian Northern Territory is restricted to
antenatal and postnatal care only, with women routinely evacuated to give birth in hospital. Using one
remote Aboriginal community as a case study, our aim with this research was to document and explore
the major changes to the provision of remote maternity care over the period spanning pre-European
colonisation to 1996.
METHODS: Our research methods included historical ethnographic fieldwork (2007–2013); interviews
with Aboriginal women, Aboriginal health workers, religious and non-religious non-Aboriginal health
workers and past residents; and archival review of historical documents.
FINDINGS: We identified four distinct eras of maternity care. Maternity care staffed by nuns who were
trained in nursing and midwifery serviced childbirth in the local community. Support for community
childbirth was incrementally withdrawn over a period, until the government eventually assumed
responsibility for all health care.
CONCLUSIONS: The introduction of Western maternity care colonised Aboriginal birth practices and
midwifery practice. Historical population statistics suggest that access to local Western maternity care
may have contributed to a significant population increase. Despite population growth and higher
demand for maternity services, local maternity services declined significantly. The rationale for
removing childbirth services from the community was never explicitly addressed in any known written
policy directive. Declining maternity services led to the de-skilling of many Aboriginal health workers
and the significant community loss of future career pathways for Aboriginal midwives. This has
contributed to the current status quo, with very few female Aboriginal health workers actively providing
remote maternity care.
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Women and Birth
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Open Access
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