Pregnant lesbian women not receiving same care as other mothers-to-be
October 23rd, 2009 - 1:31 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Oct 23 (ANI): Pregnant lesbian women struggle to be treated like normal expectant mothers as, they say, the focus is often on their sexuality rather than the fact that they are expecting a baby, say researchers.
Swedish researchers from Linkopings University and Uppsala University Hospital have called for special training for midwives, more neutral healthcare routines and forms and special education groups for pregnant women who are lesbians and their partners.
The study showed that pregnant women who are lesbians are not receiving the same care as other mothers-to-be.
The research underlines how important it is for midwives and healthcare professionals to be aware that not all parents are heterosexual and that it is vital to focus on the patient’s needs not their sexuality.
“Ten lesbian women aged from 30 to 46 were interviewed” said lead author Dr Gerd Rondahl, a Senior Clinical Lecturer at the University.
“All were open about their sexuality with healthcare staff, all had experience of antenatal care, childbirth or postnatal care in Sweden and eight of them were in a relationship with another woman at the time of the study.
“Our study showed that none of the women were offered any childbirth and parenting education and some assumed that this was because the midwife did not know how to handle two mothers rather than the mother and father unit normally seen in traditional parenting groups.
“Some reported positive experiences but others felt vulnerable and defenceless because of the way that healthcare staff reacted to them. However, the majority felt that healthcare staff focused more on their sexuality than their needs as pregnant women and prospective parents,” Rondahl added.
The study also showed that some women chose clinics that they knew were experienced in dealing with pregnant women who are lesbians.
Most of the women reported that their first meeting with their midwife was positive. Even if midwives were surprised, they were kind and friendly towards the prospective parents.
But those with negative experience felt it was down to personality not sexuality. However, one mother was so upset at the initial reaction she received - perceived as disbelief and disgust - that she moved to another clinic.
All the women saw the forms the midwife had to fill in as a source of embarrassment for both parties. Some were offended by the standard forms and saw them as conservative and stereotyped. (ANI)
- A dai steps toward ensuring safe motherhood in Rajasthan (With images) - May 01, 2012
- Report says that midwife shortage leads to 1 million deaths every year - Apr 04, 2011
- New mothers in Australia suffer from trauma - Jun 01, 2011
- She braves bullets to bring healthcare to women (Feature) - Apr 16, 2012
- Women's rights being violated in India's surrogacy capital - Mar 02, 2012
- Will mums-to-be learn to hypnotize themselves to cut labour pain? - Feb 14, 2011
- Strong link found between victimization experiences, substance abuse - Feb 25, 2011
- Witness to violence makes women prone to risky sex: Study - May 11, 2012
- Heavy drinking during pregnancy 'ups premature birth risk' - Apr 11, 2011
- Study: Children of Lesbian moms do well - Jun 08, 2010
- Pregnancy doesn't make women forgetful - Feb 03, 2010
- Pregnant women heed mother's wisdom more than medical advice - May 17, 2010
- 'Simulated' needles as effective as real acupuncture - Mar 25, 2011
- Turmeric-based drug being tested against Alzheimer's - Feb 15, 2012
- A white ribbon flutters towards safe motherhood in Rajasthan (With Images) - Apr 29, 2012
Tags: childbirth, clinical lecturer, education groups, expecting a baby, first meeting, gerd, healthcare professionals, healthcare staff, lesbian women, linkopings university, midwife, mother and father, parenting education, parenting groups, pregnant women, prospective parents, sexuality, special education, swedish researchers, uppsala university hospital