0:00
/
0:00
Transcript

Veterinary perspectives on childbirth

What vets wish doctors knew about birth...

To doctors, a normal death is a natural one, and a normal birth is not.

To veterinary surgeons, a normal birth is a natural one, and a normal death is not.

When my father was dying, I was terrified. I’d never seen animals die without assistance, or without a lot of medical intervention trying to avoid it. I couldn’t understand how things could happen differently. My medical friends talked with me, and those conversations reframed my entire view. They helped me understand what was going to happen - what I could control and what I couldn’t. Their kindness and clarity helped me to make sense of an overwhelmingly difficult time.

Ten years later, I had the opportunity to repay that favour.

I was asked to give the speech at my college’s Medical and Veterinary Society Annual Dinner.

I thought back to the conversations I’d had with my medical friends, and how much they’d influenced my views on death.

I thought about the trauma that medical students see on obstetric wards throughout their training. I thought about how their time of seeing nothing but worst-case scenarios must influence their own ability to give birth years later. I thought about the fear that cause many of them feel, and how they might perpetuate that fear in their interactions with their patients throughout their career.

I recognised that fear. It’s the same fear I’d felt around death. And just as they’d helped me, I thought that I could help them.

I decided that the one talk I most wanted to give to the medical and veterinary society, was about exactly where vets and medics cross over, and what vets wish medics knew about birth. Normal mammalian birth.

This is that talk.


Fancy listening to something else?


Want to learn more about birth and the challenges of birth in healthcare systems?

Here are a few articles I’ve enjoyed recently:

Megan Rossiter
Interventions don’t always make things safer
It’s always a tricky conversation to start, the one about interventions in birth…
Read more
Ann Ledbetter
C-section Overuse Is Suppressing the Birth Rate
Cultural and economic factors dominate the conversation about falling birth rates, and the potential solutions. I read a lot of fascinating, well-written, well-researched articles on this topic here on Substack by authors like Elissa Strauss, Lyman Stone…
Read more
Moms Matter
More than Birth - the Brain, the Body and Becoming
As women, we progress through several life stages. During infancy and childhood, we were daughters, and we grew into our identities as sisters and friends. We developed our earliest identity of self: sweet and mannerly, curious and spirited, argumentative and challenging, tomboyish and athletic, idealistic and traditional (not an exhaustive list…
Read more
Doula Dreams & Screams
Heating Up The Birth pool: Why We Have To Help Each Other Out
There is more than one kind of freedom,” said Aunt Lydia. “Freedom to and freedom from. In the days of anarchy, it was freedom to. Now you are being given freedom from. Don’t underrate it…
Read more


And a couple on breastfeeding

The Unsettled
Is Breastfeeding Hard? Or Are All The Odds Just Stacked Against You?
When I was about five months postpartum and exclusively breastfeeding my son I started having pain and discomfort while nursing, I found a lactation consultant who quickly showed me how I was incorrectly positioning my baby causing him to have a harder time drawing the milk down and emptying the breast. Once she showed …
Read more
Anna’s Substack
Extended Breastfeeding
I Was Supposed to Stop Breastfeeding This Week. Then Everything Changed…
Read more
Women's Work
Of Pumps and Pacification
I keep getting text messages from the company I ordered my employer insurance-covered breast pump telling me it’s time to sign up for their “breastfeeding”classes. I resent it…
Read more
Natal Gazing
The problem with pumping
Awkward breast pumping experiences are a rite of passage for most mothers I know. First, the quest to find a private space, and winding up in a grungy storage closet or basement bathroom (I’ve pumped in both; friends have pumped in a parked car, behind the altar in an empty church, and between makeshift cardboard dividers at a crowded conference session…
Read more

Discussion about this video

User's avatar