Maternal Mortality in America and the Crisis for Rural Women | Linda Robinson | TEDxDirigo

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  • Опубликовано: 10 июн 2024
  • Women in the United States are subject to exceedingly high rates of cesarean section and experience far greater risk of death in childbirth than any other industrialized nation. In this impassioned talk, Linda Robinson calls for accessible, affordable, and women-centric health care for all, especially in under-served rural areas where women’s health options are further curtailed.
    Linda Robinson is a nurse-midwife whose international work has taken her to Malawi, Africa, as a Peace Corps volunteer; to American Samoa where she started the first midwifery practice; and to the Democratic Republic of Congo with Doctors without Borders. She is the author of Sunday Morning Shamwana: A Midwife’s Letters From the Field, and has co-authored two other books, Being Pregnant: A Woman’s Answer Book, and Women’s Sexual Health. She has worked in women’s health care for thirty years, caring for women in all walks of life. She is currently working on a book about health care delivery to women in rural America. Linda is the mother of five children and lives in Bar Harbor, Maine, where she was one of the founders of the Women’s Health Center.
    This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at ted.com/tedx

Комментарии • 17

  • @kaydiangel33
    @kaydiangel33 5 лет назад +12

    I had a home birth in Arizona with a private midwife. ♡ Perfect home birth. I Love my Midwife! All of my friends have had c sections, and repeated c sections in hospital. This is why I had a safe home birth with a professional midwife I trust.

  • @lizzythemage8605
    @lizzythemage8605 5 лет назад +4

    This is terrifying! And so important.

  • @alixwallingford
    @alixwallingford 4 года назад +1

    I almost died 3 times on my son's birthday. First child, 5 hours of pushing, episiotomy and suction and he was still stuck. It was a very emergent c-section. I had preeclampsia very suddenly at 38 weeks. After being stitched up I remember being very tired and went to sleep. I woke up later that evening on a ventilator. I had a severe postpartum hemorrhage due to Uterine Atony. I was bleeding out. The only thing that would save me was a hysterectomy. I am looking for a way to advocate my story and help physicians understand a little better. I have no medical education.
    My only option for children now is adoption or surrogacy/gestational carrier.

  • @Debssssss
    @Debssssss 4 года назад +5

    She is so right it’s all about the $$$ the manipulation is horrible,they should have more midwives .

  • @evj1326
    @evj1326 2 года назад

    This is very true. i have a friend that had to drive 3.5 hours away to deliver her baby VBAC. The hospital that was blocks away refused. The hospitals that were an hour away refused. The hospitals that were 2 hours away refused. The only reason she had to have a c-section the first go around was because the baby was breech

  • @ankra12
    @ankra12 6 лет назад

    Shocking

  • @kirathekingkiller69
    @kirathekingkiller69 7 лет назад +3

    Problem is that when a serious problem arises no one wants to take care of it.

  • @Tfichtenbaum
    @Tfichtenbaum 2 года назад

    I had to have a c section because my induction didnt progress and my sons heartrate was dropping . So it wasnt an issue of doctors just wanting to get things done and over with ...I had preeclampsia as well .

  • @SitaraAleu
    @SitaraAleu 5 лет назад +9

    I'm going to Canada to give birth. I'm sure it's less expensive and I'll have a better chance of surviving

  • @theforestero
    @theforestero 7 лет назад

    Is that supposed to be interesting and modern...?''Multiple C-sections for pregnant woman''?

  • @Nobody-wo5mb
    @Nobody-wo5mb 6 лет назад +5

    I'm sorry but if your American and don't have enough money for transportation or even to hire a sitter for a day or two you should NOT be having a child. I think bringing a child into poverty should be considered abuse. At the same time, condoms and birth control should be free and accessible to avoid the abortion option or raising children in unsafe and poor conditions.

    • @WANNABEMOMMIE2013
      @WANNABEMOMMIE2013 6 лет назад +8

      Holy Atheist Having a child is a basic right. Whether or not you have money should not dictate your rights.

    • @SitaraAleu
      @SitaraAleu 5 лет назад +2

      Your hypocrisy is so potent, I can SMELL it through the screen

    • @kaydiangel33
      @kaydiangel33 5 лет назад +1

      It is a Human right to have a child.

    • @maxmax-mv1oe
      @maxmax-mv1oe 5 лет назад +1

      @@WANNABEMOMMIE2013 to bring a child into poverty...are you a moron? whether you have money or not you should give birth? WHAT? SO YOU SHOULD HAVE 30 CHILDREN BECAUSE YOU CAN, AND HOW DO THEY EAT, WHERE DO THEY LIVE, HOW DO THEY GO TO SCHOOL, WHAT QUALITY OF LIFE...OH WELFARE

    • @tirtzahwolfowicz5986
      @tirtzahwolfowicz5986 4 года назад +8

      The majority of the world for the majority of history has lived in what you would call poverty. How dare you consider that a person's ability to be a parent and build a family is dependant upon their financial status? A person who can provide what you would consider adequately for quality of life today could be below the poverty line tomorrow, wars and financial depressions have proven that. What makes a parent is their ability to love their child and raise them in a way that will benefit all of humanity... those qualities have virtually nothing to do with a dollar sign.