Embrace, a social movement for mothers who experienced abuse when accessing reproductive healthcare, has launched an awareness campaign. They say violations can be physical, verbal and psychological, and include medically unnecessary and coerced interventions. This neglected form of gender-based violence happens during pregnancy, childbirth and in the postpartum period. We spoke to mothers who shared their experiences of pain, trauma and neglect while giving birth at state hospitals.
Imagine being a scared 15-year-old having painful contractions in the reception area of a hospital because staff refuse to admit you. Well, this was the case for Noloyiso Williams from Redhill in Cape Town who says the memory of this experience is still traumatic almost ten years later.
Williams’s experience is shockingly not an isolated incident.
Obstetric violence common across the world
According to gender justice expert, researcher and activist Dr Jess Rucell, the World Health Organisation in 2014 confirmed that women across the world, but especially in lower-income countries, who give birth in hospitals commonly experience obstetric violence.
“Since 1998, research on obstetric violence has been documented in the Western Cape, Eastern Cape and Gauteng, in cities and rural areas.
Embrace recently hosted an event to raise awareness about this lesser-known form of gender-based violence as the national 16 Days of Activism came to an earlier this month. The campaign was started in response to the organisation being inundated with stories from people across the country.
Williams share morbid details
Speaking to GroundUp, Williams recounted the day she went into labour with her now ten-year-old son. She explained that she had been registered at False Bay Hospital where she had her antenatal checkups. But as it got closer to her due date, her mother insisted she move in with her at Samora Machel. “Soon after, I went into labour and False Bay Hospital was too far, so we went to [a closer well-known Cape Town public hospital],” said Williams.
“We went to the emergency waiting area and I was in unbearable pain. All I was doing was crying. All I could hear was one of the nurses questioning my mother about why they had brought me to that hospital and not False Bay Hospital. It ended up being an argument between them.”
“Only after my father intervened, begging them to at least let me give birth and then transfer me to False Bay, did I finally get a bed. By this time blood was running down my legs,” said Williams.
She was rushed in for an emergency C-Section operation because the baby was in distress. “The healing process for me was hell and I ended up suffering from postpartum depression,” said Williams.
Mothers kicked out of ward
Another mother who spoke out about her experience was Shana Fife from Mitchells Plain. She said that the day after her C-section, some of the women in her ward were asked to move to the lounge area to make more bed space for new mothers.
She waited there in the cold, without any pain medication for 18 hours. “The windows and chairs were broken. I sat and I waited. No one came to feed me or give me medication. I kept going to the nurses telling them I was in pain and asking for pain medication, telling them that the paediatrician had not come to check the baby and that it was cold. It was around May so winter was starting.”
Fife said that by the time a relative was able to come to pick her and the baby up, she could barely move. “I was in a lot of pain because of the C-section and could barely stand up. Having been a psych patient with a history of prenatal depression, I was anxious the whole time,” said Fife.
Doccie puts spotlight on obstetric violence
Embrace also launched a five-part documentary series, Push Comes to Shove, which reveals how trauma is inflicted on mothers when they are pregnant, during labour or newly postpartum in both public and private healthcare sectors.
The launch was held at the Desmond and Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation, and was attended by health activists, women who have experienced obstetric violence and representatives from different hospitals and organisations.
“Our organisation has worked hard to elevate the stories of women who have experienced obstetric violence. The logical next step was to co-create these short films with visual story-telling agency Makhulu and mothers who have been wanting to share their stories,” said Embrace’s Julie Mentor.
Embrace’s Nonkululeko Mbuli said they plan to work with organisations and individuals that work with birthing people. “We’ll provide resources including the films, discussion guides and other resources to debrief.”
- This article was written by Mary-Anne Gontsana and was first published by GroundUp
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