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THE BRITISH
DOULA ASSOCIATION
British
Doulas, together with some independent doulas, has set up the British
Doula Association to set professional standards of behavior and practice.
The Association has a quarterly newsletter which goes out to all its members.
If you would like back copies of the newsletter please send a stamped,
addressed A4 envelope to British Doulas, 49 Harrington Gardens, London
SW7 4JU.
To
give you an idea of how clients view our doulas, see this article from
the Telegraph:
Do
have a doula
When mum
is looking after a new baby, who's going to look after mum if her family
can't step in? Harriet Green found a perfect solution
Three weeks
before the birth of my first baby, I started to panic. It wasn't the birth
itself that bothered me - though that did focus my mind, I assure you.
No, the thing that worried me most was the follow-up. Most of the women
I met in childbirth classes seemed confident that they could cope with
a new baby. But although I looked forward to making the acquaintance of
my little daughter - as she turned out to be - I had also become convinced
that lack of sleep and frequent crying jags would send me bonkers. I needed
help.
Traditionally,
women facing similar circumstances have turned to their mothers. But that's
not always an option these days. As women are giving birth later in life,
their own mothers are much older too, and those grandmothers don't always
feel as energetic as they might have done a decade earlier. What's more,
many grandmothers are likely to hold down full-time jobs themselves. Then
there's the problem of distance: many families are scattered across the
country. My mother lives in Somerset and I'm in London. She is wonderfully
supportive, but simply not in a position to offer long-term, day-to-day
help.
What could
I do? One option was to hire a maternity nurse, but these women have a
reputation for formality and bossiness, and they nearly always stay in
your house. I did not relish such intrusion. One of my friends had hired
a maternity nurse and regretted it immediately. She felt the nurse - though
generally pleasant - got in the way when she and her husband should have
been getting to know their new baby. Anyway, it had always struck me that
hiring a maternity nurse was ill-conceived: the nurse looks after the
baby while the new mother looks after the nurse with endless tea and coffee
and meals. I wanted to look after my own baby. What I needed was someone
to look after me.
So I looked
into other possibilities and it became clear that what I really needed
was a "doula" (from the ancient Greek, meaning "handmaiden").
British Doulas, the best-known agency in Britain, told me that all doulas
are mothers themselves, so they know first-hand how difficult the early
weeks can be. They've also done formal City & Guilds training. You
can choose between "birth doulas", who support mothers during
labour, and "post-birth doulas", who help at home, in the days
and weeks that follow, for between £10 and £15 an hour.
British Doulas
has roughly 200 doulas on its books, ranging in age from their twenties
to their seventies.
One recent
client was novelist Claire Calman. She called in a doula a couple of weeks
after she had returned home from hospital, and the benefits were immediately
obvious. "As soon as Mary turned up, we went from chaos to sanity
in an hour. She ordered me to bed and, by the time I'd come downstairs,
she'd made supper, tidied the kitchen and shoved the washing in the machine.
She was very good with my baby and had a great sense of humour."
Jean Birtles,
the agency's founder - who imported the idea from America - points out
that "childbirth is a time when women are at their most vulnerable".
Post-birth doulas enable them to concentrate entirely on their new babies,
rather than feel oppressed by the unmanageable workload of new motherhood.
"Doulas will do a little washing and ironing, make a freshly prepared
lunch for the mother who may be breastfeeding, prepare supper for the
evening and provide emotional support," she says.
And unlike
your own mother, a doula will do these things the way you want them, without
making annoying comments about where you're going wrong.
So I booked
a doula, and as soon as Pru Guthrie stepped inside the house, two weeks
after Nancy was born, I knew I'd made the right decision. Pru is the mother
of two teenage children and one of the most considerate, patient and cheerful
people I have ever met. These qualities have previously served her well
when she worked as a veterinary nurse and in a school. Hard though it
may be for some women to understand - and I would have been one of them
before I met her - she actually gets a kick out of helping new mothers.
"It's a real privilege to be part of such a special time in a woman's
life," she says. "It's lovely to be able to make the first few
weeks easier for them. And I've always loved babies." Altogether,
Pru was with me for six weeks and I've never felt so well looked after.
She made sure I was comfortable, that I drank enough water and had proper
meals - all essential when you're breastfeeding. In the mornings, while
I caught up on much needed sleep, Pru would let herself in, so that when
I wandered downstairs with little Nancy, the coffee was already bubbling
in the pot and she was there to welcome us with a cheerful smile.
The kitchen
was spotless, the bottles sterilised, the dishwasher emptied and essentials
were never allowed to run out: she arrived every day with fresh supplies.
Her cooking was delicious: every evening, my husband returned from work
to find supper waiting in the oven. Consequently, we could enjoy our evenings
together without bothering about what to eat or, worse, going without.
Daytime visitors
benefited too. Pru made coffee or lunch for everybody, so friends could
actually enjoy visiting Nancy and me, rather than leave the house hungry
and thirsty.
If I needed
sleep, or to pop out on my own, Pru would look after Nancy. I soon realised
that she had a lot more experience than I did - not only from having her
own children, but also second-hand experience gleaned from her previous
assignments as a doula - so I was always grateful for practical help.
Three weeks
after the birth I had to cross London for a hospital check-up. I struggled
alone for a while to get Nancy dressed and into the car seat, while she
turned red with rage. This became so stressful that I abandoned the trip
- and phoned my husband, who'd left work early and was half-way to the
hospital - to tell him so. But Pru gently stepped in to help, even accompanying
me part of the way, despite her shift having come to an end, and I got
there without too much of a problem.
Best of all,
Pru became a great friend. I was used to working in a busy office in Soho
and had never spent much time at home during the day, so it was lovely
having her company. If I felt glum or grumpy, she picked up the pieces.
Of course,
not all doulas are this good. Claire Calman urges mothers-to-be to make
sure they find exactly the right person. As with any employee who comes
into your home, it's crucial to find one whose personality is compatible
with your own. After Calman's doula left to start her next booking, Calman
enthusiastically called in a replacement, only to find the experience
not nearly so successful. "When you are so desperate for help, you
think it'll be fine. She was sweet, but very vague."
Not surprisingly,
the best doulas get booked up fast. Demand has outstripped supply, and
Birtles says: "We really need experienced mothers to come forward
for training."
She believes
that six weeks' assistance is enough for most mothers. Well, I may be
a lightweight, but four months after Nancy's birth I still miss Pru terribly.
In fact, I've tempted her to return for the last weeks of my maternity
leave. And I don't mind if she stays for the months and years after that.
How to be
a helping hand
To work as
a doula, you have to be a mother yourself. Only that way, according to
British Doulas, can you really understand the problems facing a new mother.
For that reason, the job is ideally suited to women who want to return
to work after a long period of looking after their own families.
"Some
of our doulas have been nurses, midwives, health visitors or nannies,"
says founder Jean Birtles. "But many others have had no medically
professional or academic experience. However, as mothers (and often grandmothers),
they do have most of the relevant life experience."
All the same,
it takes a particular character to be a doula. "You should be sympathetic
and a good listener. You should also understand the issues that new families
face, and be able to work without being intrusive, prescriptive or promoting
dependence."
British Doulas,
tel: 020 7244 6053, or see www.britishdoulas.co.uk
Harriet Green
is features director of Harpers & Queen
Useful
links
Source:
The Telegraph - 17 March 2004
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