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محتوای ارائه شده توسط Your BIRTH Partners. تمام محتوای پادکست شامل قسمتها، گرافیکها و توضیحات پادکست مستقیماً توسط Your BIRTH Partners یا شریک پلتفرم پادکست آنها آپلود و ارائه میشوند. اگر فکر میکنید شخصی بدون اجازه شما از اثر دارای حق نسخهبرداری شما استفاده میکند، میتوانید روندی که در اینجا شرح داده شده است را دنبال کنید.https://fa.player.fm/legal
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Your BIRTH Partners
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Manage series 2787117
محتوای ارائه شده توسط Your BIRTH Partners. تمام محتوای پادکست شامل قسمتها، گرافیکها و توضیحات پادکست مستقیماً توسط Your BIRTH Partners یا شریک پلتفرم پادکست آنها آپلود و ارائه میشوند. اگر فکر میکنید شخصی بدون اجازه شما از اثر دارای حق نسخهبرداری شما استفاده میکند، میتوانید روندی که در اینجا شرح داده شده است را دنبال کنید.https://fa.player.fm/legal
Identifying gaps, acknowledging biases, and co-creating a trauma-informed standard of birthcare with change agents across the spectrum of birthwork.
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80 قسمت
علامت گذاری همه پخش شده(نشده) ...
Manage series 2787117
محتوای ارائه شده توسط Your BIRTH Partners. تمام محتوای پادکست شامل قسمتها، گرافیکها و توضیحات پادکست مستقیماً توسط Your BIRTH Partners یا شریک پلتفرم پادکست آنها آپلود و ارائه میشوند. اگر فکر میکنید شخصی بدون اجازه شما از اثر دارای حق نسخهبرداری شما استفاده میکند، میتوانید روندی که در اینجا شرح داده شده است را دنبال کنید.https://fa.player.fm/legal
Identifying gaps, acknowledging biases, and co-creating a trauma-informed standard of birthcare with change agents across the spectrum of birthwork.
…
continue reading
80 قسمت
Όλα τα επεισόδια
×As we wrap up season six of the podcast, we have shared so many incredible conversations over the last 11 episodes as we dove into what community means in birthcare. There is so much breadth of thought and energy these folks bring through their ability to see what could be, despite the ways that our systems fail us now. And so in this episode, I share these visions for the future of community birth care from the 11 guests that we had on this season. I invite you to take in, digest, ruminate on their answers as you come up with your own. Hear more about creating our collective vision for the future of community birthcare including: ~accessible, IN ALL ways ~equitable, prioritizing the needs of queer, trans, & gender nonconforming people ~inter-disciplinary and birthing-person led ~expansive support that meets all needs ~grounded in radical optimism! Connect more with this season's guests through their profiles found here ! Support the show…
In this week's episode, we're diving into a conversation around perinatal mental health, and how we screen for and provide better support to parents as they continue to navigate early parenthood. Our expert this week, Dr. Erin Sadler is a psychologist at Children's National in their NICU who has focused her work around supporting infant mental health with starts with pregnancy and parents. She will be sharing a little bit of the process that her hospital has used to implement a universal screening for caregivers around their mental health in both the ER and the NICU environments. This episode is for all of you who are also looking to understand more about how we integrate our mental health care and resources into the standard medical care that we provide to families. Join us for insights on: ~Removing barriers to connection ~Supporting vulnerable families and decreasing ACEs ~Universal mental health screening as standard of care ~Safety nets built into screening ~Therapeutic interventions for NICU caregivers ~Asking the "scary" questions about mental health Connect with Dr Sadler and her work here. Here is an addition resource recommended by Dr Sadler: Two of our Children's National physicians discussing an article on the establishment our in-house PMH task force . Support the show…
In this episode we invite you to think more about what it means to create community spaces that are powered by culturally responsive care. How do we build trust within them, and how we build trust within ourselves, as we contemplate the changes that happen in our bodies, through pregnancy and postpartum, how we connect with what we want and need. How do we understand our feeding choices, how we think about food for our babies and ourselves? And why it is so important to tune in and be aware of cultural differences? Why do we need more representation throughout perinatal care across the spectrum of all of the different roles within it? We need more representation, we need more folks who have different lived experiences who can offer racially and culturally congruent care who have a shared ancestral practices to uplift and support folks. To bring all of these topics together and share their wisdom on the subject is the wonderful Shalini Shah . Welcome to this conversation as we dive into all of this and think about how we create perineal care environments that are supportive, open, and welcoming for all. Join us as we discuss: ~Uplifting BIPOC birthworkers ~Fostering interdependence rather than individualism ~Eliminating shame in feeding journeys ~Body image & changes through pregnancy & postpartum ~Ayurveda & bringing yourself back to your body Learn more and connect with Shalini here . Support the show…
We are diving into another heavy and intense conversation here, as we talk about the family policing system, sometimes also referred to as the child protective system. We are confronting what it means for us, as healthcare workers, as birth workers, to be tied up in this system that is involved in family separation, and ultimately, the policing of families. When I was thinking through all of the different angles to take throughout the season, as we figure out what it means to be in community, with each other with those we serve one of the pieces that just kept coming back to me is how disconnected our care, especially in the hospital, can be from the greater community that we prepared to serve. And I think one of the big ways that that shows up is in how we interact with folks who use drugs, with folks that have mental health disorders, with folks who in so many ways, are othered, they don't meet our kind of expectation about "textbook perfect parent." We are thinking a lot about how that plays out in our role as mandated reporters, how we engage with these systems. I am so grateful to have Carlyn Mast back on the podcast. Carlyn is an exceptional advocate a repeat guest on the podcast, who as a social worker, and parent advocate has a lot of information to share that it gives light to really some of what what goes on when we report folks, the family policing system, and how this impacts families, how it impacts communities, and really the role that we have within this as perinatal care professionals. So this episode is for those of us who are not really familiar with the child protective or family policing system, how it came to be, and how it currently operates. Carlyn is going to share some of the actual steps that we can all take as we continue to interact with families so that we can show up as a community advocate with them. Join us to dive into: ~Language: Family Policing System ~History of Taking Children from their Community ~Legislation that Criminalizes Poverty ~Racial Discrimination in the System ~Abolition of Incentivizing Family Separation ~Steps to Support Families Connect more with Carlyn here . *The statements from Carlyn Mast are her sole opinion and experience, not the opinions or views of her employer. Resources: Dorothy Roberts and her book Torn Apart Joyce Macmillan April Lee Movement for Family Power upEND Movement Support the show…
In this episode, we are sharing with you a conversation with Kayden Coleman . Many of you may already know Kayden through his incredible advocacy and storytelling about his experiences as a transgender dad, a seahorse dad who gave birth to two daughters. Through this podcast he shares why he was called to be vocal about his experiences as a Black transgender dad and the prevalence of anti-Blackness in society. He brings education and insights into how we can improve birthcare, healthcare, and our human to human interactions to be more inclusive and equitable for trans folks, with greater awareness of intersecting identities. Tune in for insights on: ~Creating a community ~Educating folks who have an intent to misunderstand ~Accountability: calling in and calling out ~Anti-Blackness & the trans community ~Raising our awareness around social media dynamics ~Steps to take for equitable care Connect more with Kayden and his work here and don't miss his latest offerings mentioned on the podcast! Support the show…
In this episode of podcast, we are continuing our examination of community. Joined by guest Emily Edwards of The Good Birth Co , who is a nurse, birth worker and all around advocate for thinking and changing how we talk about birth, and how we address & prevent birth trauma. This episode will be really impactful or those of you who are also out here trying to figure out how we shift power in the birth space. How do we call out issues when we see care, that is not care? When we see wrongdoing? When we see obstetrical violence? When we see folks not respecting patient autonomy? When we start to see the seeds planted that could lead someone to have a traumatic birth, that will leave someone feeling disempowered, and the unfortunate, unethical things that have become standard in a lot of birth care? Dive in to: ~Moving beyond saviorship & the focus on birth outcome ~Advocacy in birthwork ~Stepping into power to prevent birth trauma ~Recognizing the community responsibility to change birthcare ~Working through the nuance of hard concepts on social media ~Finding your role and impact in change-making Emily is offering a bonus to our podcast listeners. Catch the replay of her training on how to tackle birth trauma head on & feeling clear about your role in fixing the system Connect with Emily and her work here . Support the show…
In this episode we explore how we connect more deeply past the complicated power dynamics and the hierarchy in health care. How can health care providers really set themselves up to be in community with those who they care for? How do we shift the way we deliver insights and education and information to ensure that it continues to center the patient? What are some of the ways that we need to reconsider how we have been trained to share information with patients to speak to folks about the experiences that they are having in their body? How do we push back when folks want to focus on efficiency rather than connection? Our guest today is Dr. K Pregnancy Specialist found on Instagram @DrK_PregnancySpecialist is an expert in high risk obstetrics. She has practiced as an MFM around the country, and is currently focused on how we make medical education and relationships more accessible to folks. She has so many insights to share around how we create this reality, where birthing people can truly feel that their provider is part of their community that they are available and that they are there to serve their best interests. This episode is for you, if you too are interested in how we change these current dynamics that have been set up and how we can use the power of social media to actually create more connection, rather than isolation. Join us as we uncover: ~The benefits of multidisciplinary care ~Unlearning as a physician ~Power of social media to get an "ear to the ground" ~Quality over efficiency in appointments ~Meeting folks where they are for health literacy ~And...remember: stop "meddling" in the vagina Connect with Dr K Pregnancy Specialist and her work here. Support the show…
As we are examining community throughout the season, thinking more deeply about what it means to be joining into this community of birth. How does it feel to be coming into something that is in some ways already established, but also something that is constantly growing and changing? I am very excited to have one of our original listeners to the podcast who has been with us through our whole journey. Erin Heacock is a passionate birth advocate who recently started as a nurse in the perinatal space. She will be sharing reflections on what she has learned and how she wants to grow in this space. We are inviting all of you to think about how we all have things to learn and how often we end up putting people up on pedestals. How do you decide who is the authority? How do we become more open to new ideas? How do we appreciate and support those who are coming after us? Join us as we explore: ~Appreciating our role and the vulnerable spaces we are invited into ~Challenging unit norms and "the way we've always done things" ~Comparing physiologic birth with the reality of typical hospital birthcare ~Learning how to question authority and bring in diverse viewpoints ~The power of fresh perspective and creating welcoming communities ~The pursuit of lifelong learning ~Ensuring the folks we care for are centered in our community building Learn more about Erin and connect more . Support the show…
As we continue our season around centering community in our birth work, I am really excited to be having a return guest, one of the very first people who truly made me feel welcomed into a community of other birth workers is Pansay Tayo of Sacred Butterfly Births & the Sacred Pause Red Room. Pansay back to share some of her wisdom as she has come to define her birth work is something that must be rooted in community. For those of you who are feeling overwhelmed by all that needs to change in birth care. Pansay has a wealth of ideas to share, as we look to make subtle adjustments to our practice, to ground ourselves and our work in our clients in their community. Join us to discuss: ~The power of sitting in circle ~Shedding perfection and embracing vulnerability ~Normalizing the challenges of pregnancy & parenthood ~Creating physical environments that tend to all the senses ~Healing generational trauma through birth ~Supporting the mind-body-spirit in tandem Learn more about Pansay and connect with her work. Support the show…
As we continue our exploration of what it means to come together as a community in birthcare, we will be diving into some of the reasons that we often find ourselves not connecting in community. What are some of the cultural and societal beliefs around worthiness and value and perfectionism that set us up to be in competition with each other, rather than in community? In particular, what are things those of us who have been socialized as white need to uncover about white supremacy? How have patterns from that been ingrained in our behaviors, in our beliefs and and how we look to be in community- with those we care for and with our colleagues? I am so grateful to have Allison Tate joining us in this conversation. She transplanted to the US as an established birthworker and became keenly aware of how this dynamic plays out and personal work she needed to do moving forward. This episode is for you if you are looking for insights around: ~Increasing your awareness about how you show up in community ~Rejecting "glossy" birthworker communities & competition ~Considering how value & worthiness is assigned in community ~Recognizing tenants of white supremacy in birthwork ~Holding yourself accountable to doing inner work Follow Allison and her work here . Resources mentioned in the episode: Cheyenne Scarlett's My Deep Dive -Reflection prompts for birthworkers Doula Instincts Membership -Allison's co-led community space for birthworkers interested in growth and accountability. Support the show…
I am really delighted to be just diving deep into some of the issues around community, collaborative relationships, and navigating the medical hierarchy. I am so excited to share our guests with you this week, Dr. Cody Pyke is trained as both a physician and as an attorney, and has some incredible insights to share with you. How do we craft our messaging to connect with legislators and folks who really work on systems, policy levels? Have you been thinking about understanding your strengths and where they fit into this larger community and all of the many things that need to be done? Are you thinking about how we create equity? As we bring all folks together at the same table to dive into these issues, how do we get rid of this hierarchy that continues to hold us back as we consider what community can really look like and what true collaborative care means? Listen in as we explore: ~overcoming intimidation around discussing policies & legislation ~translating your message to be understood by outsiders ~collaborative care and the National Perinatal Association ~honoring the equal voices of parents when designing policies ~recognizing the impact of insurance on healthcare ~exploring the ethics and gatekeeping in perinatal advocacy Connect more with Cody and their work here. Support the show…
We are so thrilled to be coming for Season SIX of the podcast! As we delve into our new season theme of centering community, it feels fitting that our very first episode at the podcast was about community, it is very much at the heart of the work we do here at your birth partners. And so often when this work is more challenging, there needs to be when things are not going smoothly. It is because we are not rooted in community. We need folks who are here with us doing this work, ones who are ready to hold space with us and for us, ones who are happy to share about their own journey to hold us accountable as we uncover our own biases, as we recognize things that are not ideal in our practice and how we want to change. And we must have others together as we do this collaborative work of shifting, recreating reimagining what birth care can look like. Our guest this week, Anna Balagtas (she/her) is a radical birth worker and community organizer, known as Your Pocket Doula , has a ton of personal experience walking through this journey, she is going to share so many ideas that uplift you and show you how it is possible to recreate to change the trajectory of the path you're on to find the community that you want and deserve to be a part of. Join us as we dive into: ~recognizing when your values aren't shared by those around you ~the role of doula orgs in training complicitness in obstetrical mistreatment ~identifying saviorism in ourselves ~pivoting to find community ~trusting yourself on your journey in birthwork ~learning alongside your community Learn more about Anna and connect with her work! Support the show…
As we wrap up season five around change-making in perinatal care, I am excited to share with you some takeaways from the season as I have reflected on what our guests have shared and pulled together some themes so that as you figure out the way you want to create change in the perinatal care system, you will have some inspiration from those who are walking this path along with you. Themes: ~Changing individuals => systems change ~Community with accountability as basis for change ~Taking care of the change agents ~Divorcing change making from saviorship This bonus episode includes some reflection questions for you if you are still searching for your purpose within this work and how you want to go about creating change! Support the show…
So in this episode we are diving into the future of Queer Reproductive Justice, and what does it mean to show up for queer, trans, non binary, and other folks who have been marginalized within the perinatal care system. To lead us in that conversation, I am delighted to have king yaa on to share their wisdom and their work as they have delved into this throughout their career. And as they speak, and educate on this topic in so many different platforms. Learning from king yaa has truthfully been one of the most impactful pieces of my journey over the last few years. As I have searched to grow as a birth worker, to be more aware of different perspectives within perinatal spaces...both as I learned to care better for folks who are queer and trans, but also, as I have looked hard at myself, to understand my positionality within this space to reflect on what I can bring to it, and also how the way that I show up in this work has such an impact on the care that folks receive from me. Through this conversation, I hope you have the time and space to reflect on your own place in this work, where you want to grow, where you can share your knowledge, and how you can begin to put all this together, as we lift up those who have been most marginalized and create a standard of care that is safer for them, we create a standard of care that is safer for all of us. And I am eager to share with you their thoughts and reflections about what king yaa sees as as they share their queer reproductive justice framework, and the future of care as we all come together to create change. Listen in as we explore these themes: ~foundation of their courses for providers ~queer & trans people's liberation & pleasure ~king's queer reproductive justice framework ~incorporate understanding of barriers into care ~examining saviorism, intersectionality, & positionality in birthwork Learn more about king yaa and their offerings through their guest profile. Recommended IG accounts to follow: @KaydenXOfficial @BirthBruja @FeministMidwife @Doctor_Midwife Support the show…
In this episode, we are going to be diving into the topic of debriefing: what debriefing is, how it can benefit folks in the immediate postpartum period as they start to reflect on their birth story, on their journey on the feelings that they have as they reflect on what happened during their birth, whether those were, you know, overwhelmingly positive or negative experiences. Together with Emily and Mandy we have created a resource for Debriefing at the Bedside, that we are really eager to share with you all. This is a free resource. We want to get in the hands of as many folks who interact with people in that immediate postpartum period, whether that is at the hospital bedsides, whether that is at home in those first few weeks, we want to provide this tool so that you all can feel more confident as you look to assist folks in reflection in thinking about their experience, as we break down some of the barriers that stop folks from feeling like it is okay to talk about what happened. We are so hopeful that you all will walk away from this with more awareness about how important debriefing can be for everyone for every birth. That you will be able to put this into action in your practices as you look to create a space that is more welcoming for folks to speak to their lived experiences, and that prepares us to support them along the way. Episode highlights include: ~Defining debriefing vs reflection vs processing ~Navigating conflicting feelings about your birth story ~Debriefing as a tool for fostering connection with caregivers ~Normalizing the need to debrief ~The privilege of pausing to contemplate your experience ~Why birthworkers need to seek out their own debriefing support Here is a preview of the Debriefing resource & here you can request the full free fillable pdf . Support the show…
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