Close X
Friday, October 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. College Issues Cease And Desist Letter To 'Death Midwives' Group

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jul, 2016 11:54 AM
    VANCOUVER — When a close family friend died last August, Satwinder Bains got a call asking her to help give the dead woman a bath.
     
    "It was such an honour, such a privilege to be able to do it," said Bains, a professor of Sikh studies at the University of the Fraser Valley in Abbotsford, B.C.
     
    The Sikh tradition of joining others to pray for a deceased loved one and bathing the person entering "a new journey" is a sacred rite and has nothing to do with religion, she said.
     
    "At the time of death, both prayer and person will be by your side," said Bains of the simple ritual that is similar to practices in other cultures and involves dressing the deceased and combing his or her hair before cremation.
     
    Bains said the tradition is highly personal and she finds it tough to consider it as part of a so-called death midwifery service.
     
    "I think to take away that privilege and give it to a death midwife or whatever is so difficult to get around."
     
    The College of Midwives of British Columbia is also challenging use of the word midwifery because it's regulated as part of a profession with certain education and training standards, regulations and a complaints process.
     
    Registrar Louise Aerts said the college has issued a cease and desist letter to the Canadian Integrative Network for Death Education and Alternatives for using the title midwife for people who are not registered with the college and to remove it from its website and any advertising.
     
    Aerts said midwifery is regulated in 10 provinces and territories, with Newfoundland and Labrador and New Brunswick in the process of regulating it and the Yukon involved in preliminary discussions to do the same.
     
    "The reason that it's a protected title is that the colleges have the legislated mandate to protect the public," she said. 
     
    "We do have an expectation from the Ministry of Heath that we will take action on this type of thing."
     
     
    The website for the Canadian Integrative Network for Death Education and Alternatives says a death midwife offers support such as bathing the "death journeyer" and guidance to families regardless of whether they use a funeral home. It also compares the role of a birth midwife to a death midwife.
     
    A spokesperson for the network could not be reached for comment.
     
    Aerts said those who call themselves death midwives could instead go with the term death doulas.
     
    "Personally, I think the terminology doula is clear. It makes more sense. I understand the parallels to midwifery and why they're using it, but doula connotes that supportive role and it's not a restricted title."
     
    Sarah Kerr, a death midwife in Calgary, said the College of Midwives of Alberta has not contacted her about using the term.
     
    However, Sheila Harvey, registrar of the College of Midwives of Alberta, said the college does not support anyone's use of the title midwife without specific training for the job but that the college is not yet an independent body under the Health Professions Act so it can't take action against people who use the title.
     
    Kerr said she opted to call herself a death midwife instead of a death doula when she started her business three years ago because "the sound of it appealed to me more."
     
    "I'm not so concerned about titles," she said. "I'm more concerned that families have options. This is a whole new field and right now it's calling itself death midwifery and it's a lay person's movement of people stepping forward and offering different services and support to dying people and their families.
     
    "We're all on the same team, birth midwives and death midwives. Birth midwives fought very hard decades ago and even more recently to make options available for families. And death midwives are doing the same thing."
     
    Kerr said she provides a variety of services depending on a family's wishes, such as facilitating a storytelling circle about the dying person or a "living funeral" where people gather to say goodbye.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Come for the Mystical Music, Prepared for a Cryptic Narrative in Doost, Playing at The Cultch

    Come for the Mystical Music, Prepared for a Cryptic Narrative in Doost, Playing at The Cultch
    Performed in the Historical Theatre, the mystical journey is inspired by the life of the Nimatullahi Sufi Order’s past Master, Dr. Javad Nurbaksh. The stage setting complete with traditional musical instruments looks divine and when Nadeem Phillip takes a seat in a meditative state, the excitement builds up. 

    Come for the Mystical Music, Prepared for a Cryptic Narrative in Doost, Playing at The Cultch

    Local Governments To Set Infrastructure Project Priorities: Amarjeet Sohi

    Local Governments To Set Infrastructure Project Priorities: Amarjeet Sohi
    Sohi spoke to a business group today in Richmond, B.C., as part of cross-country tours by Liberal cabinet ministers to sell the benefits of their maiden budget

    Local Governments To Set Infrastructure Project Priorities: Amarjeet Sohi

    'Perfect Stage': Canada Primed For Critical World Cup Qualifier With Mexico

    'Perfect Stage': Canada Primed For Critical World Cup Qualifier With Mexico
    Canada hosts powerhouse Mexico in a crucial World Cup qualifier on Friday, a game the veteran midfielder says could not only vault the men's national team closer to the 2018 tournament, but change how the program is viewed as a whole.

    'Perfect Stage': Canada Primed For Critical World Cup Qualifier With Mexico

    Avalanche Canada Warns Novice Skiers, Sledders To Avoid Backcountry Over Easter Long Weekend

    Avalanche Canada Warns Novice Skiers, Sledders To Avoid Backcountry Over Easter Long Weekend
    Avalanche Canada has issued a special warning for Banff, Yoho, Kootenay, and Jasper national parks, Kananaskis Country in Alberta, the Purcells near Golden, B.C., and the North Rockies east of Prince George.

    Avalanche Canada Warns Novice Skiers, Sledders To Avoid Backcountry Over Easter Long Weekend

    Search For Missing Manitoba Boy Expanding; Underwater Recovery Team Brought In

    Search For Missing Manitoba Boy Expanding; Underwater Recovery Team Brought In
    The search for a missing toddler who disappeared while playing outside his rural Manitoba home is expanding to include bodies of water.

    Search For Missing Manitoba Boy Expanding; Underwater Recovery Team Brought In

    Former Military Man With PTSD Sentenced To 4 Years For Trying To Strangle Daughter In N.S.

    Former Military Man With PTSD Sentenced To 4 Years For Trying To Strangle Daughter In N.S.
    Robin Andrew Clifford of New Glasgow, N.S., was originally charged with attempted murder but he later pleaded guilty to aggravated assault.

    Former Military Man With PTSD Sentenced To 4 Years For Trying To Strangle Daughter In N.S.