I was very excited to find that, not only do midwives have full access to any hospital in Calgary, but as of April 2009, midwifery care is 100% covered by Alberta Health. I started looking into the (very) small number of midwifery practices that exist in Calgary. Their websites all seemed to say the same thing: our kind of service is very popular, so get in touch with us early in your pregnancy if you want a space. When I saw how few midwives there were, I had a brief moment of wondering whether I should get in touch and say "I'm planning to get pregnant around this time. Can you put me on your list now before I'm actually pregnant?" But then I thought about that a second time and it felt like something a crazy person would do. Plus, who knew if I would actually get pregnant when I wanted? So I never followed through.
Fast forward to January. We find out I'm pregnant on a Friday night. The first thing I did Saturday morning was fill out the online intake forms for all the practices I could find. There was one practice in particular I was really drawn to, but that was really based only on the website, so I emailed them all, just to be safe. I was four (almost five) weeks pregnant.
I waited to hear back. After a week and a bit, I started to hear back. And guess what? Every practice told me they were full. Every. Single. One. When I heard from the final one, I had a major PIMD. I was so disappointed because I felt like I had all this knowledge about what I wanted and despite that, there was nothing I could do to get that kind of care. The whole thing also made me start to wonder. What did other people do to get midwives? Did they actually do what I thought was crazy and contact a midwife before they were even pregnant? Were they friends with a midwife? Had a midwife already delivered another baby of theirs? Ugh. I just don't know.
I'm sure everything will work out in the end. I know that, really, the important thing is a healthy baby, regardless of who hands it to me. But I'm still sad. I know now, instead of what I pictured, I will see one (or various different) OB and then will have my baby delivered by the practice's on call OB (someone I may or may not have met before). To me, that is definitely a less-than-ideal scenario. But I hope once this baby is here, how he or she got here will become not such a big deal.
It IS a big deal, and it's sad that having watched all those episodes of Baby Story and knowing just what you want, it doesn't seem that you'll get it. It's fair to feel sad about that. It IS true that what will matter most at that moment is having your baby out and in your arms (no matter who helps that happen), but I would have loved for you to have the experience you wanted.
ReplyDeleteI can't believe midwives aren't flocking to Calgary! Maybe it isn't lucrative enough to make up for the cost of living???