L11 - Give It A Try! - Torrecillas Luna María de Los Ángeles
L11 - Give It A Try! - Torrecillas Luna María de Los Ángeles
L11 - Give It A Try! - Torrecillas Luna María de Los Ángeles
You might expect your doctor to recommend what they think best during childbirth,
but it’s not uncommon to feel pressured into having a procedure that you don’t
want. Rebecca Grant reports on the ethics and law of consent in the delivery room.
Kimberly Turbin wasn’t expecting childbirth to be a pleasant experience, but she
wasn’t expecting it to be a nightmare either.
On 4 May 2013, she was sitting on the couch at a friend’s house. They had plans
to go out for seafood in San Pedro, next to the Los Angeles Harbor, and 27-year-
old Turbin was relaxing in the living room while her friend took a shower. Then she
felt something “pop” – her water had broken. Turbin was rushed home to take a
shower herself and grab her things before heading to the hospital. She arrived at
the Providence Tarzana Medical Center in the San Fernando Valley around 5 pm.
Turbin had gotten health-care insurance through Medi-Cal, a state programme that
has offered free or low-cost health coverage for people with limited income. She
had received prenatal care through a nonprofit community health centre which is
called El Proyecto del Barrio, where most of her appointments were handled by
nurses. The day before she had gone into labour, two weeks before her due date,
she had first met Alex Abbassi, an obstetrician who worked with Providence
Tarzana.
Turbin is a two-time rape survivor, and when she arrived at the hospital, she asked
the staff to be gentle and get permission before they touched her . “I was scared of
everything and everybody and I told them, ‘I must be told what you are doing or
you are going to freak me out’”, she says.
Abbassi checked on Turbin’s progress over the course of the evening, and shortly
after midnight, it looked like she was ready to deliver. She was on her back in the
hospital bed, immobilised by an epidural and pushing, when Abbassi said, “I am
going to do an episiotomy (also known as perineotomy, is a surgical incision of the
perineum and the posterior vaginal wall, which is generally done by a midwife or
obstetrician during second stage of labor to quickly enlarge the opening for the
baby to pass through) now”.
Turbin objected: “What? Why? We haven’t even tried!” More than once, she said,
“No, don’t cut me.” Surgical scissors in hand, Abbassi explained that the baby’s
head was too big and that her “butthole” might “rip” otherwise. Turbin implored him,
Lesson 11: Verbal Tenses II
once again, not to cut her. He said, “I am the expert here… Why can’t I do it? You
can go home and do it. You go to Kentucky”. Then, despite her refusals, he cut her
perineum 12 times.
“I didn’t know he did that until I saw my video”, says Turbin. “Nobody could tell me
why and that’s what bothered me. I was so mad he had forced me to do something
I didn’t want to do”.
After two years looking for a lawyer who would take her case, Turbin has filed a
complaint for assault and battery against Abbassi. Her supporters describe it as a
potential turning point for the rights of women during childbirth.
Since the 1980s, however, clinical research has indicated that it is not advisable to
consider episiotomy a medical practice. It can be a life-saving intervention under
certain circumstances but for most births, “snipping” does more harm than good.
The procedure is associated with higher levels of pain, edema, bleeding and
incontinence –and actually increases the risk of severe tearing.
Therefore, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the UK’s
National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) have recommended
against routine use of episiotomy. NICE’s guidelines on intrapartum care state to
do it if there is a “clinical need”, such as to relieve fetal or maternal distress.
“There are cases in which episiotomy remains an appropriate thing to do, but when
labour and delivery is progressing normally, there is no indication to do an
episiotomy,” says Dana Gossett, a professor and OB/GYN at University of
California San Francisco. “Episiotomy has declined over the last three decades
because physicians recognise the potential harm and that we should not routinely
do an intervention unless there is a clear indication to do so”.
In Turbin’s case, her labour was progressing normally. She was young and
healthy, and there were no apparent circumstances that made an episiotomy
necessary. Even if there had been a legitimate medical reason, the doctor still
needed her consent. Like most patients, Turbin had signed consent forms when
she entered the hospital. Those forms stated that she consented to “emergency
treatment, medical or surgical treatments, or hospital services rendered to the
patient under the general and special instructions of the physician”, but also that
Lesson 11: Verbal Tenses II
she had “the right to consent or to refuse any proposed operation or procedure at
any time prior to its performance”.
Nadia Sawicki, professor of law at Loyola University Chicago, has studied the
ethics around doctor–patient relationships and informed consent. She says that
even though patients sign consent documents when they enter the hospital, that
does not mean doctors can perform surgery against their explicit will. If that were
so, then anytime anyone entered the hospital, they’d give up their agency entirely.
“Every time you go to a hospital, you sign consent forms – there is paperwork
involved,” Sawicki explains. “But a basic legal principle that everyone understands
is that consent is needed before that kind of a patient interaction. You can have a
document that says, ‘consent to all treatment’, but if a doctor hasn’t had a
conversation with the patient, that consent document isn’t going to protect the
hospital”.
“I knew something was different right away,” she says. “It was my first pregnancy,
but right then and there, I already knew it was a boy. I was so happy”. Turbin
decided to move back to Los Angeles to be closer to her family during the
pregnancy. It was an easy pregnancy – she didn’t even experience morning
sickness – and she hoped her birth experience would be similarly smooth. What
she got was an unwanted episiotomy.
“Women have faced many violations during maternity care and it is as if their
human rights – dignity, bodily and psychological integrity, privacy, equality – do not
exist,” says Camilla Pickles, who studies obstetric violence and the law at the
University of Oxford. “Subjecting them to a cascade of medical interventions
unnecessarily and without informed consent is wrong, harmful to their overall
wellbeing and can be dangerous”.
“My son has a sad mom who gets frustrated because she’s in pain”, says Turbin. “I
was supposed to be okay but it went completely upside down”.
Grant, R. (2017)ha
Present perfect:
1. We haven’t even tried!”
2. Turbin has filed a complaint for assault and battery against Abbassi.
3. Since the 1980s, however, clinical research has indicated that it is not
advisable to consider episiotomy a medical practice.
4. Episiotomy has declined over the last three decades because physicians
recognise the potential harm and that we should not routinely do an
intervention unless there is a clear indication to do so.
5. Nadia Sawicki, professor of law at Loyola University Chicago, has studied
the ethics around doctor–patient relationships and informed consent.
6. You can have a document that says, ‘consent to all treatment’.
Lesson 11: Verbal Tenses II
7. Women have faced many violations during maternity care and it is as if their
human rights – dignity, bodily and psychological integrity, privacy, equality –
do not exist.
8. My son has a sad mom who gets frustrated because she’s in pain”.
Past perfect:
1. They had plans to go out for seafood in San Pedro.
2. Then she felt something “pop” – her water had broken.
3. Turbin had gotten health-care insurance through Medi-Cal.
4. She had received prenatal care through a nonprofit community health centre
which is called El Proyecto del Barrio.
5. The day before she had gone into labour, two weeks before her due date,
she had first met Alex Abbassi, an obstetrician who worked with Providence
Tarzana.
6. Even if there had been a legitimate medical reason, the doctor still needed
her consent.
7. Like most patients, Turbin had signed consent forms when she entered the
hospital.
8. She had “the right to consent or to refuse any proposed operation or
procedure at any time prior to its performance”.
Passive voice:
1. What she got was an unwanted episiotomy
2. She was sitting on the couch at a friend’s house
3. Where most of her appointments were handled by nurses.
4. I was scared of everything and everybody and I told them, ‘I must be told
what you are doing or you are going to freak me out.
5. She was on her back in the hospital bed, immobilised by an epidural and
pushin.
6. Episiotomy is a surgical incision of the perineum –the area between the
anus and the vulva
7. Surgical scissors in hand, Abbassi explained that the baby’s head was too
big and that her “butthole” might “rip” otherwise.
8. I was so mad he had forced me to do something I didn’t want to.