Midwife Marita

Midwife Marita I am a Registered Midwife practicing in Edmonton, Alberta. My approach to midwifery is based in a foundation of communication and consent.

I am passionate about serving my LGBTQ2SIA+ community, indigenous families, and those having experienced trauma.

The University of Manitoba Midwifery program is returning this fall, and apparently has 50% of spaces reserved for indig...
05/08/2020

The University of Manitoba Midwifery program is returning this fall, and apparently has 50% of spaces reserved for indigenous applicants! It’s a program with a complicated past but I’m glad to see this concrete initiative to bring more indigenous midwives back into practice in Canada.

1. Successful completion of the following courses with a minimum grade of “C” in each course. All required courses must be at a 1000 level or higher.

05/04/2020

This was such a delightful message to see first thing in the morning! Happy (almost) International Day of the Midwife to all of my incredible colleagues, the student midwives, and traditional birth attendants!

2020 is the Year of the Nurse and Midwife, and what a year it has been so far! My colleagues across the country are all bringing their most amazing, persistent, courageous, and kind hearts to this work, and I am proud to learn from every one of you. Thank you for everything you do, and everything you are ✊🏻💖

FYI! Parking is free at the moment at all Alberta Health Services locations for both the public and staff.
04/02/2020

FYI! Parking is free at the moment at all Alberta Health Services locations for both the public and staff.

Effective April 3, AHS is temporarily suspending parking fees for staff and the public at all of our facilities provincewide.

This change reduces the risk of COVID-19 spread associated with touching screens and buttons at payment machines at sites, and supports physical distancing measures. Many AHS staff and physicians are working from home and eliminating parking fees and the need for parking passes also helps make this transition easier.

We ask that the public and staff continue to be respectful of the parking spaces reserved for emergency personnel, physicians, barrier free stalls, pick-up and drop-off zones, and fire lanes.

The reality is that our US counterparts are putting their lives on the line and being given guidance about how to reuse ...
03/22/2020

The reality is that our US counterparts are putting their lives on the line and being given guidance about how to reuse their masks and protective equipment over and over. I can’t stop thinking about how helpless, scared, and committed to their duty American essential workers must be feeling right now.

Canadians, do your part to protect those that can’t stay home so that we can keep our essential services stocked and safe in the coming months. As midwives we will continue to care for you as you grow your sweet families and hold onto hope, please help us stay safe so we can keep you safe ✊🏻💖

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a virus (more specifically, a coronavirus) identified as the cause of an outbreak of respiratory illness first detected in Wuhan, China.

02/02/2020

Have you ever wondered why embroidery scissors are shaped like storks? Well, these scissors didn't actually start out as scissors, but as umbilical clamps. Sometimes, the clamps would be used with a set of forceps shaped like snakes. Why snakes? To symbolise the Rod of Asclepius, the Greek god of healing and medicine.

Between the 19th century and now, these little stork scissors have gone through some really big changes. In the past, most of them were between four and a half to six inches long, with their heads mounted at almost a 45-degree angle. The beaks were heavy clamps not meant to cut, but to restrict the blood flow before the umbilical was cut. Some even had little babies hidden inside the stork's beak that would appear when the clamps were opened.

The midwives began to use the scissors for needlework that they carried with them to work on during long waiting times when babies were being born.

Who knew these scissors had such a long history that started with delivering babies? The Smithsonian has a medical bag on display with a pair of stork scissors, in their American History Collection.
609-398-6659

Seeing midwifery grow in the north makes my heart swell. Going back to catch babies in my hometown as a student midwife ...
02/01/2020

Seeing midwifery grow in the north makes my heart swell. Going back to catch babies in my hometown as a student midwife was an experience that I still find hard to put into words. Thank you to Indigenous and Métis midwives and traditional birth attendants who have done this work since time immemorial, and to the National Aboriginal Council of Midwives who have championed for this change (join as a supportive or student member!). Thank you to forces of nature Lesley Paulette, Heather Heinrichs, Véronique Bazinet and many others who have tirelessly worked to bring midwifery back to northern communities. The work you do is deeply necessary, and your communities are lucky to have your care and perseverance.

 Heather Heinrichs is a midwife working in remote Hay River in Canada’s Northwest Territories – a sub-arctic town of 3,500 nestled on the south bank of Great Slave Lake. Until five years ago, women from Hay River who wanted to give birth had to fly or drive around the huge expanse of lake to de...

Powerful. This has pretty much everything I love in one place. Poetry, moon and water symbolism, strength of bodies that...
01/23/2020

Powerful. This has pretty much everything I love in one place. Poetry, moon and water symbolism, strength of bodies that can bring and release life, resistance of the patriarchy. Grateful for art that gives me chills ✨🌑✨

"The dude on Twitter says: “I was having s*x with my girlfriend when she started her period, I dumped that bitch immediately.”

Dear nameless dummy on Twitter:
You’re the reason my daughter cried funeral tears when she started her period.
The sudden grief all young girls feel after the matriculation from childhood,
And the induction into a reality that they don’t have to negotiate,
You and your disdain for what a woman’s body can do.
Herein begins an anatomy lesson infused with feminist politics
Because I hate you.

There is a thing called the uterus.
It sheds itself every 28 days or so, or in my case every 23 days,
I’ve always been a rule breaker.
That’s the anatomy part of it, I digress.

The feminist politic part, is that women know how to let things go,
How to let a dying thing leave the body,
How to become new, how to regenerate,
How to wax and wane, not unlike the moon and tides,
Both of which influence how you behave, I digress.

Women have vaginas that can speak to each other,
And by this I mean, when we’re with our friends, our sisters, our mothers,
Our menstrual cycles will actually sync the f**k up.
My own cervix is mad influential,
Everybody I love knows how to bleed with me.
Hold on to that, there’s a metaphor in it.

Hold on to that.
But when your mother carried you,
The ocean in her belly is what made you buoyant, made you possible.
You had it under your tongue when you burst through her skin,
Wet and panting from the heat of her body,
The body whose machinery you now mock on social media,
That body, wrapped you in everything that was miraculous about,
And then sung you lullabies laced in platelets,
Without which you wouldn’t have no Twitter account at all motherf**ker.
I digress.

See, it’s possible that we know the world better
Because of the blood that visits some of us.
It interrupts our favorite white skirts,
And shows up at dinner parties unannounced,
Blood will do that, period.
It will come when you are not prepared for it;
Blood does that, period.
Blood is the biggest siren, and we understand that blood misbehaves,
It does not wait for a hand signal, or a welcome sign above the door.
And when you deal in blood over and over again like we do,
When it keeps returning to you, well, that makes you a warrior.

And while all good generals know not to discuss battle plans with the enemy,
Let me say this to you, dummy on Twitter;
If there’s any balance in the universe at all,
You’re going to be blessed with daughters.
Blessed.

Etymologically, bless means to make bleed.
See, now it’s a lesson in linguistics.
In other words, blood speaks, that’s the message, stay with me.
See, your daughters will teach you what all men must one day come to know,
That women, made of moonlight magic and macabre,
Will make you know the blood.
We’re going to get it all over the sheets and car seats,
We’re going to do that.
We’re going to introduce you to our insides, period
And if you are as unprepared as we sometimes are,
It will get all over you and leave a forever stain.

So to my daughter:
Should any fool mishandle that wild geography of your body,
How it rides a red running current like any good wolf or witch,
Well then just bleed, boo.
Get that blood a biblical name,
Something of stone and mortar.
Name it after Eve’s first rebellion in that garden,
Name it after the last little girl to have her ge****ls mutilated in Kinshasa,
That was this morning.
Give it as many syllables as there are unreported r**e cases.

Name the blood something holy,
Something mighty, something unlanguageable,
Something in hieroglyphs,
Something that sounds like the end of the world.
Name it for the war between your legs,
And for the women who will not be nameless here.
Just bleed anyhow,
Spill your impossible scripture all over the good furniture.

Bleed and bleed and bleed on everything he loves,
Period.

~ Dominique Christina, 'The Period Poem'
Watch her spoken word performance here: https://youtu.be/4vu2BsePvoI
www.dominiquechristina.com

Art by Helen Claira Burt
IG: .goddesses
www.helenclaira.redbubble.com

I love this tradition, what a joy to celebrate a baby’s first laugh as a community 💖
01/22/2020

I love this tradition, what a joy to celebrate a baby’s first laugh as a community 💖

The person who makes the child laugh for the first time has been chosen as the one who welcomes them with a feast for the whole family.

Well, this is super adorable 🥰
01/22/2020

Well, this is super adorable 🥰

01/18/2020

"It shouldn't be a feminist act to know how your body works." Yessss!

01/06/2020

Canada’s government once pressured Inuit women to travel south to give birth. Now, they can have their babies at a hometown maternity clinic led by Inuit midwives.

Willow Family Medicine’s lactation clinic makes a difference in the lives of Edmonton-area families every day. The work ...
12/12/2019

Willow Family Medicine’s lactation clinic makes a difference in the lives of Edmonton-area families every day. The work they do is specialized, evidence-based, and focused on a holistic overview of parent’s and baby’s needs. The care they provide is crucially important to the nursing success/support of so many clients I have referred. Please take the time to add your name to this petition if you have benefitted from WFM’s care, if you believe in access to choice and support when it comes to feeding one’s baby, or if you understand the value of accessing evidence-based lactation support.

Increase funding to Willow Family Medicine breastfeeding clinic. 1 signatures are still needed!

12/05/2019

Information for anyone searching for care, or for birth workers who know of people looking for care in April or May 2020!

No. Hymens are different for everyone, one cannot tell whether someone is a “virgin” by looking at their anatomy, and th...
11/08/2019

No. Hymens are different for everyone, one cannot tell whether someone is a “virgin” by looking at their anatomy, and the idea of virginity is a value judgement that is historically and currently used to oppress women. Your worth is not based on when, if, or how often you have been s*xual with anyone. No one EVER has a right to touch your body for any reason that is not a needed, and actively/continually consented to, medical procedure. The physician who participated in the violation of that famous person’s kids should have their license suspended. But, good job ACOG for taking a public stand!

"ACOG does not have guidance on 'virginity testing.' As a medical organization, ACOG releases guidance on medically indicated and valid procedures," states ACOG President Dr. Ted Anderson.

🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻
11/06/2019

🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻

The Manitoba government has been given 180 days to allow non-binary people s*x designations on birth certificates like an X instead of male or female and must pay $50,000 in damages to a trans person who was discriminated against, an independent human rights adjudicator has ruled.

Perinatal mental health supports are one of the most inaccessible services and at such a crucial and pivotal moment. I b...
10/16/2019

Perinatal mental health supports are one of the most inaccessible services and at such a crucial and pivotal moment. I believe that supporting parents and families to be healthier and more supported - however that looks for an individual, makes our whole society stronger, kinder, and more resilient. Vote for the candidate that feels right for you, and consider the needs of those that have less access and privilege when you do.

In a letter response to a query posed by the Canadian Perinatal Mental Health Collaborative (CPMHC) that asked each party leader where they stand on the creation of a national strategy for per…

Recall alert for certain brands of gripe water!
09/23/2019

Recall alert for certain brands of gripe water!

Health Canada says the contaminated products pose "serious health risks" to babies who have consumed them.

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