The Rights of Childbearing Women
(Revised, 2004)
MCA encourages individuals and organizations to copy and
distribute this statement of rights in its entirety, as long
as credit is given to the Maternity Center Association. This
statement is available as a printed brochure which you can
order for free or in quantity.
This statement outlines a set of basic rights that the Maternity
Center Association (MCA) has identified and promotes for
all childbearing women. It applies widely accepted human rights
to the specific situation of maternity care. Although most
of these rights are granted to women in the United States
by law, many women do not have knowledge of their rights.
Fundamental Problems with Maternity Care in the United
States
This statement was developed in response to serious and
continuing problems with maternity care in the United States,
including
• The United States is the only wealthy industrialized
nation that does not guarantee access to essential health
care for all pregnant women and infants. Many women, especially
those with low incomes, lack access to adequate maternity
care.
• A large body of scientific research shows that many
widely used maternity care practices that involve risk and
discomfort are of no benefit to low-risk women and infants.
On the other hand, some practices that clearly offer important
benefits are not widely available in U.S. hospitals.
• Many women do not receive adequate information about
benefits and risks of specific procedures, drugs, tests, and
treatments, or about alternatives.
• Childbearing women frequently are not aware of their
legal right to make health care choices on behalf of themselves
and their babies, and do not exercise this right.
We must ensure that all childbearing women have access
to information and care that is based on the best scientific
evidence now available, and that they understand and have
opportunities to exercise their right to make health care
decisions. Women whose rights are violated need access to
legal or other recourse to address their grievances.
Every Woman's Rights
Consideration and respect for every woman under all circumstances
is the foundation of this statement of rights.
1. Every woman has the right to health care before, during,
and after pregnancy and childbirth.
2. Every woman and infant has the right to receive care that
is consistent with current scientific evidence about benefits
and risks.* Practices that have been found to be safe and
beneficial should be used when indicated. Harmful, ineffective,
or unnecessary practices should be avoided. Unproven interventions
should be used only in the context of research to evaluate
their effects.
3. Every woman has the right to choose a midwife or a physician
as her maternity care provider. Both caregivers skilled in
normal childbearing and caregivers skilled in complications
are needed to ensure quality care for all.
4. Every woman has the right to choose her birth setting
from the full range of safe options available in her community,
on the basis of complete, objective information about benefits,
risks and costs of these options.*
5. Every woman has the right to receive all or most of her
maternity care from a single caregiver or a small group of
caregivers, with whom she can establish a relationship. Every
woman has the right to leave her maternity caregiver and select
another if she becomes dissatisfied with her care.* (Only
second sentence is a legal right.)
6. Every woman has the right to information about the professional
identity and qualifications of those involved with her care,
and to know when those involved are trainees.*
7. Every woman has the right to communicate with caregivers
and receive all care in privacy, which may involve excluding
nonessential personnel. She also has the right to have all
personal information treated according to standards of confidentiality.*
8. Every woman has the right to receive maternity care that
identifies and addresses social and behavioral factors that
affect her health and that of her baby.** She should receive
information to help her take the best care of herself and
her baby and have access to social services and behavioral
change programs that could contribute to their health.
9. Every woman has the right to full and clear information
about benefits, risks, and costs of the procedures, drugs,
tests and treatments offered to her, and of all other reasonable
options, including no intervention.* She should receive this
information about all interventions that are likely to be
offered during labor and birth well before the onset of labor.
10. Every woman has the right to accept or refuse procedures,
drugs, tests and treatments, and to have her choices honored.
She has the right to change her mind.* (Please note that this
established legal right has been challenged in a number of
recent cases.)
11. Every woman has the right to be informed if her caregivers
wish to enroll her or her infant in a research study. She
should receive full information about all known and possible
benefits and risks of participation, and she has the right
to decide whether to participate, free from coercion and without
negative consequences.*
12. Every woman has the right to unrestricted access to all
available records about her pregnancy, her labor, and her
infant; to obtain a full copy of these records; and to receive
help in understanding them, if necessary.*
13. Every woman has the right to receive maternity care that
is appropriate to her cultural and religious background, and
to receive information in a language in which she can communicate.*
14. Every woman has the right to have family members and
friends of her choice present during all aspects of her maternity
care.**
15. Every woman has the right to receive continuous social,
emotional, and physical support during labor and birth from
a caregiver who has been trained in labor support.**
16. Every woman has the right to receive full advance information
about risks and benefits of all reasonably available methods
for relieving pain during labor and birth, including methods
that do not require the use of drugs. She has the right to
choose which methods will be used and to change her mind at
any time.*
17. Every woman has the right to freedom of movement during
labor, unencumbered by tubes, wires, or other apparatus. She
also has the right to give birth in the position of her choice.*
18. Every woman has the right to virtually uninterrupted
contact with her newborn from the moment of birth, as long
as she and her baby are healthy and do not need care that
requires separation.**
19. Every woman has the right to receive complete information
about the benefits of breastfeeding well in advance of labor,
to refuse supplemental bottles and other actions that interfere
with breastfeeding, and to have access to skilled lactation
support for as long as she chooses to breastfeed.**
20. Every woman has the right to decide collaboratively with
caregivers when she and her baby will leave the birth site
for home, based on their condition and circumstances.**
(At this time in the United States, childbearing women are
legally entitled to those rights marked with *. The legal
system would probably uphold those rights marked with **.)
©Maternity Center Association, 1999
Our Sources
The following sources have helped guide the development
of this statement of rights:
American Hospital Association. A Patient´s Bill of
Rights, revised edition approved by the AHA Board of Trustees
on October 21, 1992.
Annas, G. J. A national bill of patients´ rights. New
England Journal of Medicine_338, (10) 695-699, 1998
Annas, G. J. The Rights of Patients, second edition. Carbondale,
IL; Southern Illinois University Press, 1989.
Boston Women´s Health Book Collective. Section on "Child-bearing"
and chapter on "The politics of women´s health
and medical care." In: Our Bodies, Ourselves for the
New Century. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1998, pp. 433-543,
680-722.
Coalition for Improving Maternity Services (CIMS). The Mother-Friendly
Childbirth Initiative,1996. Available at: http://www.motherfriendly.org
Enkin, M., Keirse, M. J. N. C., Neilson. J., Crowther, C.,
Duley, L., Hodnett, E. and Hofmeyr, J. A Guide to Effective
Care in Pregnancy and Childbirth, third edition. New York:
Oxford University Press, 2000. Available on this website.
International Childbirth Education Association, Inc. The
Pregnant Patient's Bill of Rights. Minneapolis: ICEA, 1975.
President's Advisory Commission on Consumer Protection and
Quality in the Health Care Industry. Appendix A: Consumer
Bill of Rights and Responsibilities.In its Final Report: Quality
First: Better Health Care for All Americans. Available at:
http://www.hcqualitycommission.gov/final/append_a.html
United Nations. Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Published
by the United Nations, 1948.
Thank you to George Annas, professor and chair of Health
Law at the Boston University School of Public Health, for
clarifying the legal status of the individual rights.
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