British Columbia has put an end to the practice, which can lead to traumatic child apprehensions soon after delivery and disproportionately impacts Indigenous women.
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The Government of British Columbia has put an end to “birth alerts”—a practice that allows hospital staff to alert child welfare workers that a newborn may be at risk for harm, without informing expectant parents.
This practice, which can lead to traumatic child apprehensions soon after delivery, disproportionately impacts Indigenous women.
By ending this practice, B.C.‘s action marks progress towards delivering on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada’s Calls to Action on child welfare, and specifically the first Call to Action—to reduce the number of Indigenous children in care.
To continue making meaningful progress in this era of Truth and Reconciliation, all provinces and territories should promptly follow suit where similar practices exist.
The practice of birth alerts is harmful for a number of reasons. Driven by fears of having a birth alert issued, it can deter at-risk women from accessing prenatal care or, for example, from seeking treatment for a substance use disorder while pregnant.
The practice can also make it difficult for women and their partners to turn their lives around as new birth alerts can be informed by remote events. For example, if a woman had a child apprehended years earlier, she can be flagged as being high-risk in a future pregnancy even if her life has changed considerably.
The TRC called upon federal, provincial, territorial, and Indigenous governments to commit to reducing the number of Indigenous children in care. This was written into the Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada released in December 2014, and reemphasized in the recent release of the Report of the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.
As a means to achieving this call to action and to ensure an end to discriminatory practices, policies and processes within all provincial jurisdictions that relate to reporting newborns at risk for harm should be thoroughly scrutinized and revised, or drafted where none exists.
Though a step in the right direction, ending birth alerts alone will not be enough to create a meaningful shift in child welfare systems across the country that disproportionately impact Indigenous families.
For instance, in the province of Alberta where I work as an obstetric general internist, birth alerts are not practised. Despite this, government statistics show that in 2015-16, 12,715 initial assessments were conducted by Child and Family Services on children up to the age of three.
Of these assessments, 30 per cent (3,794) involved Indigenous families, despite their comprising only 6.5 per cent of Alberta’s population.
Indigenous youth make up 52.2% of children in foster care, despite representing just 7.7% of children in the wider population.
I spoke with Kyle Edwards of @macleans last January about why this matters, and why I called an emergency meeting. https://t.co/xRu13dXdL9November 29, 2018
This highlights that even in the absence of birth alerts, other discriminatory practices remain in place that require close scrutiny to ensure less Indigenous children end up in care.
In a recent statement, Katrine Conroy, B.C. Minister of Child and Family Development emphasized that the focus of all child welfare practices should shift from nontransparent “red-flagging” of expectant parents to voluntary engagement and early intervention starting at the outset of pregnancy.
This approach would foster more trusting relationships with service providers and support women and their families in planning for and safely parenting their babies if that is their goal.
A shift in culture is coming. This is exemplified by many promising initiatives underway across the country that focus on upstream prevention of child apprehensions at birth. Examples, amongst many, include:
Examples like these fly in the face of comments made by Saskatchewan’s Social Services Minister Paul Merriman in response to B.C.’s action—that his province won’t consider ending birth alerts without a viable alternative in place.
Viable alternatives are available, but pursuing them requires political will. We must continue to apply pressure to these governments to take action.
Following the B.C. government’s clear and public statement to end the discriminatory practice of birth alerts in their province, all provinces and territories should promptly follow suit.
This should be done through a shift in culture from nontransparent, punitive measures, to one focused on prevention and early intervention, fostering trusting and collaborative relationships with at-risk expectant parents.
Only then will we make meaningful progress in achieving calls to action related to keeping Indigenous children with their families in this era of Truth and Reconciliation in our country.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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