Rhetoric vs Reality
In most high-income countries like the United Kingdom, comprehensive judicial precedent, policies and guidelines together establish resources for obtaining informed consent. Unfortunately, these materials appear to have limited impact on the practical realities faced by the people who consume maternity health services.
In our work today, the fact pattern in Montgomery’s case of dismissing women’s concerns and requests for information and the failure to obtain informed consent prior to initiating treatment (or even, in some cases, over objections to that treatment) remains the norm. In some countries, including middle to high income countries, disrespect and mistreatment is so common that women speak of themselves as being “lucky” if they survived the childbirth experience unscathed.
In 2015, the extent of the mistreatment in both high and low income countries prompted the World Health Organisation to publish a statement on the extent and impact of abuse and disrespect of women in facility based childbirth. The abuse and disrespect are documented as a violation of women’s human and reproductive rights, and a subset of gender-based violence against women. This was followed by the 2018 WHO recommendations on intrapartum care advocating for a holistic, human rights-based approach to the provision of maternity health services.
In practice, the broad majority of health facilities have become impervious to a birthing woman’s human rights. Focussing only on hastening the delivery of the infant, maintaining hospital process lines and gender based stereotypes about women and motherhood, many personnel simply do not “see” the rights violations and gender-based violence being perpetrated in their presence. As a result, careproviders are dismissive, angered or genuinely confused by complaints about violations of rights, especially the failure to afford informed consent.
For example, in Montgomery’s case, the plaintiff gave evidence, in relation to a birth that took place in 1999, that she was pleading with her care providers to answer her questions and to respond to her repeated questions about needing a Caesarean Section. Her careprovider admitted that she did not attempt to understand, let alone meet, the plaintiff’s needs because, in her view, the doctor knew better. Despite the obvious violation of her human rights, it took the plaintiff nearly two decades and lengthy, repeat court battles to receive judicial acknowledgement that a failure to afford informed consent had caused harm to her and her infant.
In addition, the ongoing response to Montgomery’s case has raised questions about continued careprovider confusion around the concept and application of informed consent. Human rights lawyers saw the UK Supreme Court’s determination as a nod to the inviolable yet poorly enforced principles of informed consent in the provision of maternity care in the UK. By contrast, the UK’s Royal College of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists considered implementing processes to warn women about the risks of having a vaginal birth – a spontaneous bodily function which, in and of itself, is clearly not a medical intervention and therefore should not require any consent.
Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women
On the human rights front, little has changed since Mrs Montgomery gave birth. In 2019, the UN Special Rapporteur on violence against women, its causes and consequences on a human rights-based approach to mistreatment and violence against women in reproductive health services with a focus on childbirth and obstetric violence [UN Doc. A/74/137] expressed virtually identical concerns based on reports received globally. In that report, the Special Rapporteur cited a failure to afford informed consent based on harmful gender stereotypes about motherhood and women’s subordinate role in society, and the unequal power dynamic within provider-patient relationships as root causes of mistreatment and violence in childbirth.
Then there is the abuse of the doctrine of medical necessity. In Montgomery’s case, the plaintiff’s careprovider retrospectively sought to justify her actions by asserting the doctrine of medical necessity. Two decades later, the UN Special Rapporter reported an abuse of that same doctrine, citing examples of where it was used to justify a violation of women’s human rights, in particular the right to informed consent.
These difficult circumstances are exacerbated when already constrained health systems are caring for birthing persons from non-English speaking backgrounds, or who are refugees, immigrants, in domestic violence situations, differently abled or identify as LGBTIQ.
When in balance, informed consent will constitute an agreement between care provider and woman over what treatment option to take in each instance, how it will be performed and whether it can result in any side effects, well before contact is made with the woman’s body.
That balance, particularly in the provision of maternity health services, is fragile. Women in labour are already vulnerable, made more so if they are young or socio-economically disadvantaged. They are unfamiliar with hospital protocols and the time restrictions being imposed on them. They feel restrained, exposed and displaced by repeated interventions and interactions with multiple and everchanging care providers. They are intimidated by the professional strangers pushing them into medical interventions. Equally, careproviders weighed down by liability concerns, professional and employment obligations, and cost cutting measures will inevitably elevate practical or medical expedience and outcomes over unmeasurable concepts such as compassion and dignity.
Committee on the Elimination of Descrimination Against Women
When careproviders are supported by the authorities or administrative bodies also seeking to avoid liability, the resulting power imbalance between woman and careprovider cannot be overstated,. As the Committee for the Elimination of Discrimination against Women determined in S.F.M v Spain [CEDAW/C/75/D/138/2018] (reported in 2020):
“The Committee considers that stereotyping affects the right of women to be protected against gender-based violence, in this case obstetric violence, and that the authorities responsible for analysing responsibility for such acts should exercise particular caution in order not to reproduce stereotypes.
In the present case, the Committee observes that there was an alternative to the situation experienced by the author, given that her pregnancy had progressed normally and without complications and that there was no emergency when she arrived at the hospital but that, nevertheless, from the moment she was admitted, she was subjected to numerous interventions about which she received no explanation and was allowed to express no opinion.
Furthermore, the Committee observes that the administrative and judicial authorities of the State party applied stereotypical and thus discriminatory notions by assuming that it is for the doctor to decide whether or not to perform an episiotomy, stating without explanation that it was “perfectly understandable” that the father was not allowed to be present during the instrumental delivery and taking the view that the psychological harm suffered by the author was a matter of “mere perception”, but that they did show empathy towards the father when he stated that he had been deprived of sexual relations for two years.”
As shown above, without the oversight of legal and human rights principles protecting the right to informed consent, that power imbalance can quickly shift in favour of the careprovider, without appropriate accountability. As we discuss in the next section, shared decision cannot address this deficiency in practice. It will only provide further means for avoiding responsibility and accountability in relation to obtaining consent.
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