Australian mothers are being forced to give birth on road-sides and this is why.
Where did you give birth? A private birthing suite, a delivery room in a well-equipped public hospital, or on the side of a dusty outback road?
If you think the last is a ridiculous notion then think again because a crisis in rural maternity options for Australian women is making this more of a reality.
What about your maternity appointments? Were they tough? I remember it being shockingly difficult to find a parking spot for my private obstetrician.
I remember being antsy at being kept waiting for over an hour once while he attended to other patients, and I remember being a little peeved that he missed the birth of my third who came a little too quickly and had to be delivered by a midwife at our hospital of choice.
How lucky I was.
For Chanel McCasker a routine appointment with her obstetrician was a plane trip away. The mother, from the remote Bathurst Island, was a long way from the nearest hospital in the Northern Territory. She was one of the lucky ones who made it to hospital when she went into labor.
According to a News Limited report a shocking 70 per cent of rural and remote birthing units in NSW have closed in the past two decades.
For Doug and Kimberly Lisle the birth of their son, Jack was meant to be a routine affair. But when Kimberley went into labour at their sheep station at Wollun, near Walcha in northern NSW they knew the hour long drive to Armindale Hospital was ahead of them.
Only 10 minutes in and baby Charlie wasn’t waiting. News Limited report that Kimberley told her husband to pull over and call an ambulance.