Interesting! Like most things in life, I think there's a balance.
I haven't used a doula so I'm not in a great position to post here but I will post what I would expect my doula to do. Primarily I would see her role as LISTENING to me and my wishes. Taking my last labour as an example, I would have briefed her that I would like to go natural as much as possible BUT I would expect her to be supportive if I had tried everything and all things considered, had decided to use drugs.
My labour was very long. OK, officially I may only have been in labour for a stock standard 16 hours or so but the pre-labour killed me. By the time I went to the hospital I'd had 7 hours sleep in three days and my DD was posterior. Now, I know that a lot of people would say that posterior babies take longer to come out and you just need to be patient and try this, try that BUT I was exhausted. So when I asked for the epidural it was not primarily because of the pain, I just needed to press the pause button and have a rest. A good doula may have said to me - listen, just try the gas - an epidural will make the labour longer whereas if you keep things ticking along this baby will be out quicker. I KNEW that logically, but just needed someone to tell me that. So, a doula who was totally anti-drugs just would not have been a good, supportive person for me in that situation. If she'd said "oh, you've done so well, keep going, mind over matter, you can do it," - I wouldn't have listened. I HAD done well, but I needed something extra at that point.
As for lactation consultants/breastfeeding advice - again, there's a balance. The advice I got from the LC in hospital led me to spending 2.5 hours EVERY 3 hours for the first 2 weeks doing the breastfeeding, expressing, formula regime. So I got a half-hour break every three hours. I could have coped with that if there was light at the end of the tunnel and if DD had been improving on the breastfeeding but she wasn't. And the advice was mixed - oh, you have flat nipples so BF is going to be difficult but if you give formula you're doomed. So what are you meant to make of that? I think in hindsight I should have taken DP's advice which was "she's a bloody big baby, she's not going to starve and don't even worry about it until your milk's properly in, just keep trying until she gets it and stop hooking yourself up to machines."
But hindsight is a wonderful thing!




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