Toronto

This midwife-led clinic is being called a 'safety net' for parents and newborns

The Family and Newborn Clinic at Michael Garron Hospital opened this January. Some patients are already calling it a much-needed support system, while leaders say there's a need for more postpartum midwifery care.

Postpartum midwifery care should be in every community, say clinic leaders

Why this Toronto midwife-led clinic is being called a first of its kind

10 days ago
Duration 2:36
The Family and Newborn Clinic at Michael Garron Hospital is being hailed as a much-welcomed support system. But as CBC's Britnei Bilhete explains, leaders say there's still a need for more postpartum midwifery care.

Leaders of a midwife-led clinic billed as the first of its kind in Toronto's east end say every community should have a similar service to help fill the gaps in postpartum health care.

The Family and Newborn (FAN) Clinic, located within Michael Garron Hospital's BMO Child and Youth Clinic, is led by a team of midwives who provide routine and semi-urgent care to new parents and their babies for up to eight weeks postpartum. It's open to new parents who either gave birth at the hospital or live in the hospital's catchment area, with or without a referral, seven days a week.

The space opened in January after years of preparation and construction, and since then it's served over 300 families looking to get rapid care, says Christie Lockhart, chief of the midwifery department.

"We should have these in every community. Every parent who's giving birth should have access to comprehensive postpartum care," she told CBC Toronto. "We're not the first and we're not the only, but we're definitely few and far between."

On top of taking in-clinic appointments, the centre also gives low-risk families the option of leaving the hospital early if they'd like to recover at home, and sets them up with a midwife who will visit them up to two days postpartum.

"It's definitely a first for the east end of Toronto," Lockhart said.

WATCH | Inside Michael Garron Hospital's new paediatric facility:

A look at Michael Garron Hospital's new pediatric outpatient centre

5 months ago
Duration 2:15
Toronto's Michael Garron Hospital is celebrating the grand opening of its new paediatric facility. The Child and Youth Centre is home to more than 20 clinics, including one that's midwife led. CBC’s Britnei Bilhete has the details.

Post-birth, parents and newborns need routine assessments and timely answers to urgent concerns. But many are left with few options for fast appointments if their obstetrician or pediatrician is booked up or their family doctor can't see them — if they have one amid a shortage.

Too often, parents are forced to make a visit to an ER to get care, says Lockhart, and "we never want to have a minor complication coming through the emergency department.

Province says it put over $15M into midwifery in last year 

Asked how the province is supporting more spaces like the FAN Clinic, Ema Popovic, spokesperson for the Minister of Health said the province "recognizes Ontario's midwives are an important part of our healthcare system. That is why last year we invested more than $15 million to increase midwifery compensation and ensure that families and newborns can access high-quality midwifery closer to home," including at Michael Garron Hospital. 

Popovic also noted efforts the government is taking to increase family doctors, such as expanding medical school seats.

For first-time parents Manon Vialette and Adrian Haight, the FAN Clinic has been their go-to place for their postpartum concerns when their family doctor and OB couldn't see them quickly enough.

A couple smiles for a photo with a baby in lap inside a clinic assessment room.
First-time parents Manon Vialette and Adrian Haight say Michael Garron Hospital's FAN Clinic has given them a sense of relief during 'a challenging time.' (Submitted by Michael Garron Hospital)

"For me, it's the emergency support… that safety net that you maybe don't know that you have when you're a new parent," Haight said.

Dad, mom and their baby Emily have visited the clinic twice for time-sensitive care, once for a routine weekend check-up, and a second time when Vialette's C-section scar wasn't healing properly.

"It's been really, really helpful because it's a challenging time," Haight said.

"Don't have to wait six hours in the emergency room, that's for sure," Vialette added. 

Aside from routine check-ups and urgent medical concerns, the pair and other patients can also access other services such as breast-feeding education, says full-time midwife staff member Mary Dirmeitis. 

"Postpartum care for parents is a gap in our healthcare system in general," she said. "We're filling that gap, which is really nice."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Britnei Bilhete is a reporter with CBC Toronto. She previously worked as a producer with the CBC News social media team and reported for CBC Nova Scotia. You can send your story tips to her at [email protected].