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1 in 3 Australian women describe their birth experience as traumatic. Here's what you can do to manage it.

I'm the statistic; my first birth was traumatic and I'm still managing the physical trauma eight years later.

It took me months after birth to come to terms with my experience and seek the professional help I needed. 

When I was pregnant for the second time, I did everything I could to actively prepare for labour and birth and I thankfully had a much more positive and healing experience. 

Watch: COPE's The Truth campaign unveils the profound and potentially long lasting emotional impacts following a traumatic birth. Story continues after video.

It was this birth - my empowering second birth - that inspired me to create the podcast Australian Birth Stories and since then, I've interviewed over 300 women about their pregnancy, birth and postpartum experiences. It didn't take long for me to realise that birth trauma affects many women and for a plethora of reasons. It really is much more common than we think.

Unfortunately, in the exhaustion and challenge of early motherhood, it's difficult to make sense of what you're feeling and experiencing, and often, your own needs quickly fall to the bottom of the priority list. 

Many women have explained the details of their trauma but admitted that it was months into motherhood, when they stepped out of the foggy exhaustion of the newborn bubble, that they realised their labour and birth experience had left them with trauma and its associated symptoms.

There's a common misunderstanding that a birth experience needs to be a medical emergency or end in loss to be deemed traumatic. This couldn't be further from the truth. 

Birth trauma can be physical, psychological, or both. It may be obvious immediately after birth or it may take months to become apparent. 

Some women admit they don't regard their birth as traumatic until they're pregnant again and their memories come flooding back; they're subsequently filled with angst, fear, and overwhelm as they consider labour and birth again.

One woman's trauma experience is not comparable to another and therefore, it's entirely subjective. No one - not a birth partner, doula, midwife or obstetrician - can dismiss birth trauma or call it something other than it is. 

If you describe your birth as traumatic, no one can dismiss this, even if they were a witness to or participant in your birth. Interestingly, support people who witness birth can also experience birth trauma, even if the birthing person does not.

Trauma can be experienced when your birth hasn't met your expectations, you feel like you weren’t listened to, or the events of your birth felt out of your control.

Physical birth trauma can be connected to a caesarean wound, perineal tearing, episiotomy, pelvic floor injury and/or prolapse. These traumas may be obvious immediately after birth or they may take months to be identified.

Physical birth trauma can also have psychological repercussions or birth trauma can be related solely to your emotional and mental experience of labour and birth. Signs of psychological birth trauma include:

  • Feeling angry about labour and/or birth
  • Nightmares
  • Unwanted memories or flashbacks
  • Consistently replaying the traumatic event
  • Guilt for how you’re feeling 
  • Relationship issues 
  • Avoiding reminders, such as avoiding driving near the hospital where it happened
  • Feeling terror, stress and fear whenever you think or talk about the birth 
  • Feeling detached or numb

Listen to Me After You where Laura Byrne guides some very different women through their very different stories of life after birth. Story continues after podcast.


Managing birth trauma.

One in 10 women who experience birth trauma will be diagnosed with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). However, many women will manage their trauma without an official diagnosis. Sometimes, simply talking through the experience with family and friends will be enough for a woman to process and resolve her experience.

For many women, targeted support will be necessary to manage their trauma symptoms. This may include:

Women's health physiotherapist.

If you're experiencing physical birth trauma (pelvic floor injury, perineal tear, prolapse), a women's health physiotherapist will be vital to your recovery. In most cases, your care provider will refer you after birth but if not, you're best to ask your GP for a recommendation. 

Physiotherapists can assess your symptoms and give you a personalised treatment plan that will include exercises and treatments moving forward. If your symptoms are severe, you may see them regularly for a year or more.

Mental health therapy.

This is the most important step you can take if you have emotional and/or psychological trauma. Many women with birth trauma will seek guidance from their GP (where they can access a mental health care plan which will give them 10 subsidised appointments and receive a referral to a counsellor or psychologist). 

Psychologists who specialise in dealing with trauma are best and may recommend Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing (EMDR) therapy. EMDR therapy can be quite confronting, but if you can trust the process, it really helps you process and move through your trauma.

Open discussions with your care provider.

If you are pregnant and preparing for another labour and birth, talk to your care provider about your past birth experience and your associated trauma. They will help you process your experience and may recommend accessing your hospital records so you can read a step-by-step account of your experience. 

Knowing these may change the way you feel about how your body laboured and birthed, and may provide reasons things happened the way they did. If you have questions, your care provider should be able to answer them for you.

Lastly, active birth preparation is a practical way for you to let go of your past birth and regard your next as an entirely new experience. Listening to other women's birth stories is a really powerful way for you to understand the spectrum of labour and birth experiences and learn skills you can use in your next birth.

The Australasian Birth Trauma Association is solely dedicated to supporting women, partners and families after birth-related trauma. It also offers a thorough guide to pregnancy and birth after birth trauma. For more information, visit   birthtrauma.org.au.

Feature Image: Getty.

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Top Comments

cat 2 years ago
I always see discussions about birth trauma that approach it as if the medical system is at fault. Im sure thats true in a lot of cases, especially for minorities. But perhaps in many cases birth is always going to be traumatic, because the human body just isn't very well designed for it. I wonder if we should be more focused on implementing trauma mitigation protocols after birth and having therapy systems in place. 
daijobou 2 years ago 1 upvotes
@cat I call it “mother the mother”. So many cultures around the world have strong traditions of supporting new mothers, but if you don’t have a strong support system in Australia - you are screwed. Birth is terrible and messy and dangerous,  the hormonal changes are intense but if women are supported and  given proper after birth care the chances of being severely traumatised, or developing severe PND are greatly diminished. 
Fathers, family and friends need to be educated from a young age about how to care for and support new mums. We used to know birth was hard - it used to be “womens business” so we were cared for by those that understood and had been through it themselves  - but that has been lost, new mothers and children are suffering. We need to stop pretending popping out babies is easy.
Sorry for ranting I’m very passionate about the health of new mums. 

mb1111 2 years ago 3 upvotes
@cat umm didn’t you state that females can have babies with relatively little impact on their bodies in a thread about surrogacy? Or is that just for women in third world countries?
cat 2 years ago
@mb1111  birth trauma and long-term bodily impact aren't the same at all.  

Please don't hijack this thread for your own purposes, it doesn't reflect the respect this topic deserves. 

mb1111 2 years ago 2 upvotes
@cat I was just pointing out the contradiction. Western women should be supported, but surrogates in poorer countries are compared to people in medical trials and construction workers. All females are equal, but some are more equal than others 

daijobou 2 years ago
It is so difficult for women to speak about birth trauma, as evidenced by the previous comments people always tend to blame the mother “her expectations were too high”, “she wasn’t prepared enough”, “she was over prepared”. Unfortunately many Australians have this idea that you just pop out a baby than carry on like nothing has happened but in reality it is one of the most dangerous  things many women will ever go through and it changes you forever.
I didn’t realise I was traumatised by my first birth until I was about to birth my second and had an uncontrollable irrational fear of being denied painkillers with my c-section surgery.
@daijobou I don't think pointing out that sometimes one's birth plans do go out the window as "blaming the mother". In healthcare, we cannot always deliver what people want or expect on demand, like you would order a dish from a menu. To establish the expectation that one can lock in a birth plan that will run perfectly to schedule is to set someone up for potential disappointment and trauma. Do women need to be heard and respected, and have their wishes met if possible? Absolutely.  But sometimes, that doesn't happen, through no fault of anybody - birth and pregnancy is a dangerous time as you say, so often safety takes precedence. A pinch of realism is needed here.
I'd also be remiss if I didn't add to my comments above an acknowledgement that obstetric trauma is definitely a real thing. Women have been treated in a very patriarchal manner by healthcare in general - childbirth is probably the most extreme case of this. However, I also think in an attempt to claw back some modicum of control and autonomy, women have been led to believe they can also ask for the world and have it guarantee-delivered (no pun intended). When things don't go to "plan", it's perceived as a failure or trauma. Whilst the healthcare system undeniably has a long way to go with regards to recognising the disparities women face in the system, it's also important to understand that even when the system is at its best, sometimes expectations may exceed the ability to deliver.