Monday, February 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Midwifery Rally Held At Alberta Legislature, Calls For More Funding Made

The Canadian Press, 10 Mar, 2016 11:26 AM
    EDMONTON — A rally has been staged at the Alberta legislature in support of midwives.
     
    About 200 men, women and children gathered Wednesday afternoon to call for more funding for the service.
     
    Dana Weatherhead of the Association for Safe Alternatives in Childbirth says the existing funding is not enough to provide services for the 1,800 women who are currently waitlisted.
     
    Morgan Reid, who was able to have a natural water birth at a centre in Edmonton, says she applied for a midwive the day she found out she was pregnant because she was worried about not being able to get one.
     
    Kendra Ruhl-Larocque of Whitecourt, Alta., says there are no midwifery services in her northern Alberta community so she drove to Edmonton to give birth.
     
    She says although she's happy she was able to give birth naturally, she would have been more comfortable doing it in her own community.
     
    Weatherhead says women under midwifery care want to give birth at home, so if more babies are born at home, that would mean less funding would be needed for hospital costs.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    CNN Reporting From Cape Breton As Trump-Inspired Spotlight Continues

    CNN Reporting From Cape Breton As Trump-Inspired Spotlight Continues
    The cable news channel is following up on reports that a local website encouraging U.S. citizens to move to Cape Breton has gone viral, attracting more than 300,000 hits in the past two weeks.

    CNN Reporting From Cape Breton As Trump-Inspired Spotlight Continues

    New Brunswick Premier Looks To Draw Cybersecurity Jobs With Centre Of Excellence

    Premier Brian Gallant was in San Francisco Tuesday to promote the province to information technology companies at a major cybersecurity conference.

    New Brunswick Premier Looks To Draw Cybersecurity Jobs With Centre Of Excellence

    Consumers Eye New Options As CRTC-Mandated Trimmed Down TV Takes Effect

    Consumers Eye New Options As CRTC-Mandated Trimmed Down TV Takes Effect
    Canada's major TV service providers say it's too early to tell how many of their customers will choose to switch to the new slimmed-down services that are on offer as of today.

    Consumers Eye New Options As CRTC-Mandated Trimmed Down TV Takes Effect

    Market-oriented Group Wants To Speed 'Once-in-lifetime' Clean Economy Transition

    Market-oriented Group Wants To Speed 'Once-in-lifetime' Clean Economy Transition
    Smart Prosperity officially launches Tuesday in Vancouver with a boost from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, whose Liberal government's climate agenda appears to dovetail with the economic transformation envisioned by the new market-oriented group.

    Market-oriented Group Wants To Speed 'Once-in-lifetime' Clean Economy Transition

    Forcing News Outlet To Turn Over Source Materials 'Dangerous,' Court Told

    Forcing News Outlet To Turn Over Source Materials 'Dangerous,' Court Told
    Iain MacKinnon tells Ontario Superior Court that RCMP were on a sweeping fishing expedition when they asked Vice Media and its reporter for its records.

    Forcing News Outlet To Turn Over Source Materials 'Dangerous,' Court Told

    Albertans Asked To Give Input On Doctor-assisted Death In Online Survey

    EDMONTON — The Alberta government wants to hear what residents think about doctor-assisted death.

    Albertans Asked To Give Input On Doctor-assisted Death In Online Survey