A year-long investigation into the Free Birth Society reveals how mothers lost children after being radicalised by uplifting podcast tales of births without midwives or doctors.
Lucy Hough talks to the investigative correspondent Lucy Osborne about her reporting.
The Free Birth Society (FBS) is a multimillion-dollar business that promotes an extreme version of free birth, meaning women giving birth without medical assistance. The Guardian can now reveal that the organisation has been linked to dozens of cases of maternal harm and baby deaths around the world. After a year-long investigation, Sirin Kale and Lucy Osborne explain why some women they interviewed found FBSβs views so appealing, and why medical professionals say their claims about birth are dangerous
The Free Birth Society was selling pregnant women a simple message. They could exit the medical system and take back their power. By free birthing. But Nicole Garrison believes FBS ideology nearly cost her her life. This is episode one of a year-long investigation by Guardian journalists Sirin Kale and Lucy Osborne
Soon-to-be parents hired a woman they believed would act as a licensed midwife. But she in fact belonged to a radical society that was linked to baby deaths around the world
Ernesta Chirwa recalls the jarring moment the woman she presumed was her midwife said something unexpected. Caitlyn Collins was driving her to hospital after 6am, on 15 February 2022. βShe said,β says Chirwa, who is 30 and lives in Cape Town, βPlease donβt mention to the nurses that we were trying to have a home birth.β
Chirwa was in too much pain to speak β she was in active labour. But she remembers feeling surprised. βWhy,β Chirwa recalls, βis she asking us not to mention that we were trying to have a home birth?β