2022 Workshops: Turning the Tide for Birth and Breastfeeding

2022 Workshops: Turning the Tide for Birth and Breastfeeding

24 & 27 February 2022

Workshop 1: Thursday 9.00am - 4.00pm 24 Feb 2022. Venue: Warrnambool Breastfeeding Centre

09:00 AM
Would you like to become a Birth Cartographer®? - Catherine Bell
04:00 PM
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Workshop 2: Sunday 9.00am - 1.00pm 27 Feb 2022. Venue: the Whalers Hotel.

09:00 AM

Nisha Gill - Trauma-Sensitive Perinatal Care – 3.5 hr workshop (3.5 L cerps)

‘Trauma-informed practice’ has become a catchphrase if not clichéd concept in recent times. Much of it is geared towards changing systems and policies in workplaces. However, these systems are the sum total of individuals with their own histories and levels of autonomic nervous system regulation and dysregulation. When perinatal professionals take ownership of what they bring to relating with those in their care and truly appreciate that all parts make up the whole, then the power to make a positive difference becomes very real. This workshop is an opportunity to delve deeper into understanding the neuro-physiological basis of trauma, explore how your personal history and knowledge base have influenced your practice, and appreciate how you as a perinatal professional have significant power to minimize the potential for trauma among those in your care.  The workshop will entail a combination of cognitive learning, reflective processes and embodiment practices.  Participants will ideally have attended during the conference presentation A Neuro-physiological approach to trauma minimization in the perinatal continuumas a springboard to this workshop.

At the end of this presentation participants will be able to:

- Understand the neuro-physiological basis for trauma including the concepts of neuroception (detection of safety versus threat), window of tolerance/ resilience range, co-regulation on a primordial level, and the defensive survival states of Fight, Flight, Freeze & Appease.

- Identify five main factors which promote a sense of safety and regulation in the pregnant, birthing or postpartum person & their family.

- List three ways in which the potential for trauma can be reduced specifically during each phase of the perinatal journey:  pregnancy, birth and the postpartum.

- List ten signs of operating in protective survival physiology 

- Embody and describe five nervous system regulation tools

- Identify five ways in which their practice can be enhanced towards greater trauma sensitivity.

Trauma-sensitive perinatal care - Venue: the Whalers Hotel - Nisha Gill
01:00 PM
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Catherine Bell
BIOGRAPHY

Catherine Bell

BSc (Hons), MSc (Comm)

Catherine is the author of The Birth Map: Boldly going where no birth plan has gone before. After becoming a mother, she shifted her focus from marine biology and general science communication to maternal communication and decision making. She is currently a PhD Candidate at the University of Canberra evaluating a new approach to birth preparation she developed in response to the short comings experienced in the current system – Birth Cartography.

Nisha Gill
BIOGRAPHY

Nisha Gill

BAppSc, Dip C, SEP

Nisha Gill is a Somatic Experiencing (trauma resolution) practitioner, applying a neuro-physiological or bodymind lens to working with trauma using Somatic Experiencing, Somatic Practice, Neuro Affective Touch and counselling. Her special focus is on the resolution of developmental, birth, sexual, pre- & peri-natal and medical traumas. Nisha’s practice is informed by her experiences as birth educator, birth doula, integrative bodyworker, and female embodiment teacher. She formerly worked as a speech pathologist in hospital and rehabilitation settings.

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