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Saskatchewan

Support systems during birth an exercise in empowerment for new Indigenous doula

Jolene Creely said birth is one of the most scariest but also most vulnerable experiences a woman can have. A doula can help empower women during birth and provide a sense of fulfilment, she added.

Jolene Creely decided to go into doula training after she gave birth

Jolene Creely from the Okanese First Nation had thought about having a doula at her own birth but said there would have been too many people in the room. (Submitted by Jolene Creely)

When Jolene Creely was giving birth to her child, she did not have a doulapresent and said she put everything in the hands of her companion and twoolder relatives.

"My supports were really great but one thing, a mistake Imade, was not telling them what I wanted to hear or necessarily how I wanted them to support me," Creelytold CBC Radio'sThe Afternoon Editionon Monday.

"I didn't get to voice what I wanted to and I think it's just because I didn't know how."

Creely was a journalism student at the time, but givingbirth changed her career trajectory.

She said birth is one of the scariest and most vulnerable experiences a woman can have. Adoulacan help empower women during birth and provide a sense of fulfilment, she added.

'You can feel so alone'

Creely said it's important that there be more Indigenous doulas and midwives because of a lack of supports for Indigenous women.

"Being an Indigenous woman, you can feel so alone at times, especially when giving birth."

When the opportunity for doula training came up in Saskatoon, Creelyapplied and was supported by her community,the Okanese First Nation, in doing so.

Creely said she wants to provide a safe space for women to give birth and also incorporate Indigenous practices.

One idea Creelysuggests is having a smudge burning during birth, as a way to incorporate another sense in the process.

Creelysaid she wants to practice in Regina and Fort Qu'Appelle.

With files from CBC Radio's The Afternoon Edition