Hard Pushed: A Midwife’s Story by Leah Hazard

“For fans of Adam Kay’s This Is Going to Hurt and Christie Watson’s The Language of Kindness,” the blurb on my press release for Leah Hazard’s memoir opens. The publisher’s comparisons couldn’t be more perfect: Hard Pushed has the gynecological detail and edgy sense of humor of Kay’s book (“Another night, another vagina” is its first line, and the author has been known to introduce herself with “Midwife Hazard, at your cervix!”), and matches Watson’s with its empathetic picture of patients’ plights and medical professionals’ burnout.

Hazard alternates between anonymized case studies of patients she has treated and general thoughts on her chosen career (e.g. “Notes on Triage” and “Notes on Being from Somewhere Else”). Although all of the patients in her book are fictional composites, their circumstances are rendered so vividly that you quickly forget these particular characters never existed. Visceral details of sights, smells and feelings put you right there in the delivery room with Eleanor, one-half of a lesbian couple welcoming a child thanks to the now-everyday wonder of IVF; Hawa, a Somali woman whose pregnancy is complicated by the genital mutilation she underwent as a child; and Pei Hsuan, a Chinese teenager who was trafficked into sex work in Britain.

Sometimes we don’t learn the endings to these stories. Will 15-year-old Crystal have a healthy baby after she starts leaking fluid at 23 weeks? What will happen next for Pei Hsuan after her case is passed on to refugee services? Hazard deliberately leaves things uncertain to reflect the partial knowledge a hospital midwife often has of her patients: they’re taken off to surgery or discharged, and when they eventually come back to deliver someone else may be on duty. All she can do is to help each woman the best she can in the moment.

A number of these cases allow the author to comment on the range of modern opinions about pregnancy and childrearing, including some controversies. A pushy new grandmother tries to pressure her daughter into breastfeeding; a woman struggles with her mental health while on maternity leave; a rape victim is too far along to have a termination. At the other end of the spectrum, we meet a hippie couple in a birthing pool who prefer to speak of “surges” rather than contractions. Hazard rightly contends that it’s not her place to cast judgment on any of her patients’ decisions; her job is simply to deal with the situation at hand.

I especially liked reading about the habits that keep the author going through long overnight shifts, such as breaking the time up into 15-minute increments, each with its own assigned task. The excerpts from her official notes – in italics and full of shorthand and jargon – are a neat window into the science and reality of a midwife’s work, with a glossary at the end of the book ensuring that nothing is too technical for laypeople.

Hazard, an American, lives in Scotland and has a Glaswegian husband and two daughters. Her experience of being an NHS midwife has not always been ideal; there were even moments when she was ready to quit. Like Kay and Watson, she has found that the medical field can be unforgiving what with low pay, little recognition and hardly any time to wolf down your dinner during a break, let alone reflect on the life-and-death situations you’ve been a part of. Yet its rewards outweigh the downsides.

Hard Pushed has none of the sentimentality of Call the Midwife – a relief since I’m not one to gush over babies. Still, it’s a heartfelt read as well as a vivid and pacey one, and it’s alternately funny and sobering. If you like books that follow doctors and nurses down hospital hallways, you’ll love it. This was one of my most anticipated books of the first half of the year, and it lived up to my expectations. It’s also one of my top contenders for the 2020 Wellcome Book Prize so far.

 

A few favorite passages:

“So many things in midwifery are ‘wee’ [in Scotland, at least!] – a wee cut, a wee tear, a wee bleed, the latter used to describe anything from a trickle to a torrent. Euphemisms are one of our many small mercies: we learn early on to downplay and dissemble. The brutality of birth is often self-evident; there is little need to elaborate.”

“Whenever I dress a wound in this way, I remember that this is an act of loving validation; every wound tells a story, and every dressing is an acknowledgement of that story – the midwife’s way of saying, I hear you, and I believe you.”

“midwives do so much more than catch babies. We devise and implement plans of care; we connect, console, empathise and cheerlead; we prescribe; we do minor surgery. … We may never have met you until the day we ride into battle for you and your baby; … you may not even recognise the cavalry that’s been at your back until the drapes are down and the blood has dried beneath your feet.”

My rating:

 


Hard Pushed was published in the UK on May 2nd (just a few days before International Midwives’ Day) by Hutchinson. My thanks to the publisher for the free proof copy for review.

25 responses

  1. Not for me. Anything to do with hospitals and bodily fluids has me running for the exit – fast. I definitely don’t want to follow doctors and nurses down hospital hallways! I’m grateful that they’re there, but ….

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    1. Fair enough 🙂 You wouldn’t like the more clinical titles I read for the Wellcome Book Prize — or any of them. My main reaction to lots of these situations was “thank goodness I don’t have to go through that…”

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Funnily enough, I’m OK with clinical stuff, and even enjoy some of it – well, find it interesting anyway. It’s the human interest stuff that’s beyond me.

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  2. I do love a pun but I think that might be a step too far at a party, not that I go to an awful lot of those!

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    1. Ah, I didn’t mention the title — I think of it as applying mostly to herself and her pressured colleagues, though of course it’s relevant to the delivery room. This is the kind of book that lets it all hang out, pleasant or not!

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      1. It was the cervix introduction that caught my eye but I imagine if you’re pregnant that may well raise a smile.

        Liked by 1 person

  3. Hah – this sounds great.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I think you’d like it since you liked Watson’s book — did you notice the similar soft-focus cover? (Though if you look closely enough, this one actually pictures something.)

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      1. Yes! This looks a lot like the paperback cover of Watson’s book, too.

        Liked by 1 person

  4. I’m going to have to read this one!

    Liked by 1 person

  5. After struggling with The Language of Kindness I’m not sure this is for me, but great review!

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    1. I can’t decide if you’d like it or not — it’s funnier and more edgy than the Watson book, and I think you might be interested in the examples of cultural expectations.

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  6. This sounds a brilliant example of this genre and the excerpts you quote at the end just wonderful. I would read it for the cultural stuff and anthropology although not quite sure I’d deal with the medical detail!

    Liked by 1 person

  7. I love the last passage you shared. Good maternity ward care is invaluable. I’m so grateful to the nurses who were with me and cared for me through that challenging time.

    Liked by 1 person

  8. Bledwina Blighty Pudfish | Reply

    I will read this – I enjoyed This is going to Hurt and also since you say it’s a possible contender for next year’s Wellcome Prize.

    Liked by 1 person

  9. I think I would love this. If I can get past the fact that we don’t always find out what happens to the patients. That must be really hard for her.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I think that sort of detachment is essential in the medical field. If you cared ‘too much’ about each and every patient, you could get emotionally overwhelmed very quickly.

      Liked by 1 person

  10. This sounds really good! I’ll have to see if it’s available in the US 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Not yet, that I know of — but since she’s American I hope she’ll get a U.S. book deal.

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  11. […] Hard Pushed: A Midwife’s Story by Leah Hazard: An empathetic picture of patients’ plights and medical professionals’ burnout. Visceral details of sights, smells and feelings put you right there in the delivery room. Excerpts from a midwife’s official notes – in italics and full of shorthand and jargon – are a neat window into the science and reality of the work. This is a heartfelt read as well as a vivid and pacey one, and it’s alternately funny and sobering. If you like books that follow doctors and nurses down hospital hallways, you’ll love it. […]

    Like

  12. […] *Hard Pushed: A Midwife’s Story by Leah Hazard: An empathetic picture of patients’ plights and medical professionals’ burnout. Visceral details of sights, smells and feelings put you right there in the delivery room. This is a heartfelt read as well as a vivid and pacey one, and it’s alternately funny and sobering. […]

    Like

  13. […] are honest about physical as well as emotional changes, with midwife Leah Hazard (author of Hard Pushed) kicking off with an eye-opening rundown of the intimate scarring some mothers will have for the […]

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  14. […] attending a Wellcome Collection online event with Unsworth and midwife Leah Hazard (author of Hard Pushed) this evening and look forward to hearing more from both […]

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  15. […] in 2019, I reviewed Hard Pushed, Leah Hazard’s memoir of being a midwife in a busy Glasgow hospital. Here she widens the view to […]

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