Childbirth campaigner, Founder of The National Childbirth Trust
Prunella Mary Briance (née Chapman) (1926–2017) was the British founder of the National Childbirth Trust and a passionate campaigner to improve the health of women and their experience in childbirth.
Early life
Briance was born on 31 January 1926, in Putney, London, to Eric Haldane Chapman (1887 -1961), a major (later colonel) in the British army, and Vera Lyndall, née Archbold.[1] The family moved to India when Briance was still young, though she returned to England for her secondary education, joining the Women's Royal Naval Service during the Second World War.[2] After the war she studied Russian at London University and that was where she met and married John Briance, a diplomat. The couple lived in Iran,[2] then Cyprus, then London where Briance had two pregnancies, one of which ended in her baby girl dying.[3] They had one son, Richard Briance.[2]
Activism for maternal health
The NCT (Natural Childbirth Association of Great Britain,[3] later changed to the National Childbirth Trust) was founded in 1956 and is a prominent organisation in the UK which provides ante and post natal support for parents. Briance's work changed the landscape of healthcare provision for maternal health.[citation needed]
Briance suffered two traumatic childbirth experiences, her first delivery in Cyprus, where she overheard doctors and nurses discussing if she would die, but despite trauma had a health baby boy, and two years later in London, where she was harmed during the labour and her baby girl shortly died.[3] Due to these experiences, Briance was determined to change the situation for other women, and successfully raised awareness of options to mothers and fathers during birth.[2][4] She began by advertising in The Times[4] and Daily Telegraph[2] newspapers to find other mothers and supporters to found a new organisation. The response was overwhelming and the launch was commended by many women, including a telegram of 'good luck' from the Queen.[3]
The organisation ran classes for parents based on research from gynaecologist Dr. Grantly Dick-Read, on reducing pain of childbirth in a less medicated manner, with the women leading on decisions in their care. Early NCT teachers included his wife Jessica Dick-Read and Sheila Kitzinger, social anthropologist who authored many books on childbirth and childcare.[5] However the medical profession was not so supportive of the notion that a 'natural' birth did not included appropriate medical advice, where needed, and their supporters were challenged by the British Medical Association,[2] so the name was changed to the National Childbirth Trust.[3]
Dick-Read and Briance had left but the organisation grew steadily over the years to 8,000 members in the 1970s[6] and by the 1980s, 240 local and regional branches, most including both parents in classes about anatomy and physiology, pain control and a partner's role in care.[7] By 2016, the NCT had 300 branches across the UK and Channel Islands and over 100,000 members.[6] Many of Briance's most radical ideas at the time (such as having fathers present in labour wards) are now accepted as common practice, and the overall approach of woman-centred maternity care[8] was endorsed by Government research published in 1993 and became British health care policy.[3]
In 1982, Briance self-published a book Childbirth with confidence: What every woman should know about childbirth, from her presentation at the 6th International Congress of Psychosomatic Obstetrics and Gynaecology in the Reichstag, West Berlin, Germany.[9] The foreword by Professor D.W. Winnicotpaediatrician and psychoanalyst stated that only 3% of births to healthy women required medical interventions.[10] Since that period, NCT have continued to influence popular and professional books on maternity care[11] from the work in educating parents-to-be and obstetrics service staff, following the examples of Dick-Read and Briance.[12] The 2011 Scottish government review of health policy including 'pathways of care which are person-centred', a programme called 'Keeping Childbirth Natural and Dynamic (KCND).[13] Credit is also given to the NCT in influencing changes in the birth experiences of women over the last 40 years.[14]
Their model of small social group learning, whilst adding peer pressure,[6] also gives social support for new parents e.g. preparing for breast-feeding are now linked into the NHS advice, and NCT influenced the Equality Act to give breastfeeding women rights to do so in public, without discrimination.[7] NCT also responded formally to the Government report: Midwifery 2020, still echoing Briance's call for health care services to 'make having a baby a more community-focused, personal and positive experience.'[15]