B.C. college of midwives takes court action to ban use of term ‘death midwife’
VANCOUVER — Two British Columbia women who call themselves death midwives are facing legal action for using a term that the province’s regulator of midwives says applies exclusively to health professionals providing maternity care.
The College of Midwives of British Columbia served Pashta MaryMoon and Patricia Keith with a cease and desist letter in June 2016 but is now seeking a permanent injunction through B.C. Supreme Court in an effort to stop them from using a term it says is exclusive to its members.
It argues the Canadian Integrative Network for Death Education and Alternatives, co-founded by MaryMoon, defies the Health Professions Act by using a reserved title and “harm to the public is presumed from the breach of the law.”
Families who hire her to care for their dying loved ones have never confused her services with the birthing process, MaryMoon said Wednesday.
