Titus 2 Birthing at the
Jail
Periodically I am asked how the jail program came about, program
logistics, our present condition, and how to start a similar program.
I hope this page answers some of those questions.
How Titus 2 Birthing was Birthed
I participate in several on-line birth professional email lists.
One of of these loops, a doula wrote about her experience providing
labor support to a prison inmate in Colorado. She described the woman
being in labor and handcuffed to the bed. I had done labor support
with a county jail inmate before, and knew that our situation locally
was not that inhumane, but it certainly was not ideal. Inmates cannot
have family present in labor and delivery, must have a guard with
them at all times, are shackled after delivery, and received very
little childbirth education when they received any at all. I resolved
to see if I could change that.
I wrote a letter to our county sheriff explaining what I wanted to
do, how I hoped to accomplish it, what benefits I expected to see,
and what I expected the county to do in return. He responded with
some enthusiasm and directed me to meet with the chaplain to discuss
the details, review the curriculum, and determine when and how we
would proceed. Chaplain Atwell was also positive in his response, so
we scheduled a follow-up meeting with other jail staff personnel who
had jurisdiction over the pregnant inmates: confinement, medical, and
the chaplain staff.
All in all, it took about six weeks to get started. That included
making sure the curriculum masters were ready, meeting with the
inmates to insure that they were interested in such a program, and
meeting with hospital chaplain and volunteer staff to coordinate
efforts between entities.
The first class was June 24, 1998 and was attended by 14 inmates.
At the close of 1998, 55 inmates had attended at least one class and
we had finally managed to clear the paper trail hurdle for labor
support and attend several births. In January of 1999, we started a
second program in the Dallas jail. By then end of our first year, we
had reached 99 inmates in Ft Worth and 36 in Dallas for a total of
135, and had provided labor support for 14 births.
Program Logistics
For childbirth education, the Titus 2 Birthing program uses the
Titus 2 Birthing: A Return to the Biblical Model curriculum.
The curriculum includes biblical wisdom and truth coupled with
medical research and customary care. Inmates may start the program at
any time during their confinement. Since the nine classes contain
different topics, it is not uncommon for most of the inmates to start
attending class at someplace other than the beginning of the series.
This is not a problem. They can attend as long as they desire, and
some have attended more than a full set of classes. We even have
inmates attending class who are not pregnant; possibly looking for
ways to assist their daughters to birth better or to learn better
parenting skills.
Classes were held in the cell group for the first three and a half
years, so anyone in the room could attend, including more than a few
guards. Inmates receive individual handouts for that day's class so
we cut down on the expense of providing handouts for classes they do
not attend. Handouts are provided through the Chaplain's Office.
A lending library of approximately 40 books includes a variety of
books on childbirth, parenting, grief, and marriage. These books,
donated or purchased for the program, may be checked out for 2 weeks
at a time. Inmates also receive a variety of childbirth and parenting
magazines donated by Lamaze, American Baby and First Moments. These
magazines are theirs to keep.
In September, 2001, a separate parenting class was started using
the Sears' ParentProject curriculum. This material was supplemented
with material aimed at moms with children older than age 2, so that
the needs of more women could be met.
In January, 2002, the Titus 2 classes moved to a separate
classroom outside the cell groups. This enabled a number of positive
changes:
- fewer interuptions in the class and less competition with
noise from other activities
- a regular roster of participants from all of the female cell
groups in the facility (and, unfortunately, a sometimes lengthy
waiting list!)
- a permanent cabinet to house our library so it didn't have to
rolled in and out each week
- a large whiteboard for writing and display space for posters
- more class time available when enables students to complete
the day's lesson and to get one-on-one counseling after class
- a dedicated prayer time with a place to post prayer needs,
baby pictures, and information of general use
- more freedom for class activities, class discussion, and
inmates have the opportunity to ask questions and get answers to
any pregnancy or parenting concern they have
- Child Protective Service took note of the official nature of
the parenting classes, attendance records and the certificates
issued and began to accept class attendance as part of mandated
parenting education for incarcerated moms
Classes are taught at the same time each week. Assistance with
other needs is often handled at times other than class times so as
not to interfere with the lessons and to preserve privacy issues.
Referrals with other programs are more frequent and outside resources
continue to be one of our greatest needs.
We have the opportunity to assess needs the inmate may have
regarding the baby, if she delivers while incarcerated. If family
members will care for the baby, we can assist by referring them to
programs that will assist with the baby. If the inmate will be
released prior to delivery, we can arrange to provide labor support
at the location they have chosen.
Present Status -Oct. 2004
As of October 31, 2004, the Fort Worth Titus 2 Birthing program has
worked with over 750 women and their families.
The parenting component is now more extensive than our childbirth
effort, with two parenting classes held weekly. Both the Hidden
Keys to Successful Parenting and Hidden Keys to Loving
Relationships series by Dr. Gary Smalley now make up our main
parenting curriculum. Supplements to these two series include
appropriate discipline, anger management, Christian discipleship, and
motivation strategies. Because there is a greater demand for
parenting classes than childbirth classes, the waiting list is often
long, but classes are larger and better attended.
How to Start Your Own Program
We have had several inquiries about assisting other jails to start
a program. I suggest you start the same way we did. Approach your
county sheriff and chaplain about the pregnant inmates. Discover how
many pregnant inmates they average, where they deliver, and what
requirements the jail and hospital staff may have in allowing labor
support. Draft a letter explaining the value of labor support and
childbirth education to the sheriff and chaplain. Detail your goals
and requirements.
If you need assistance, we will be glad to help. We can provide
copies of the letters we drafted, our program statistics, and assist
you with curriculum. We can answer questions on how to obtain
teaching resources and supplies. To request assistance, contact Rev.
Kathy Rateliff at Titus 2
Birthing.
Titus 2 Birthing Program a VOICES 2004 Winner
Kathy Rateliff is a VOICES 2004 awards winer because of the work of the Titus 2 jail program. One of 100 winners in 2004, her program was chosen to be included with the other 99 out of 10,000 entries. We are grateful to Charming Shoppes Inc. for their acknowledgement of this program and the work it does.
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