Forced to travel during pandemic, Nunavut women want birthing services at home
IQALUIT, Nunavut — In October, Collette Nilaulak gave birth, alone, to her third child in a hospital room about 1,200 kilometres from her home in Rankin Inlet, Nunavut.
Pandemic restrictions meant one person could be with her at Winnipeg’s Saint Boniface Hospital. But Nilaulak’s partner, who had flown south with her, had to remain at a hotel to watch their two-year-old daughter.
“It was very hard on me. Going through labour alone is hard,” Nilaulak said.
She spent another two days alone in hospital after giving birth before isolating in a hotel for two weeks to fulfil a Nunavut government requirement for anyone returning to the North after travelling south.