Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Stages of Labor Signs
BirthingNaturally.com writes about signs of the different stages of labor. Warning: after reading each stage, you have to go back to the first page to link to the next.
Labels:
active labor,
early labor,
pre-labor,
pushing.,
signs of labor,
stages of labor,
transition
Monday, December 29, 2008
Amniotic Fluid Embolism
A full article all about AFE.
A (long) abstract: study performed in California regarding the rate of AFE in 1994-1995--with a "sample" size of 98% of births for those years. The usual stated rate has been between 1:8,000 and 1:80,000. The study found:
"Fifty-three singleton gestations had the diagnosis of amniotic fluid embolism, for a population frequency of one per 20,646 deliveries [out of 1,094,248]. Fourteen women with amniotic fluid embolism died, for a maternal mortality rate of 26.4%."
An interesting article about deaths related to the use of misoprostol (Cytotec)--used orally and vaginally for labor induction. Four out of the sixteen cases presented had AFE.
The Wiki entry could use some work.
CDC's report on pregnancy-related mortality 1987-1990 (go straight to the tables here.)
A (long) abstract: study performed in California regarding the rate of AFE in 1994-1995--with a "sample" size of 98% of births for those years. The usual stated rate has been between 1:8,000 and 1:80,000. The study found:
"Fifty-three singleton gestations had the diagnosis of amniotic fluid embolism, for a population frequency of one per 20,646 deliveries [out of 1,094,248]. Fourteen women with amniotic fluid embolism died, for a maternal mortality rate of 26.4%."
An interesting article about deaths related to the use of misoprostol (Cytotec)--used orally and vaginally for labor induction. Four out of the sixteen cases presented had AFE.
The Wiki entry could use some work.
CDC's report on pregnancy-related mortality 1987-1990 (go straight to the tables here.)
Labels:
AFE,
amniotic fluid embolism,
Cytotec,
induction,
misoprostal,
natal death
Monday, December 22, 2008
Sunday, December 21, 2008
Contraction Master
Free website to count contractions--all one has to do is hit the spacebar at the beginning and end of each contraction.
Labels:
contractions
Friday, December 19, 2008
Perpetually Pregnant for the last two decades
The Duggars of Arkansas (apparently they have a show on TLC; I've had a lack of cable for the last year) just had their eighteenth child. Their oldest is twenty.
Blogging Again - Since I can't seem to stop reading about doulas and birth.
A Danish study regarding reasons for dystocia--delay of labor defined as less than two centimeters in four hours after four centimeters in the first stage, in second stage as no progress for two hours in the descending phase (three hours with a epidural) or one hour in the expulsion phase. The biggest factor was epidural at 71.2 percent. Concludes:
"Our study contributes further evidence of an increased risk of dystocia in nulliparous women who, at admission to hospital, present with a descent of fetal head above the inter-spinal diameter and a cervix dilatation [less than] 4 cm. We found that a tense cervix, a thick lower segment and a poor contact between the fetal head and the cervix are risk indicators for dystocia. Further studies should examine if fetal head-to-cervix contact is a significant predictor of dystocia and if differentiation of the management of dystocia can be based on assessment of fetal head-to-cervix contact. The observed association between epidural analgesia and increased risk of dystocia is of interest and may have a causal explanation."
A doula character on an episode of Guiding Light.
Doula Match a free site where you can search for a doula (using your zip code and due date) or register yourself as a birth and/or post-partum doula, complete with a profile and calendar of availability(!).
A tool for the starting doula, free accounting software from Quickbooks. Make your own invoices! Features are limited.
"Our study contributes further evidence of an increased risk of dystocia in nulliparous women who, at admission to hospital, present with a descent of fetal head above the inter-spinal diameter and a cervix dilatation [less than] 4 cm. We found that a tense cervix, a thick lower segment and a poor contact between the fetal head and the cervix are risk indicators for dystocia. Further studies should examine if fetal head-to-cervix contact is a significant predictor of dystocia and if differentiation of the management of dystocia can be based on assessment of fetal head-to-cervix contact. The observed association between epidural analgesia and increased risk of dystocia is of interest and may have a causal explanation."
A doula character on an episode of Guiding Light.
Doula Match a free site where you can search for a doula (using your zip code and due date) or register yourself as a birth and/or post-partum doula, complete with a profile and calendar of availability(!).
A tool for the starting doula, free accounting software from Quickbooks. Make your own invoices! Features are limited.
Labels:
advertising,
doula,
dystocia,
networking,
software,
studies,
tv
Monday, September 29, 2008
Lots to Post
CDC Press Release on how most American children are currently on schedule for vaccinations.
Journal of Perinatal Health [!] "Do Not Disturb: The Importance of Privacy in Labor"The Vancouver Sun article on using self-relaxation exercises for birth.
Iran's health officials are training their countries obstetricians in natural birth due to the 40% cesarean rate there, as they're thought of as "painless births" and more natural births are considered something the low-class does.
Science Daily's article on the recreation of a Neanderthal birth (anatomically.)
Since breastfeeding women are reluctant about taking antidepressants, this study was done to show the effects of therapy for postpartum depression.
There is a study being done on using garlic to treat GBS. Scroll down to get the protocol here and the study questions are at the end of it (the answers are sent via email.)
Another reason to do your kegels: the NIH says that 24% of women have pelvic floor disorders.
Wiki has an entry on Lotus Birth, which means you don't cut the cord, you just wait until it dries off (with or without the placenta.)
Journal of Perinatal Health [!] "Do Not Disturb: The Importance of Privacy in Labor"The Vancouver Sun article on using self-relaxation exercises for birth.
Iran's health officials are training their countries obstetricians in natural birth due to the 40% cesarean rate there, as they're thought of as "painless births" and more natural births are considered something the low-class does.
Science Daily's article on the recreation of a Neanderthal birth (anatomically.)
Since breastfeeding women are reluctant about taking antidepressants, this study was done to show the effects of therapy for postpartum depression.
There is a study being done on using garlic to treat GBS. Scroll down to get the protocol here and the study questions are at the end of it (the answers are sent via email.)
Another reason to do your kegels: the NIH says that 24% of women have pelvic floor disorders.
Wiki has an entry on Lotus Birth, which means you don't cut the cord, you just wait until it dries off (with or without the placenta.)
Friday, September 5, 2008
Science Starts Catching Up to Births
The Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry - This is the abstract of a (small) preliminary study on how the areas of a mother's brain that respond to her baby's cry are more active (shown by MRI) when she's had a vaginal birth than when she's had a cesarean. "First this suggests that VD mothers are more sensitive to own baby-cry than CSD mothers in the early postpartum in sensory processing, empathy, arousal, motivation, reward and habit-regulation circuits. Second, independent of mode of delivery, parental worries and mood are related to specific brain activations in response to own baby-cry."
The University of Melbourne is developing a computer program predicting premature labor based on the mother's hormones. The knowledge can lead to interventions that may prolong gestation.
A woman in New Zealand who had to have a planned cesarean talked her doctors and hospital into letting her pull the baby out of the incision and have the baby skin-to-skin on her chest immediately after birth. (She had her doctors talk to a doctor in the UK who had done several such procedures.)
The University of Melbourne is developing a computer program predicting premature labor based on the mother's hormones. The knowledge can lead to interventions that may prolong gestation.
A woman in New Zealand who had to have a planned cesarean talked her doctors and hospital into letting her pull the baby out of the incision and have the baby skin-to-skin on her chest immediately after birth. (She had her doctors talk to a doctor in the UK who had done several such procedures.)
Tuesday, September 2, 2008
Baltimore Home-Births
From an almost-hometown newspaper, the Baltimore City Paper. It was nice to see that in the comments there were several people arguing--with cited statistics--about how the United States doesn't have the best death rates around birth.
Get Out the Kleenex
Labels:
birth stories,
death,
doula,
Maine,
midwife,
natural childbirth,
sibs,
stillbirth
Friday, August 22, 2008
First (Real) Post
I'm not sure how the layout will go; please bear with me!
Washington State now has a 25% cesarean rate, with a disproportionated increase in the Puget Sound area. The Seattle PI article also mentions the rate has risen by 6% every year for the last decade or so.
BOLD puts on a play called Birth which is the vagina monologues of birth (er). From the website:
"[Karen] Brody wrote Birth after interviewing 118 women across America about their birth stories. The play tells the story of eight of those women, representing the spectrum of experience among low-risk, educated, birthing women in the US today. Each performance is followed by a talk-back, giving audience members a chance to discuss pertinent issues from the play."
Birth will be playing in Seattle on September 5th, 6th, and 7th, and in many other locations on various dates.
And from the amazing births file, a Nigerian woman, who thought she was having twins (as her doctors so concluded from the ultrasounds), naturally birthed three babies--two were unfortunately conjoined at the chest and abdomen. One of the doctors expressed she should have had a cesarean because she was so weak afterward. My first thought at that was "So you want to take away one of her victories she gained on a day that was so very hard for her?" Not to mention recovering from cesarean is no breeze in itself.
Birth control affects pheromones receptors--normally, women are attracted to the scent of men who are genetically dissimilar to themselves. On birth control, women shift to the scent of men who have more genetic similarities to them. {Did I mention that this site will also cover pre-conception issues?}
Washington State now has a 25% cesarean rate, with a disproportionated increase in the Puget Sound area. The Seattle PI article also mentions the rate has risen by 6% every year for the last decade or so.
BOLD puts on a play called Birth which is the vagina monologues of birth (er). From the website:
"[Karen] Brody wrote Birth after interviewing 118 women across America about their birth stories. The play tells the story of eight of those women, representing the spectrum of experience among low-risk, educated, birthing women in the US today. Each performance is followed by a talk-back, giving audience members a chance to discuss pertinent issues from the play."
Birth will be playing in Seattle on September 5th, 6th, and 7th, and in many other locations on various dates.
This is a very interesting research article from Ohio State University that reveals that mothers play kind of a "gate-keeping" role when it comes to how much the fathers are involved in taking care of their infants. Apparently, the best way to get the dad involved is to have the mom actively support him in it and not do things such as roll her eyes when he puts on the diaper backwards (again. :o)
And from the amazing births file, a Nigerian woman, who thought she was having twins (as her doctors so concluded from the ultrasounds), naturally birthed three babies--two were unfortunately conjoined at the chest and abdomen. One of the doctors expressed she should have had a cesarean because she was so weak afterward. My first thought at that was "So you want to take away one of her victories she gained on a day that was so very hard for her?" Not to mention recovering from cesarean is no breeze in itself.
Birth control affects pheromones receptors--normally, women are attracted to the scent of men who are genetically dissimilar to themselves. On birth control, women shift to the scent of men who have more genetic similarities to them. {Did I mention that this site will also cover pre-conception issues?}
Welcome to the Massage-Doula Newsfeed!
Almost everyday, I wade through my Google alerts for articles related to massage, birth, doula, and childbirth. A lot of it is frankly crap. However, some articles I think would be very useful, and so I've been kicking around the idea of starting a blog where I'd post the good stuff, so other people wouldn't have to make the wade!
My posts will have a slightly Seattle-area bent--since that's where I live. It's also where I'm taking a Maternity and Infant Massage Specialist course at Cortiva Institute - Seattle. The course covers pregnancy massage, a DONA doula class, post-partum massage, advanced pregnancy massage, and a teaching infant massage class. My main goal is to promote healthy and purposeful touch within families, as it is an undervalued but important basic need for optimal growth, development, and the feeling of well-being.
My posts will have a slightly Seattle-area bent--since that's where I live. It's also where I'm taking a Maternity and Infant Massage Specialist course at Cortiva Institute - Seattle. The course covers pregnancy massage, a DONA doula class, post-partum massage, advanced pregnancy massage, and a teaching infant massage class. My main goal is to promote healthy and purposeful touch within families, as it is an undervalued but important basic need for optimal growth, development, and the feeling of well-being.
Labels:
ooc
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