Moms have fewer drugs or no drugs and
experience less interventions and complications which means less risk of side effects for mom and baby
Not exact matches
These benefits include but are not limited to the power of the human touch and presence, of being surrounded by supportive people of a family's own choosing, security in birthing in a familiar and comfortable environment of home, feeling
less inhibited in expressing unique responses to labor (such as making sounds, moving freely, adopting positions of comfort, being intimate with her partner, nursing a toddler, eating and drinking as needed and desired, expressing or practicing individual cultural, value and faith based rituals that enhance coping)-- all of which can lead to easier labors and births, not having to make a decision about when to go to the hospital during labor (going too early can slow progress and increase use of the cascade of risky
interventions, while going too late can be intensely uncomfortable or even lead to a risky unplanned birth en route), being able to choose how and when to include children (who are making their own adjustments and are
less challenged by a lengthy absence of their parents and excessive interruptions of family routines), enabling uninterrupted family boding and breastfeeding, huge cost savings for insurance companies and those without insurance, and increasing the likelihood of having a deeply empowering and profoundly positive, life changing pregnancy and birth
experience.
Whilst much is known about the clinical management of labour and childbirth
less attention is paid to what, beyond clinical
interventions, needs to be done to make women feel safe, comfortable and positive about the
experience.
Research shows that women who have continuous support during labor have a shorter, more comfortable labor,
experience fewer
interventions (including cesarean birth), and use pain medication
less often.
This review suggests that women who received midwife - led continuity models of care were
less likely to
experience intervention and more likely to be satisfied with their care with at least comparable adverse outcomes for women or their infants than women who received other models of care.
A systematic review of 15 trials [28] identified that women receiving care in midwifery - led continuity models of care were
less likely to
experience interventions and more likely to be satisfied with their care.
fewer medical
interventions less vacuum / forcep delivery
less analgesic use
less Cesarean Births report more positive birth
experience
Compared with women who planned a hospital birth with a midwife or physician in attendance, those who planned a home birth were significantly
less likely to
experience any of the obstetric
interventions we assessed, including electronic fetal monitoring, augmentation of labour, assisted vaginal delivery, cesarean delivery and episiotomy (Table 3).
Research shows that women who receive continuous emotional and physical encouragement during labor are
less likely to need pain relief, medical
intervention, assisted delivery, or cesarean surgery, and generally
experience shorter labors.
For example, one study found that women who receive psychosocial or psychological
interventions are significantly
less likely to
experience depression after giving birth.
On the other hand, home births were much
less likely to involve cesarean sections, had fewer
interventions, and the mothers
experienced fewer lacerations.
There are many documented benefits of having a doula, among them a lower rate of C - sections,
less use of epidurals and other
interventions, and more overall satisfaction and confidence with birth
experiences.
Once they became pregnant, they were interested in
less intervention for the pregnancy and birth because of all of what they
experienced to conceive.
Since teachers are far
less persuaded by research studies on
interventions than by their colleagues» own
experiences with
interventions, the answer probably doesn't lie in creating a new, massive clearinghouse of products or research studies.
The intent is laudable, but
less electronic
intervention would result in a more natural and intuitive driving
experience.
In CORSA, drivers
experience less intrusive dynamic and traction control
intervention while maintaining driving precision and traction.
Some pets
experience anxiety before arriving to the office, our Fear Free approach provides options for early
intervention, making the cat carrier or car ride
less stressful.
Rituals, and their displacement, erasure, and adaptation also enter the work as generative sites of
intervention, and as stages for performing and
experiencing place -
less - ness.
In any case, this
intervention encourages us to understand the Tintoretto murals at the Scuola Grande
less as icons of meaning than as occasions for an
experience that requires neither scripture nor text.
For example, among participants who were sexually
experienced at baseline, those in the 12 - hour combined abstinence and safer - sex
intervention reported
less sexual intercourse in the previous 3 months at the 6 -, 12 -, 18 - and 24 - month follow - up than the control group.
The care co-ordination aspect of the
intervention was based on current National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidance.17 18 BA is a simple psychological treatment for depression that aims to re-engage patients with positively reinforcing
experiences and reduce avoidance behaviours.19 It is no
less clinically effective but more cost effective than cognitive behavioural therapy in treating depression in adults.20
The applicability rating of blended
interventions for individual therapy was clearly
less positive (48 %), while prior therapy
experience (54 %) did not predict this appraisal (r = 0.116, p = 0.580).
Individuals exposed to adverse childhood
experiences tend to be
less equipped to take on a parenting role when they are adults and, in the context of adverse circumstances and the absence of some form of social support and / or
intervention, they are more likely to adopt inappropriate parenting behaviours and perpetuate a cycle of negative and adverse parenting across generations.
In our
experience, when these
interventions are regularly used in bi-weekly coaching sessions with the team, they greatly facilitate the team's healthy functioning, leading to a more open and supportive, and
less repressive, climate on the ward.
One or two people who monopolize most of the time without much
intervention from the therapist leading the group may make the group a
less positive
experience for other participants.
This is in part because we target the more primitive,
less plastic parts of the brain (which are
experience driven) when staging
interventions that lead to psychological development and behavioral change.
We next examined whether women
experiencing domestic violence may have been
less engaged with the
intervention, which, in turn, could have led to a diminished program effect.
Analyses regarding the KEEP
intervention found that those in the
intervention group were nearly twice as likely to
experience a positive placement exit as the control group, but were no more or
less likely to
experience a negative exit as the control group.
Although the nurses in the
intervention group did as well overall as the psychologists, they had
less general mental health treatment
experience than did the psychologists.
Participants who had not
experienced the
intervention were
less likely to find it acceptable.
While strong research evidence demonstrates that parent training
interventions are capable of preventing child behavioral problems, much
less is known about how the participants in these programs
experience the change process.
Teachers» sensitivity seems to be of particular importance in helping children with
less favorable caregiving
experiences... at home to become engaged in corrective relational
experiences, and there is evidence that
interventions aimed at increasing teachers» sensitivity can be successful.