Similarly, Cathy Warwick, on being confronted by the reality that there are not enough staff and equipment to provide care
for women in labor now declares that what midwives women really need is access to a specialized service that is appropriate for only a tiny proportion of the population and represents a dreadfully inefficient use of scarce resources.
Not exact matches
And
now there come reports that birth trauma — defined as a frightening
labor experience that leaves a
woman with PTSD - like symptoms — is on the rise
in the U.K., and that
women are increasingly opting
for C - sections out of a fear of natural
labor...
Additionally, many hospitals
now offer birthing rooms that allow a
woman to stay
in the same bed
for labor, delivery, and sometimes, postpartum care (care after the birth).
After the fact, I am
now convinced of an unexpected bonus: that the pain of
labor is IMMENSELY reduced by
laboring and delivering at home due to innumerable comfort measures (both physical and psychological); I have much more respect
for all the
women who manage their
labors in a hospital - kudos to you, ladies!
Now, sometimes
women do present with surprise breech
in precipitous
labor, too late
for a section, and then they just do the best they can.
«
Now more than ever, we must elect representatives to Washington who will stand up
in support of
labor's collective bargaining rights so that working men and
women may have a voice on the job, a chance to negotiate
for fair pay and safe working conditions, and the ability to a secure a comfortable retirement.»
I
now think it's the best film Reitman has made
in a career of slightly overpraised good films (Juno, Up
in the Air, Young Adult) some flat - out bad ones (
Labor Day; Men,
Women & Children), and an unsung gem (Thank You
for Smoking).
And
now: Made
in Dagenham, a peppy, period
labor drama about underpaid
women at a Ford plant
in suburban London
in 1968, who go on strike
for higher pay and wind up demanding wholesale societal change.
Many hard - working men and
women have
labored in the mining economy
for generations and sadly many are
now unemployed.
Intertwining myriad voices, Wiley Cash brings to life the heartbreak and bravery of the
now forgotten struggle of the
labor movement
in early twentieth - century America - and pays tribute to the thousands of heroic
women and men who risked their lives to win basic rights
for all workers.