From the flip of the coin, if we can't regulate
how safe their birth practices are, at least they are open with it and help women find their way out.
Not exact matches
How can the AMA decide that homebirth is not as
safe as a hospital
birth for millions of women, when they don't even know these women's medical histories?
If you have been hurt badly, lied to or had significant physical and emotional damage from traditional medical care — being forced back into that environment will cause fear, that will hamper labour due to
how women were made (any threat the woman feels causes labour to slow until she no longer experiences that «fight or flight response», and when she feels
safe again, labour should resume)-- labour slows and then interventions «have» to be done... and the cycle repeats itself — reenforcing the belief that the hospital is not the place to
birth.
it doesn't mean a woman can't give
birth on her own, just that she's smart enough to accept that no matter
how much you plan, shit happens and it's better to be
safe than sorry.
Yes, I was thinking that the saying «
birth is as
safe as life gets» the other day when I was feeling just
how unsafe life is.
Learn
how my Lamaze childbirth classes,
birth doula services,
birth tub rentals and other resources can help position you for a
safe and healthy
birth experience.
Training for out of hospital midwives (hence, my STABLE course instructor certification), NRP (Dr Lane's doctoral project), and
how to deliver the
safest care possible out of hospital needs to continue to happen - raising the bar for out of hospital
birth.
Dr Motha's video,
How to Prepare for a
Safe and Easy Water
Birth, is also available by post, priced # 20.
Everyone who has answered back believes it's
safe, or that they would have been
safer attempting the homebirth as opposed to the hospital
birth because of
how «inattentive» doctors are.
There are women who post here who have had similar experiences, and they have shared
how they use drug and other therapy to manage their fear and anxiety so they can give
birth to subsequent children in hospital where it is
safer, even though the thought terrifies them.
I always wonder
how much privacy can play into having a
safe birth, especially because the type of
birth considered
safest for another species of animal is an unassisted, solo
birth.
How can you trust that homebirth is safe when the most comprehensive study ever done of homebirth (and analyzed by a midwife) found that PLANNED homebirth with a LICENSED midwife has a death rate approximately 800 % higher than comparable risk hospital birth, and even MANA can't figure out how to criticize
How can you trust that homebirth is
safe when the most comprehensive study ever done of homebirth (and analyzed by a midwife) found that PLANNED homebirth with a LICENSED midwife has a death rate approximately 800 % higher than comparable risk hospital
birth, and even MANA can't figure out
how to criticize
how to criticize it?
The consent policy illustrates
how the 8th Amendment takes away the rights of women to decide
how or where they given
birth — where they feel
safest, what they decide to be best for themselves and their baby.
And an opportunity to really know what's going on and what's happening with
birth isn't just going to be a benefit to be able to analyze
how we can make
birth safer, but to optimize what systems of care are gonna give women the most choices.
The article I most enjoyed recently was «
How Safe Is Your Home
Birth?»
How safe is my home
birth?
The question is,
how safe is * your * hospital
birth?
I wasn't sure
how safe they were and I was also scared of the judgment that we would get once people found out that we had a home -
birth.
-LSB-...] whose response was, The article I most enjoyed recently was «
How Safe Is Your Home
Birth?»
Class 4: The Onset of Labor: Your «Guess Date» and Normal Length of Pregnancy; Preparing for your Birthing Day; Signs of Birthing Beginning; Amniotic Membranes Breaking — Your
Safe Choices; True vs. «False» Labor;
How to Time Your Birthing Waves (contractions); Your
Birth Log; When to go to the
Birth Place; Automatic Comfort and Relaxation on «The Drive» and Arrival at Your Place of
Birth (if out of your home; Hypno - Guardians; Nurses — the Unsung Heroes; Using Hypnosis for Comfort During Internal Exams; Dilation, Effacement, Position and Station of Baby; The Beautiful Progress of Labor, Including Fast, Average and Slow or Stalled Labor; Artificial Induction and Natural Induction Techniques; Creating a
Safe and Serene Birthing Environment; Nausea Elimination; Optimum Fetal Positioning.
I would have seemed stupid and naive, and I was naive (a friend — rightfully — yelled at me for not getting any care and for not having any plans for
how I would have care during the
birth, and I told her to back off), but I was really trying to keep my baby
safe.
It is a beautiful picture of
how Shiphrah has long been a part of empowering women in this community to have
safe, supported, natural
births - often in the midst of quite chaotic and difficult life situations.
Create a
safe space where you can share your
birth experience exactly
how it was, at a pace that is manageable.
You are far more interested in arguing about tangential issues than really learning about
how to make the
birth of your son
safer.
You don't see the tremendous risk that
birth still carries BECAUSE of modern obstetrics and
how safe it has become.
It's our job to do our best to provide a
safe birth environment - and Hashem makes the final decision as to where and
how the the
birth will go.
I don't understand
how a wish for a natural
birth could trump the desire for a
safe one.
Instead, authors Judith Lothian, RN, PhD, LCCE, FACCE, FAAN, and Charlotte DeVries take the best, current research on
how to have a
safe and healthy
birth and present it in an easy - to - understand way, leaving you with practical and actionable steps put into practice right away.
The second half is full of practical information on natural
birth;
how to create a
safe and comfortable environment for natural
birth that is more pleasurable, less painful, with less medical intervention.
Come in for a free consultation to meet Kristin and learn more about
how a midwife can help you have a
safe and satisfying
birth experience!
Other times, right from the beginning, a woman is told her options and
how an assisted
birth is the best option for a
safe birth for her baby and for herself.
It doesn't matter
how safe home
birth is in the UK if you're giving
birth in the US.
It just reminds me of the documentary «The Business of Being Born», which while I'm sure is also not 100 % true, it does shine a light on
how doctors in a hospital tend to over prescribe treatment during labor that causes spiraling complications to what could have been an otherwise
safe natural
birth.
ALISON GREG: For me, it wasn't whether or not I felt
safe but it was
how I was processing my
birth story.
Again, couldn't we simply explore this to learn
how homebirths could be
safer for those moms who have been previously scarred by hospitals (including losing an older child in a hospital
birth — yes, it happens) or for those who for whatever reason choose to
birth at home?
You might consider asking her
how she manages to sleep at night, knowing
how many babies have been sacrificed to the lie that homebirth is
safer than hospital
birth.
But home
births have been on the rise, and it has been hard to assess
how safe it is, because the numbers get conflated in confusing ways.
Home
birth advocates, at least the more realistic ones, talk about
how home
birth is
safe as long as the potential candidates are screened appropriately and are low risk.
We allow a
safe place for our new parents to talk, laugh, cry, question, and explore their thoughts and feelings about their
birth and
how their experience might shape them as new parents.
IF, as they claim, «home
birth is
safe as long as the patients are sufficiently low risk,» then
how can you account for the increase in bad outcomes, which is now becoming undeniable?
How did we come to believe this, that home
birth is less
safe than hospital
birth?
While I don't put much stock in home
birth horror stories as evidence that home
birth is less
safe than hospital (because I don't know
how they compare to the number of hospital horror stories), I put even LESS stock in «I would have died if I hadn't been in the hospital» stories.
Authors Judith Lothian, RN, PhD, LCCE, FACCE, FAAN, and Charlotte DeVries take the best, current research on
how to have a
safe and healthy
birth and present it in an easy - to - understand way, leaving you with practical and actionable steps put into practice right away.
What this means for you
How this relates to choosing a
birth team is simple: By choosing a
birth support team which will empower you fully to have a truly biological, oxytocin - rich
birth, you raise your chances substantially for a more easeful, less painful, quicker,
safer birth.
There are more than half a dozen other studies from several countries that have found home
birth to be as
safe as hospital
birth (a very low standard considering
how dangerous hospital
birth sometimes is.)
Be wary of «Lamaze» classes that spend a lot of time practicing relaxation and breathing and little or no time building your confidence or discussing
how to keep things simple and
how to have the
safe, healthy
birth you want in the
birth setting you have chosen.
How can you sift through the vast amounts of conflicting information and find an approach that will supercharge your fertility, promote a healthy pregnancy and a
safe and natural
birth, and set the stage for a long and healthy life for your children?
She informed me all about home
births,
how safe they are, and
how empowering a drug and interference - free pregnancy can truly be.
I wonder
how safe are these types of computers as
birth control used alone on green days?
Home
birth supplies,
birth pool set - up, feeling
safe at home, reasons for and
how to handle a hospital transfer,
how to feel supported in the immediate postpartum period at home... these are all topics that can be given the energy and space in class they deserve when you have a room full of people preparing for a home
birth.