We have soaring
rates of birth trauma for both mother and baby, which significantly impacts their lives in the short and long term.
Not exact matches
I would love to see a study that compares the
rates of trauma sustained between PLANNED homebirth and PLANNED hospital
birth — I'd be willing to bet that planned homebirth is actually more likely to be traumatic than planned hospital
birth.
These are my insiders secrets to increase your likelihood
of avoiding high
rates of risky medical and surgical interventions, serious complications including
birth trauma for you and your baby, and having the
birth of your dreams.
When you consider the isolation, lack
of support, history
of abuse or other
trauma, and, particularly in the U.S., the need for mothers to return to work almost immediately following the
birth, the increase in depression
rates is hardly surprising.
• Assumptions about different cultural groups and how they impact breastfeeding support • Shoshone and Arapaho tribal breastfeeding traditions shared through oral folklore • Barriers to decreasing health disparities in infant mortality for African Americans • Effects
of inflammation and
trauma on health disparities that result in higher
rates of infant mortality among minority populations • Barriers to breastfeeding experienced by Black mothers and how lactation consultants can support them more effectively • Social support and breastfeeding self - efficacy among Black mothers • Decreasing pregnancy,
birth, and lactation health disparities in the urban core • Positive changes in breastfeeding
rates within the African American community • Grassroots breastfeeding organizations serving African American mothers
Child - Parent Psychotherapy (CPP) has been
rated by the CEBC in the areas
of: Domestic / Intimate Partner Violence: Services for Victims and their Children, Infant and Toddler Mental Health Programs (
Birth to 3) and
Trauma Treatment - Client - Level Interventions (Child & Adolescent).