Not exact matches
It's the «word of God»
when it's a
section / version that they want to shove down your throat, but God help you (ironic usage intended) if you point out the numerous
sections condoning murder, slavery, torture, subjugation of
women, etc..
Yet it is also the case, as the next
section will seek to show, that to men and
women who need a Lord whom they can adore, a «Pattern» (as Kierkegaard put it) they can follow, and a Savior who will bring them wholeness of life
when they know and acknowledge their selfishness and sin, Christ is God's supreme Deed for us and for our salvation.
When being a
woman who preaches the Gospel or teaches with authority or writes a book that actually isn't expressly meant to be shelved in the «
Women»
section of the bookstore isn't so worthy of note.
Even now
when I travel to preach, at least three
women will always quietly thank me for being a
woman who shops in the plus -
section and gets up on stages to preach.
Where is the
section for teachings that show men as inferior such as
when the first people to visit the tomb of Jesus are
women and the men fail to believe them because they are sexist?
When my boys were very little, some 50 year ago, Family Circle or
Woman's Way Magazine included a recipe for Moravian ginger cookies in their Christmas cookie
section.
Unfortunately, there is now a trend allowing
women to elect a primary c /
section when there is NO reason why she should not have a vaginal birth.
I'm amazed that they are showing c -
sections like they are no big deal
when so many impressionable
women and girls watch their show.
Of course the best way to lower it is for
women to educate themselves as to
when a c -
section is TRULY needed.
There are plenty of
women who,
when presented with all the information, would still choose to deliver via planned c -
section or epidural or whatever, and that's great.
I can't understand why a
woman would choose to have a c -
section when it's not medically necessary.
Honestly, it is surprising that it took insurance companies this long to wake up to the fact that they are paying either way — for the c -
sections that don't get done
when they should, those that get done poorly (regardless of whether they were necessary) or
when a
woman is denied access to a vaginal birth after cesarean, which is happening more and more...
Women recovering from c -
sections will also feel pain
when they try to sit up in bed or roll over.
.15 and 3... & from day 1 I have always talked to my daughters about how to dress like POWER and CONFIDENCE... Not an easy task
when all the other young
women my daughter is around wear clothes that are barely there... So far so good... she is all about her mid
section being covered... her shorts being NOY too short... no push up bras and she hates the thought of high heels... I must admit I hope she changes her feelings on the high heels..
Traditionally, caesarean
sections were only carried out
when a normal birth would put the health of either the mother or baby at risk; however, nowadays, many
women are having elective caesareans, meaning they choose to have the operation rather than giving birth naturally.
When I read the post and then Amanda's article, A French Feminist Fights the New Feminine Mystique, as a
woman who values both female liberties and the philosophies on which attachment parenting is based, I felt compelled to take my thoughts further than the comment
section below either would allow.
Obese
women are at an increased risk for gestational diabetes and
when giving birth are at an increased risk for medical interventions, including induction, epidural, and cesarean
section.
And
when it comes to medical intervention, a study published in the Journal of Midwifery and
Women's Health found that the C - section rate for low - risk women who chose to give birth at a birth center was only 6 percent, compared to the U.S. C - section rate of 27 percent for low - risk w
Women's Health found that the C -
section rate for low - risk
women who chose to give birth at a birth center was only 6 percent, compared to the U.S. C - section rate of 27 percent for low - risk w
women who chose to give birth at a birth center was only 6 percent, compared to the U.S. C -
section rate of 27 percent for low - risk
womenwomen.
You can have the higher risk of being the
woman who has a not so rosy memories about her forceps delivery / c -
section / pitocin or you can run the higher risk of being the
woman who,
when asked how many children she has says, «I have 2 living children.»
I was just at a Chassidic shul the other day, and
when I asked a
woman if I could nurse in the
women's
section, she suggested it would be more appropriate to nurse in the bathroom instead.
You just proved my point, namely that you believe vile and inaccurate stereotypes of
women who choose C -
sections and that you also believe mental illness should preclude
women from having babies, even
when that mental illness has no bearing on the
woman's ability to raise a child.
It was only
when reading Wendy Ponte's article, «Cesarean Birth in a Culture of Fear,» in Mothering Magazine, that I learned all the reasons a
woman might want to avoid having a C -
section unnecessarily.
Doctors nowadays are too quick to just give a
woman a c
section,
when a vaginal birth in fact is possible.
* In spring, our position became heightened
when a HSE draft consent policy was circulated the day before a VBAC
woman, Mother A, was brought before an emergency sitting of the High Court to force a Caesarean
Section.
I knew I could never tell a
woman she needed a c -
section when she might not have, or assisted with birth methods I didn't agree with, or sabotage breastfeeding relationships because it was hospital protocol.
Sometimes because a
woman had been pushing and pushing but still refuses a c
section when she gets to the hospital ends up tearing so badly that she still requires surgical repair.
In fact, some
women may even be persuaded to believe they have to have a repeat Cesarean
section when they don't.
In India, for example,
when a
woman delivers by c -
section, she may be forced to deliver her next baby without any real help, which is very dangerous.
Uterine rupture is a serious concern that can occur in any labour, but most cases occur
when a
woman attempts vaginal birth after a previous caesarean
section.
And later
when I asked if we could discuss a birth plan, she laughed and said that at the hospital, they joked whenever a
woman came to them with a birth plan, they signed them up for a C -
section right away because invariably, things went wrong.
Summer — I think I know exactly how you feel, because it's how I feel
when people make inaccurate assumptions and generalizations about
women and babies who didn't have a natural birth (I had an emergency c -
section at 28 weeks, and my baby is the happiest one I've ever met).
If you are unsure about the choices you would like to make surrounding your birth options, or just want to know a little more
when it comes to hospital birth practices, epidurals, c -
sections, then The Thinking
Woman's Guide to a Better Birth by Henci Goer and Rhonda Wheeler is the book for you!
A caesarean
section is
when a baby is delivered through a cut that is made across the
woman's stomach below her bikini line.
Research in the same article shows that some doctors have been over eager and push
women into having C -
sections when it's not necessary.
A VBAC is
when a
woman gives birth vaginally after a previous Caesarean
Section.
Of course a
woman should schedule a c -
section when there is no doubt they can deliver vaginally.
Doulas are truly amazing and have been credited with many positive side effects, including lower cesarean
section rates
when they are present as well as higher satisfaction with the birth experience on the part of the
women they serve during childbirth.
Some
women wear it as a slimming belt even
when they haven't given birth, but it does an excellent job as a c -
section belly band none the less.
When a
woman who has previously had vaginal births and has not previously had a c -
section goes to the hospital in labor at term, if she's carrying one head - down baby, the probability that she will have a c -
section is only 3 %.
As an added bonus, NCB - leaning
women will then see that despite all their best NCB - promoted efforts, massages, position changes, etc., sometimes the medical interventions of Pitocin, C -
section, etc. end up necessary anyway, and they'll spread the word to their friends
when they share their birth stories.
Rates of cesarean
section for multiparous
women,
when women with previous cesarean
sections were excluded, were not different (p value cut - off for statistical significance after the Bonferroni correction 0.002).
When we midwives bemoan our high c -
section rate, we often focus on how
women can give birth vaginally.
«Induction of labour
when a
woman is unfavourable to induction, or as a matter of routine is associated with high c
section rates.
The problem apparently is that these darn doctors are saying «once a C always a C»
when some insists
women should at least try to attempt a VBAC (vaginal birth after C -
section).
Caesarean
sections should only be carried out
when medically necessary, according to the World Health Organisation, which says the surgical procedure can put the health of
women and their babies at risk.
so i just don't get how all you
women loose all this weight so quickly,
when i was pregnant i gained a total of 20 lbs, and lost 30 lbs right after the birth, i didn't do a lot of excersice because i had a c -
section but kept active and didn't gain any weigh.
The current impasse on the
women's agenda is the result of a last - minute change in strategy by the governor and the coalition just days before the end of session,
when it became apparent that Senate Republican Leader Dean Skelos wasn't going to allow the abortion plank onto the floor — and that there weren't 32 declared votes in the chamber to support that
section.
Research suggests that having pregnancies less than 12 months apart is associated with an increased risk of complications like placental abruption (
when the placenta separates from the wall of the uterus before delivery) and placenta previa (
when the placenta partially or completely covers the cervix) in
women who delivered their first child via caesarean
section.
My blood pressure was dangerously high and my OB was talking about c -
section when my awesome doula mentioned that she has known
women in the past who used the blood pressure drop associated with epidurals in their favor to help bring it down
when it was too high.
When I had my first c -
section in Belgium, it was standard practice for all
women to be seen by a physical therapist while in the hospital and in the first two weeks after birth.