Category: In the News

Latch and Alternating Breasts During a Feeding can Cause Colic

A mother with her infant at a Government hospital in Chennai during the `World Breast Feeding Week' in August 2004. — Photo: V. Ganesan

A mother with her infant at a Government hospital in Chennai during the `World Breast Feeding Week' in August 2004. — Photo: V. Ganesan

TWO WEEKS after our son Louis was born, three months ago, he started showing signs of colic.

At around six in the evening, he would cry loudly and inconsolably for no apparent reason, his back arched and his legs doubled up. Since our daughter Olive (now three) had done the same, we were not altogether surprised.

To add to the grief, my wife got mastitis, which we assumed was the reason each feed felt as if she were having her nipples slashed with razor blades. The antibiotics to treat it only made our son worse, upsetting his tummy. As we lurched towards meltdown and bottle-feeding, a health visitor suggested we visit midwives Chloe Fisher and Sally Inch, said to be the international queens of breastfeeding, at their drop-in clinic at Oxford’s John Radcliffe Hospital in southern England.

That they could help us with the mastitis seemed plausible, but I was sceptical when Fisher told us that the colic was also to do with my wife’s breastfeeding technique. No one had told us that colic had anything to do with how you breastfeed.

The ailment has baffled medical scientists seeking a biological cause. Only social, rather than medical, science seems to provide some clues. Most, if not all, babies in developed nations get some of the symptoms, yet it is rare or unknown in developing ones. A possible reason is that in the latter countries, babies are constantly held, fed effectively and on demand. Babies cry less whose mothers carry them for three hours or more, or feed on demand during the first two months. Another reason could be the lack of social support and the hard-working, stressful lives of pregnant mothers in developed nations.

It came, therefore, as a great surprise to me when Fisher told us that colic in the breastfed baby is primarily due to something as simple as not attaching the baby to the breast correctly, which means that the baby is unable to `drain’ the breast properly during feeds.

Fisher enunciated two principles: “First, don’t assume the breast is like a bottle. The milk is in the breast, not in the nipple, whereas with a bottle, the milk is in the teat. To feed effectively from the breast the baby must scoop in a deep mouthful of breast, whereas with a bottle, it can just suck on the end of the teat.

Wrong assumption

Second, people wrongly assume the middle of the baby’s mouth is halfway between the top and bottom lip. In fact, the middle is between the upper surface of the tongue and the upper palate.

For the baby to draw sufficient breast tissue into its mouth, it must be able to get its tongue well away from the base of the nipple and that won’t happen unless the breast is presented between the tongue and the upper palate.”

If the baby did not attach properly, the midwives told us, it would not drain the breast properly and would keep compressing the nipple between the tongue and hard palate, turning it into something resembling minced lamb.

Next came the other important point: “Only switch breasts when the well-attached baby comes off the breast spontaneously and seems completely satisfied,” said Fisher.

“In offering the second breast, let the baby decide whether he wants it. If the mother starts each feed on alternate breasts (regardless of whether the baby has had one or two at a feed), the breasts will get roughly even use.

The important thing is to allow the baby to finish the first breast first.” Failing to do this is the main cause of colic. Fisher also told us that the initial milk is low in fat and calories.

If you switch breasts before the high-fat milk has been drunk, the baby will take more from the second breast than he would otherwise have done.

Despite the relatively huge volume of liquid in its stomach, the baby will then be wanting another feed before long, because low-fat feeds are processed quickly, leading to a pattern of frequent feeding.

This can cause mental illness-inducing sleep deprivation, but worst of all, it will cause colic. Both poor attachment and breast switching result in the baby taking frequent, large-volume, low-fat feeds, which in turn lead to rapid emptying of the stomach into the large intestine.

If too much gets there too fast, there is not enough of the enzyme lactase to break the sugar in the milk (lactose) down. The gut turns into a malfunctioning brewery, with fermentation of the sugar in the excess milk creating gas and explosive poos. The crying, arched back, rigid tummy and irritability of colic follow.

I was flabbergasted. If all this were really true, why on earth was not everyone told about it, especially considering the damage done to the mental health of parents by colic? Fisher replied that she and Dr MikeWoolridge had published the hypothesis in the journal the Lancet 17 years ago.

Fisher believes she is right because she has seen thousands of mothers solve the problem by following their advice, but since the 1988 paper, her theory has been scientifically tested. Inch doubted that my wife actually had infectious mastitis or had needed antibiotics for it and easily proved her point.

Back pressure

The inflamed breast was due to back pressure within the ductal system of the breast, she said. Ineffective milk removal was not keeping pace with milk production so the milk could no longer be contained within the ductal system.

It was forced into the connective tissue of the breast, where it gets treated as a foreign protein, with subsequent inflammation and pain. All of which was of more than academic interest to us.

While we returned to the Thursday clinic for a booster course in attaching to the breast, from the first moment my wife did it properly, the pain was much less. From that very night our son was free of colic and within a week, the `mastitis’ was disappearing. — ©Guardian Newspapers Limited 2005

This story reprinted from: http://www.hinduonnet.com/seta/2005/04/07/stories/2005040700141700.htm

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Doctor Treating Pregnant Women With Experimental Drug To Prevent Lesbianism

Article from The Stranger: http://www.thestranger.com/slog/archives/2010/06/29/doctor-treating-pregnant-women-with-experimental-drug-to-prevent-lesbianism

That’s not fair, as Hanna Rosin at Slate will shortly point out. Pediatric endocrinologist Maria New—of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine and Florida International University—isn’t just trying to prevent lesbianism by treating pregnant women with an experimental hormone. She’s also trying to prevent the births of girls who display an “abnormal” disinterest in babies, don’t want to play with girls’ toys or become mothers, and whose “career preferences” are deemed to “masculine.” Unbelievable:

The majority of researchers and clinicians interested in the use of prenatal “dex” focus on preventing development of ambiguous genitalia in girls with CAH. CAH results in an excess of androgens prenatally, and this can lead to a “masculinizing” of a female fetus’s genitals. One group of researchers, however, seems to be suggesting that prenatal dex also might prevent affected girls from turning out to be homosexual or bisexual.

Pediatric endocrinologist Maria New, of Mount Sinai School of Medicine and Florida International University, and her long-time collaborator, psychologist Heino F. L. Meyer-Bahlburg, of Columbia University, have been tracing evidence for the influence of prenatal androgens in sexual orientation…. They specifically point to reasons to believe that it is prenatal androgens that have an impact on the development of sexual orientation. The authors write, “Most women were heterosexual, but the rates of bisexual and homosexual orientation were increased above controls . . . and correlated with the degree of prenatal androgenization.” They go on to suggest that the work might offer some insight into the influence of prenatal hormones on the development of sexual orientation in general. “That this may apply also to sexual orientation in at least a subgroup of women is suggested by the fact that earlier research has repeatedly shown that about one-third of homosexual women have (modestly) increased levels of androgens.” They “conclude that the findings support a sexual-differentiation perspective involving prenatal androgens on the development of sexual orientation.”

And it isn’t just that many women with CAH have a lower interest, compared to other women, in having sex with men. In another paper entitled “What Causes Low Rates of Child-Bearing in Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia?” Meyer-Bahlburg writes that “CAH women as a group have a lower interest than controls in getting married and performing the traditional child-care/housewife role. As children, they show an unusually low interest in engaging in maternal play with baby dolls, and their interest in caring for infants, the frequency of daydreams or fantasies of pregnancy and motherhood, or the expressed wish of experiencing pregnancy and having children of their own appear to be relatively low in all age groups.”

In the same article, Meyer-Bahlburg suggests that treatments with prenatal dexamethasone might cause these girls’ behavior to be closer to the expectation of heterosexual norms: “Long term follow-up studies of the behavioral outcome will show whether dexamethasone treatment also prevents the effects of prenatal androgens on brain and behavior.”

In a paper published just this year in the Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, New and her colleague, pediatric endocrinologist Saroj Nimkarn of Weill Cornell Medical College, go further, constructing low interest in babies and men—and even interest in what they consider to be men’s occupations and games—as “abnormal,” and potentially preventable with prenatal dex:

“Gender-related behaviors, namely childhood play, peer association, career and leisure time preferences in adolescence and adulthood, maternalism, aggression, and sexual orientation become masculinized in 46,XX girls and women with 21OHD deficiency [CAH]. These abnormalities have been attributed to the effects of excessive prenatal androgen levels on the sexual differentiation of the brain and later on behavior.” Nimkarn and New continue: “We anticipate that prenatal dexamethasone therapy will reduce the well-documented behavioral masculinization…”

It seems more than a little ironic to have New, one of the first women pediatric endocrinologists and a member of the National Academy of Sciences, constructing women who go into “men’s” fields as “abnormal.” And yet it appears that New is suggesting that the “prevention” of “behavioral masculinization” is a benefit of treatment to parents with whom she speaks about prenatal dex. In a 2001 presentation to the CARES Foundation (a videotape of which we have), New seemed to suggest to parents that one of the goals of treatment of girls with CAH is to turn them into wives and mothers. Showing a slide of the ambiguous genitals of a girl with CAH, New told the assembled parents:

“The challenge here is… to see what could be done to restore this baby to the normal female appearance which would be compatible with her parents presenting her as a girl, with her eventually becoming somebody’s wife, and having normal sexual development, and becoming a mother. And she has all the machinery for motherhood, and therefore nothing should stop that, if we can repair her surgically and help her psychologically to continue to grow and develop as a girl.”

In the Q&A period, during a discussion of prenatal dex treatments, an audience member asked New, “Isn’t there a benefit to the female babies in terms of reducing the androgen effects on the brain?” New answered, “You know, when the babies who have been treated with dex prenatally get to an age in which they are sexually active, I’ll be able to answer that question.” At that point, she’ll know if they are interested in taking men and making babies.

In a previous Bioethics Forum post, Alice Dreger noted an instance of a prospective father using knowledge of the fraternal birth order effect to try to avoid having a gay son by a surrogate pregnancy. There may be other individualized instances of parents trying to ensure heterosexual children before birth. But the use of prenatal dexamethasone treatments for CAH represents, to our knowledge, the first systematic medical effort attached to a “paradigm” of attempting in utero to reduce rates of homosexuality, bisexuality, and “low maternal interest.”

So no more Elena Kagans, no more Donna Shalalas, no more Martina Navratilovas, no more k.d. langs, no more Constance McMillens—because all women must grow up to suck dick, crank out babies, and do women’s work. And the existence of adult women who are not interested in “becoming someone’s wife” and “making babies” constitutes a medical emergency that requires women who are currently pregnant to be treated with an experimental hormone. Otherwise their daughters could grow up to, um, be nominated to sit on the Supreme Court, serve as cabinet secretaries, take 18 Grand Slam singles titles, win Grammies, or take their girlfriends to prom.

And we can’t have that.

Two things: Gay people have been stressing out about a day arriving when scientists developed treatments to prevent homosexuality. You can read about the preventing gay sheep freak out here, you can read about Twilight of the Golds here, and I recall—but can’t quickly find a link for—a “fellow” at the Family Research Council or the American Family Association who backed in-utero hormone treatments to prevent homosexuality. Well, here we are—the day appears to have arrived. Now what are we going to do about it?

And will the Republicans on the Judiciary Committee invite Maria New to testify at Elana Kagan’s confirmation hearings? New could argue that Kagan—childless, unmarried Kagan—is unfit to serve on our highest court because her “low maternal interest” pegs her as abnormal, well outside the “maternal mainstream.” Maybe GOP senators would be mollified if Kagan knocked back a few bottles of dex during her confirmation hearings?

UPDATE: A little more about dex from Alice Dreger:

The specific drug we’re talking about, dexamethasone, is not a benign drug for pregnant women, nor for the children exposed in utero. The studies we do have on the early prenatal use of “dex” are worrisome. The number of women and children missing from the follow-up studies of this drug use is more worrisome still.
This drug is unequivocally experimental and risky. That’s why, back in February, I organized interested members of the Bioethics community to fight to make sure every woman offered dex for CAH knows the truth about its experimental and risky nature. (You can read about our efforts in Time magazine. And you can about the medical establishment’s resultant mad scampering to make sure everyone knows this is experimental here.) Make no mistake: In spite of Dr. Maria New’s outrageous FDA-regulation-flaunting claims that this off-label drug use “has been found safe for mother and child,” it ain’t been. New is a rogue pediatrician whom medical societies have been nudging (and sometimes yelling at) for years. Because she apparently wouldn’t stop experimenting on these women and children without ethics oversight, in January I got called in to help by a few freaked-out clinicians. And I called in my colleagues to call out the feds. New just looks and sounds safe for mothers and children. Which is why she’s really dangerous.

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Fetal Monitoring – Test Leads to Needless C-sections

This article can be found here: http://www.philly.com/inquirer/magazine/20100426_Test_leads_to_needless_C-sections.html#axzz0oxsV1500

Test leads to needless C-sections

By Alex Friedman

My patient needed to be delivered. She had just developed eclampsia a potentially fatal disease that afflicts women in the second half of pregnancy. She had suffered a seizure and dangerously high blood pressure, and was at risk for far worse, including a stroke. No one knows why this condition arises, but delivery sure clears it up in a hurry.So we gave medication to start labor, and the nurses placed a fetal heart monitor.Worn like a belt, but higher on the abdomen, the ultrasound monitor would play a crucial role in the hours to come. It prints a read-out strip of the baby’s heart rate, and the pattern would guide us in determining whether the delivery would be natural or through cesarean section.

As I suspected, the baby’s heart-rate strip showed worrisome changes soon after labor began, and I knew it would get worse as labor progressed. We would fight through the night to have a natural delivery. But ultimately that single heart-rate test, which is surprisingly unreliable, would be a key factor in whether my patient would get a C-section or not.

Nearly all American mothers are monitored during labor, and bad fetal heart strips are an important cause of high cesarean section rates. A recent report detailed the dizzying increases: Almost one in three babies was delivered by cesarean in 2007, the most recent year for which data are available. That rate has grown by more than 50 percent in a decade.

I have performed hundreds of cesarean sections during residency, and many were the result of bad heart-rate strips.

A jagged pattern indicating increases in the heart rate reassures us that the baby’s brain is awake and alert, and that labor could continue. But a flat line or decreases in the heart rate after contractions make us think the baby is not getting enough oxygen and pushes us to do a C-section – delivering the baby through incisions in the abdominal wall and the uterus.

For the worst readings, we believed every second counted and rushed the surgery: If the baby wasn’t delivered one minute from the first incision into the skin, we had moved too slowly.

The complication we feared most was hypoxia, the baby not getting enough oxygen during labor. Going too long without adequate oxygen could result in a serious permanent injury, such as cerebral palsy, or even death.

No test is perfect. But almost every time we whisked a mother back to the operating room, and I cut through skin, fat, fascia, and finally the muscle of the uterus, expecting a blue, floppy baby, the child I delivered emerged pink, healthy, and a little bit angry.

Were we saving lives and averting disaster? Or were we performing unnecessary surgery?

Fetal heart-rate monitoring is a screening test. Good tests get several things right; they are cheap, detect a possible problem when there is still time to act, and minimize unnecessary follow-up tests.

The Pap smear is an excellent screening test: By examining a few cells brushed from the cervix – where the vagina opens into the uterus – doctors catch precancerous changes – or even early cancer – when it is easy to treat.

But fetal heart monitoring is an appallingly poor test. The test misses the majority of babies with cerebral palsy, the condition researchers hoped it would prevent. It causes increased rates of a painful and invasive surgery: cesarean section. Even worse, almost all women undergo continuous heart monitoring during labor, not just those at highest risk.

The odds of my patient’s baby suffering from dangerous lack of oxygen were slim. A study in the New England Journal of Medicine found that only 1 of 500 babies with a bad strip had cerebral palsy. Moreover, it remained unclear if the condition had developed before labor, in which case cesarean couldn’t prevent it.

A 2006 analysis by the British Cochrane Collaboration, evaluating all available research, found that fetal heart monitoring failed to reduce perinatal mortality – the risk of a baby’s dying late in pregnancy, during birth, or shortly after birth – and increased cesarean section rates and forceps deliveries, compared with listening to a baby’s heart rate intermittently.

As a medical student, I loved watching emergency cesarean sections. The baby’s heart rate went down, doors swung open, residents rushed the patient down to the OR, and a frantic minute or two of surgery later, a screaming baby was out. The excitement pushed me to choose a career in obstetrics. I never questioned the need for the surgery.

Now, cesarean sections for bad tracings are one of the least satisfying parts of my job.

Steven Clark and Gary Hankins, two prominent obstetricians, voiced my frustration. “A test leading to an unnecessary major abdominal operation in more than 99.5 percent of cases should be regarded by the medical community as absurd at best,” they wrote in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. “Electronic fetal heart rate monitoring has probably done more harm than good.”

Why do doctors cling to continuous fetal heart monitoring? An obstetrician will most likely point to the fear of being sued, but the complete answer is more complex. Our medical culture prizes technology and tests, even if they don’t work and can cause harm.

“It’s our bias that anything that can be quantified is an improvement,” said H. Gilbert Welch, a professor at Dartmouth Medical School whose research focuses on harm caused by screening and over-diagnosis.

“I think we get in trouble when we start promising things to . . . well [patients],” Welch said in an interview. “It is not that hard to make them worse.”

For three or four hours that night, I struggled with my patient’s bad fetal heart strip. I wanted her to avoid a cesarean section. She had type 1 diabetes, and I expected her sugars to swing wildly after surgery, and her recovery to be slow.

To improve the strip, the nurses and I tried giving her oxygen, changing her position in the bed, even rubbing the baby’s head through the cervix to wake it up.

Finally, at 3 a.m., I felt compelled to recommend cesarean. The strip continued to look bad, and my patient’s labor progressed slowly.

We went to the operating room, and delivered the baby by cesarean. My patient’s child greeted the world pink and well-oxygenated.

The test was wrong again.

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Kimberely Clarke Healthcare – Not on My Watch – Protecting Patients

I received the following information and want to pass it on to my readers:

The government recently released its annual report on the quality of health care Americans receive and while there have been some improvements, the news was not positive: hospitals still have work to do to put an end to the ongoing, but very solvable, problem of patients acquiring life-threatening infections in hospitals.

To help achieve that, Kimblery-Clark Healthcare has put together a website called “Not on My Watch” at www.haiwatch.com to educate patients and health care professionals.  Their goal is to eliminate these preventable illnesses and their often tragic consequences.

As a side note I would like to add that this is yet another reason why homebirth is often the safest route for low-risk mothers.

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Maternal Deaths

Why are women dying during childbirth during labor? It’s from hospital interventions, which this story touches on. The author could have gone one step further and brought in midwifery care: http://californiawatch.org/health-and-welfare/more-women-dying-pregnancy-complications-state-holds-report

I’d like to highlight some interesting bits from this story:

So he (doctor) set a rule: no elective inductions before 41 weeks of pregnancy, with only a few exceptions. As a result, Lagrew said, the operating room schedules opened up, and the hospital saw fewer babies admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit, fewer hemorrhages and fewer hysterectomies.

All this, however, came at a cost: The hospital had to take a cut in revenue for reducing the procedures it performed. Lagrew doubts that any hospital has increased its C-section rate in pursuit of profit, but he does note that the first hospitals to adopt controls on early elective inductions have been nonprofits.


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Taking Back Childbirth

childbirth_080721_mnOK – last ABC news article for this week – I promise. I love that they repeatedly call natural childbirth a medical anomaly. Really?!

And so here is another article about natural childbirth that made it to sheep media: http://abcnews.go.com/Health/ReproductiveHealth/story?id=5462833&page=2

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Sexy Waterbirth???

Ok, though this ABC news article is still “cautioning” women against out of hosptial births, it at least is mostly encouraging of birthing in the tub: http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Wellness/gisele-bundchen-makes-water-births-sexy-delivering-son/story?id=9721599

And who knows why the URL implies that being a model makes water birth sexy, I’m sure she sweated and moaned and bleed like the rest of us.

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Portland Ranked Best City to Have a Baby

Fit Pregnancy Magazine ranked Portland, Oregon as the best city to have a baby! Go Portland.

What made Portland so awesomly birth friendly? Portland has tons of health food options, walkability, many many many birth options and exceptional breasfeeding rates! The survey was based on 47 different critera, and here’s a look at some Portland stats:

Relative to population, Portland has more specialty retailers of healthy/organic foods and vitamins than most places.


Portland has 150 miles of stroller-friendly trails and public pathways, according to a survey of parks departments. In a per capita comparison, that’s 163 percent more than the average city surveyed (3rd highest overall relative to population).


14.9 percent of births statewide are attended by midwives. That’s 98 percent more than average. Midwifery is more widely available in Portland than anywhere else surveyed, with 189 percent more midwives than average. Relative to the number of live births per year, Portland has 64 percent more doulas than average–that figure is the 5th highest in the survey.


25 percent of babies in Oregon are born via Cesarean section. That rate is 8 percent less than average, and among the lowest in the survey.


26.6 percent of Portland mothers breastfeed their babies exclusively (meaning no solids, formula, or other liquids) for six months or longer (as recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics.) That’s among the top 2 percent of cities in the survey. Eighty-nine percent of Portland mothers attempt breastfeeding. That’s the highest percentage of any city in the report. Portland moms are 20 percent more likely than average to at least try breastfeeding. Compared to the number of babies born, Portland has 81 percent more lactation consultants than average. That’s the 2nd highest ratio Fit Pregnancy found. And, once Portland mothers begin breastfeeding, they are 19 percent more likely than average to continue through 6 months. That’s the 3rd highest level of follow-through of any city studied. Finally, By six months of age, 42 percent of Portland babies are still being breastfed. That’s the highest percentage of any city in the report.


According to data from the CDC, maternal mortality in Oregon is especially low. (My own comment: you can thank midwives and childbirth education for this one.)


Portland babies are 22 percent less likely than average to be born prematurely.


Oregon allows greater dependent-related tax breaks than most.


Portland babies are 25 percent less likely than average to be born with low birth weight.




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Epiduals and Lower Lumbar Tattoos

I found this topic quite interesting and wanted to share. It’s not something I have ever though of before. The complete article is posted below form The Unnecearean:

Robin Elise Weiss posted an article on About.com: Pregnancy & Childbirth about some anesthesiologists’ fears of administering epidural anesthesia to women with lumbar tattoos.

Some anesthesiologists have speculated that placing an epidural during labor through this tattoo may be dangerous. The theory is that if you place the epidural needle through the ink, the dye in the skin may enter the epidural space and cause infection or damage. Other doctors offer the advice that if the tattoo is healed and the ink is dry there is no cause for concern.

The truth is we really don’t know, as very few women have been studied. One recent study involved three women. You may still opt for epidural anesthesia if you are pregnant, you can even request that they avoid placing the needle through your tattoo. If you are at the planning stages for a tattoo, consider a different location if you feel this decision is one you’d prefer to avoid.

Mayo Clinic obstetrician Roger W. Harms wrote in his July 2008 Q&A article that “the exception would be if the tattoo covers a large area and is still “fresh” — meaning the involved skin is still healing” and added that “very few studies have looked at the risks of epidurals in women with lower back tattoos.”

Snopes.com lists the claim that women with lower back tattoos should not receive epidural anesthesia as “undetermined” in a February 6, 2006, post entitled Suffer to be Beautiful. Post author Barbara Mikkelson offered her theory on why medical professionals are playing God when it comes to women with lumbar tats.

Whatever the medical world ultimately determines as the truth about potential risk regarding the combination of sacral tattoos and epidurals, I can’t help but be struck by the parallels between the modern rumor about inked vixens having to give birth unbuffered by pain medications and the penalty visited upon Eve for leading Adam astray. Eve, the original bad woman, the vamp, was punished for her part in the “Have an apple, sweetheart” fiasco by being cursed by God on high with the pain of childbirth, with the whammy laid upon her passed down to all her descendents (that is, all womanhood). Lumbar region tattoos on women are seen as communicating hinted-at promises of sexual favors. The consequence visited upon both classes of temptress is the same: they shall each know the physical pain of birthing children.

On Our Bodies, Our Blog, Rachel noted that the widespread coverage of the topic of lumbar tattoos and epidurals following an article in the Wall Street Times in September 2007 “distract[ed] from ongoing conversations about the state of birth today, and how women can best receive safe, effective, and satisfying maternity care” and noted that the odds of ever getting any decent research on lumbar tattoos and epidurals is slim.

Ultimately, there is not enough information to suggest that women should not get lower back tattoos if they plan to eventually give birth with administration of an epidural, nor is there enough to suggest that women who have such tattoos cannot receive epidural injections. There is likely very little incentive to study the issue, given that there are few reports of complications and no obvious money-making drug or procedure to be developed, short of the already available tattoo removal

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Tricking Baby with Fake Hands

zakyReally? Now they’re selling fake hands to trick babies into thinking their mom is holding them? Really?

AND look, you can even sent it with your favorite PERFUME: If you wear a particular perfume on a regular basis, one drop of your favorite perfume will also work well.

Please people, think!

http://www.pregnancystore.com/zaky.htm

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Getting Wise to Babywise

The below article, published by Salon Mothers Who Think and written by Katie Allison Granju, reminds all parents to follow their own intuition when it comes to caring for your babies. Forget the books, trends and endless advice, which can make it all too overwhelming. Put all that stuff away, sit by yourself for a moment, take a deep breath and listen to your body. What does it tell you to do in that particular situation?

Read on to learn how Babywise, two top-selling “baby handbooks”  written by Gary Ezzo, can wreak havoc on babies when parents try to implement the “infant management program” outlined in the books. Ohh, and I’d like to highlight the fact that Gary’s parenting philosophy is, “Raising good children is not a matter of chance but a matter of rightly applying God’s principles in parenting.”

This is totally crazy and worth the read: http://www.salon.com/mwt/feature/1998/08/cov_06feature.html

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Reducing Infant Mortality

A lovely video with lots of stats about the state of infant mortality in America and around the world:

Reducing Infant Mortality from Debby Takikawa on Vimeo.

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USAToday Confirming What We Already Know

It makes me very happy when mainstream media catches up. Publisded by USAToday:

http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2009-09-03-midwife-home-birth_N.htm?loc=interstitialskip

Study: Home birth with midwife as safe as hospital birth

By Amanda Gardner, HealthDay

Having your baby at home with a registered midwife is just as safe as a conventional hospital birth, a new study says.

In fact, planned home births of this kind may have a lower rate of complications, according to the study published in the Sept. 15 issue of CMAJ.

Even though the study was conducted in Canada, where attitudes toward midwifery are more accepting than in some other countries, the findings may help to calm an ongoing controversy in the United States and elsewhere.

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists is opposed to home births, as are certain organizations in Australia and New Zealand. More organizations in Great Britain are supportive and Canadian provinces are currently transitioning to midwifery, said study lead author Patricia Janssen, director of the Master of Public Health Program at the University of British Columbia.

Janssen, a registered nurse who has midwife training though not certification, said: “People who function as independent midwives are not necessarily tightly regulated [in the U.S.] depending on which state you’re in, so there may not be a guarantee that they have had an adequate level of training or a certified diploma or anything like that. And they may not be monitored and regulated by a particular professional college.”

The controversy has resulted in a lack of clear regulation and licensing requirements in the United States, said Dr. Marjorie Greenfield, associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at University Hospitals Case Medical Center in Cleveland.

According to Greenfield, the National Association of Certified Professional Midwives does have a certification process but many states don’t recognize it. “If you’re a woman who wants to have a home birth, how do you determine if this person has appropriate qualifications?” she said.

The authors of the new study compared three different groups of planned births in British Columbia from the beginning of 2000 to the end of 2004: home births attended by registered midwives (midwives are registered in Canada), hospital births attended by the same group of registered midwives, and hospital births attended by physicians. In all, the study included almost 13,000 births.

The mortality rate per 1,000 births was 0.35 in the home birth group, 0.57 in hospital births attended by midwives, and 0.64 among those attended by physicians, according to the study.

Women who gave birth at home were less likely to need interventions or to have problems such as vaginal tearing or hemorrhaging. These babies were also less likely to need oxygen therapy or resuscitation, the study found.

The authors acknowledge that “self-selection” could have skewed the study results, in that women who prefer home deliveries tend to be healthier and otherwise more fit to have a home birth.

Janssen said she hoped “this article will have a major impact in the U.S.” But there is a definite “establishment” bias against home births. And the issue is an emotionally charged one, she said.

“There is a political and economic issue about controlling where birth happens, but also a deep belief by physicians that it’s not safe to have your baby at home,” Greenfield said. “Doctors see every home-birth patient who had a complication, but we don’t see the ones that have these beautiful, fabulous babies at home who may breast-feed better or have less hospital-acquired infections. There may be medical benefits,” she added.

“Midwifery needs to be regulated. It can’t be under the radar because then it’s dangerous,” Greenfield said. “There has to be a regulatory process and a licensure process [to protect] women who are going to choose home birth anyway.”


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Giving Birth: Upright Positions Shorten First Stage Labor

Below is an article from ScienceDaily (Apr. 16, 2009) supporting what midwives have known all along. Oh, progress can be so slow.

Lying down during the early stages of childbirth may slow progress, according to a new systematic review. Cochrane Researchers found that the first stage of labour was significantly shorter for women who kneel, stand up, walk around, or sit upright as opposed to lying down.

Using data from 21 studies carried out in developed countries since the 1960s, involving 3,706 women, the researchers found that the first stage of labour was around an hour shorter in those who adopted upright positions compared to those who lay down.

“In most developing countries, women stand up or walk around as they wish during the early stages of birth with no ill effects,” says Annemarie Lawrence, who works at the Institute of Women’s and Children’s Health at the Townsville Hospital in Queensland, Australia. “This review demonstrates that there is some benefit and no risk to being upright and or mobile during first stage labour.”

“Based on these results, we would recommend that women are encouraged to use whichever positions they find most comfortable, but are specifically advised to avoid lying flat,” says Lawrence.

The researchers stress that more information is urgently needed to understand how birthing positions relate to levels of pain, control and satisfaction among birthing women.

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Take Away the Incentives For Too Many C-sections – Article from Crosscut

Pasted below is an article about the thousands of unneeded (meaning not medically necessary) Cesarean births performed at hospitals. There is a measure passed by Legislature that may help change that. This article was published by Crosscut on August 6, 2009 and written by Carolyn McConnell. Read more to learn more or visit this story online at: http://crosscut.com/2009/08/06/health-medicine/19144/

Quick, what’s the most common reason for hospitalization in America? And what’s the most common surgical procedure? If you answered heart attack, appendicitis, cancer, diabetes, car crashes, and any of their associated surgical remedies, you’d be wrong, because the most common cause for hospitalization isn’t a disease or even an injury. It’s childbirth. And the most common surgical procedure is C-section.

C-section rates have been rising rapidly for several decades, a major contributor to the spiraling cost of childbirth in the U.S. Yet maternal and baby outcomes have been stagnating or worsening. The U.S. ranks dead last among industrialized nations for maternal mortality and second to last for infant mortality.

All of which should make childbirth Exhibit A in the Obama administration’s insistence on containing American health care costs while providing better care. It also suggests that an obscure measure buried deep in Washington’s new biennial budget could become an important model for national health reform.

Beginning this month, the state of Washington will pay hospitals the same amount for an uncomplicated C-section as for a complicated vaginal birth when it reimburses them through Medicaid. Almost half of all births in Washington are paid by Medicaid, so this measure will have a significant effect on the economics of birth in the state.

“C-section rates are trending up and there’s no medical necessity for that trend,” says Dr. Jeff Thompson, the state’s chief medical officer for Medicaid. C-section rates vary wildly between hospitals in the state, from as high as 48 percent down to 14 percent (Thompson won’t say which hospitals those are). When the Department of Health studied that variation, it found that it remained even when risks that make it more likely for women to need C-sections — such as maternal age, obesity, and diabetes — were factored out. Your chance of having a C-section depends a lot on what hospital you give birth in and where in the state you live.

Currently, the rate of C-sections in Washington is just under 30 percent. Nationwide, the rate is almost 32 percent, more than double what both the World Health Organization and the Centers for Disease Control say it should be. In many cases, C-sections save mothers’ and babies’ lives. But, like any surgical procedure, C-section causes harm as well as benefit. When the rate at which they’re performed rises above 10 to 15 percent, the WHO and CDC have found, the harm outweighs the benefits to mothers and babies.

It comes down to this: at least half of the approximately 22,000 C-sections performed each year in Washington are not only unnecessary, but harmful.

C-sections are major abdominal surgery, explains Dr. Jane Dimer, a Group Health obstetrician who chairs the regional chapter of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and co-chairs with Thompson the state’s perinatal advisory committee. C-sections bring with them, for the mother, a longer recovery time and heightened risk of infection and from anesthesia. In a first C-section, these risks are small, she says, but one C-section makes it highly likely a woman will deliver any subsequent babies by C-section. The risks to the mother go up with each surgery, and a woman who has several children by C-section faces heightened danger of placental complications, hemorrhaging, and ruptured uterus.

Babies born by C-section face greater risks of complications, including respiratory issues. “Costs for neonates are really what’s clogging the system,” Dr. Dimer says.

This is one clear example of what Atul Gawande has famously described in a recent article in The New Yorker (which President Obama ordered his aides to read and cited in meetings with members of Congress): “Americans like to believe that, with most things, more is better. But research suggests that where medicine is concerned it may actually be worse.” Gawande contrasts McAllen County, Texas, which has the nation’s highest per capita health costs, with Rochester, Minnesota, dominated by the Mayo Clinic, with vastly lower health spending and better health.

After ruling out other explanations for the discrepancy, Gawande concludes that the reason for the difference is the profit motive — doctors and hospitals in McAllen County have too many financial incentives to provide more medical care and none for providing better care. At the Mayo Clinic, the incentives push the opposite direction. Its doctors, for example, are salaried, so they have no incentive to perform more tests or procedures, and pay no financial penalty for spending more time with patients. With per-person Medicare spending (a useful proxy for overall health spending) $1,500 below the national average, Washington state is more a Rochester than a McAllen.

There are many reasons for this. The West Coast generally has somewhat lower costs, in part because of the presence of nonprofit HMOs like Kaiser in California and Group Health in Washington. Group Health, with its salaried doctors and a C-section rate near the lowest in the state, is Washington’s version of the Mayo Clinic. Group Health, which delivers 10 percent of the babies in the state, recently was featured in a New York Times article on health care reform, as a model for good yet cheap care. (Full disclosure: I gave birth to my first child at Group Health and remain insured by Group Health.)

Washington’s relatively low medical spending may also owe something to earlier efforts Thompson has led to make state health care better and leaner, including creating a medical technology review board and implementing a preferred drug list, which pushes doctors to prescribe the cheapest drug from among equally effective treatments. All of these steps seek to match the practice of medicine with scientific evidence about what works best.

With childbirth, the incentives all go the other way. On average, Medicaid pays $5,000 more for a C-section than for a vaginal birth, and private insurance pays a far greater premium. You don’t have to be a cynic to wonder if that could have something to do with the rise in unnecessary C-sections.

Thompson explains that there’s no good way for the state to pick out which C-sections are unnecessary. “Medicaid won’t pay for an unnecessary C-section, so hospitals have to code every section as necessary,” he says. But equalizing the amount hospitals get paid for vaginal and C-section births eliminates a financial incentive to perform C-sections. That should mean that the only reason for a doctor to perform a C-section will be that it is medically necessary, and in fact doctors and hospitals will have every financial reason to avoid C-sections — letting money sort out the necessary from the unnecessary. Policy wonks call this “realigning incentives.”

“We are choosing to improve quality mostly by using carrots rather than sticks,” says Dr. Dimer.

Dr. Elliott Main, chair of obstetrics at California Pacific Medical Center and principal investigator for the California Maternal Quality Care Collaborative, says childbirth care is a great place to start realigning incentives in medicine. “It’s a pretty good opportunity to put these concepts into action, because it’s circumscribed, not an all-your-life event like diabetes or hypertension,” he explains. “It has a beginning and an end. It’s packageable.”

He considers Washington’s move very promising. The size of the financial incentive is crucial, he says. That’s because there are such powerful incentives pushing for C-sections. Dr. Dimer explains that the incentives for C-section go beyond money. “In nature, labor can go on for hours and is highly unpredictable,” whereas a C-section delivery is highly predictable and far shorter. “In American culture, where time is money, having something that is finite and predictable is highly desirable,” she says.

Dr. Main says that financial incentives for vaginal birth have to be enough to counteract those factors, enough to command attention. He thinks Washington’s cuts in C-section reimbursement may just be that big. The state has slashed Medicaid reimbursement for uncomplicated C-sections from about $3,600 to around $1,000. Hospitals with high C-section rates are in for a rude awakening. Thompson says that since the change in reimbursements took effect he has already received calls from hospitals asking for help revising the protocols they use to decide when a C-section is called for.

Without any powerful lobby pushing for changing the reimbursement rate, it was the state’s fiscal crisis that got the measure into the state budget. The equalization of rates is projected to save the state close to $2 million and the federal government another $2 million. That’s a conservative estimate, which assumes the C-section rate stays flat. If the realignment of incentives works, the C-section rate will fall, saving Washington’s health care system even more in complications avoided.

And, Thompson, is quick to point out, it will make women and babies in Washington healthier. “This is an opportunity for us to take a leadership role to both improve quality of obstetrical service in the community and actually to spend less money,” he says.

Washington has a history of bucking the national tide when it comes to childbirth. It has a rate of out-of-hospital birth double the national average, and the state is one of only nine states in the country where Medicaid will cover out-of-hospital birth attended by a licensed midwife. In 2008 the Department of Health funded a cost-benefit analysis of the practice. It found that paying for home birth resulted in good outcomes for mothers and babies and yielded a net savings to the government of about $250,000 per year from the reduced numbers of C-sections. (Licensed midwives have every incentive for their patients not to have C-sections, including the obvious: Licensed midwives don’t do C-sections. They get paid next to nothing when their clients transfer to a hospital and have C-sections.)

Currently, midwives from Washington state are lobbying in the other Washington for legislation to push all states to cover out-of-hospital births with licensed midwives through Medicaid. Amber Ulvenes, a lobbyist for the Midwives Association of Washington State, recently used the state’s cost-benefit analysis to come up with an estimate of how much money this would save nationwide. She says if 1 percent of Medicaid-covered births were attended by certified midwives, at least $71 million would be saved annually.

If the state’s realignment of C-section incentives were to work and be implemented nationwide, the potential savings would be far bigger. With C-sections accounting for 45 percent of the $86 billion the U.S. spends on childbirth each year, lowering the C-section rate could go a ways toward paying for President Obama’s goal of getting health coverage to everyone in the country. If Washington’s realignment of childbirth incentives works, it will be one piece of evidence that Obama’s rhetoric just might be right: Not only can we afford health care reform, we can’t afford not to do it.

© 2009 Crosscut Public Media. All rights reserved.

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Mom Refuses C-Section, Baby Taken Away

 

This situation is so disturbing, I’m unable to even comment on it right now: http://shine.yahoo.com/channel/parenting/mom-refuses-c-section-baby-taken-away-492112

A woman in New Jersey refused to consent to a C-section during labor in the event that her baby was in distress. She ended up giving birth vaginally without incident. The baby was in good medical condition.

However, her baby was taken away from her and her parental rights were terminated because she “abused and neglected herchild” by refusing the C-section and behaving “erratically” while in labor.

How is this legal?

A New Jersey appellate court has upheld the shocking ruling, and custody has been given to the child’s foster parents.

The court’s decision cites hospital records that describe themother, V.M., as “combative,” “uncooperative,” “erratic,” “noncompliant,” “irrational” and “inappropriate.” That’s how we acted during labor, too … but our babies weren’t taken away, thank God.

The court opinion also focuses on the fact that the mother had been in psychiatric care for twelve years prior to the birth. But, as the Huffington Post points out, her psychiatric state would never have been questioned if the mother had not refused invasive abdominal surgery — which was entirely within her rights.

Read the entire court ruling here.

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Keep Homebirth Legal in Australia

Australia is very close to making homebirth illegal by refusing to provide insurance to homebirth midwives. As a result, private practice midwives will be unable to register, therefore making it illegal for them to attend homebirths in Australia.

As an aspiring midwife and a former Australian resident, this issue is close to my heart. I urge everyone to sign this petition to protect a woman’s right to birth in her home: http://www.homebirthaustralia.org/sites/sign-petition-save-private-midwifery

For those of you in Canberra where I used to live, there is a rally in September, please attend if you can. Writing to your Senate members and asking them to support homebirth would be great. As Sarah Buckley says, “the most effective action right now….is to hold up this legislation in the senate and require that this doesn’t impact the availability of homebirth before they let it through. You can email senator.williams@aph.gov.au and senator.sue.”

Here is a sweet video response to the Australian governments actions that explains in more detail what is happening in Australia:

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Cord Wrapped Around Baby’s Neck – Usually Harmless

300_274765 Another lovely story from Associated Content. The below story, which can also be found here, correctly informs folks that, under most circumstances, a cord wrapped around a baby’s neck is not a dire emergency. An unborn baby does not breath through it’s nose and mouth. It is cord compression that can cause fetal heart tones to dip. If a baby is born with the cord wrapped around his or her neck, a skilled midwife or doctor can unwrap the cord before mom’s next pushes.

~~~

As a confirmed birth junkie, I have heard over and over again birth stories where the baby was born by cesarean for either fetal distress or failure to descend, and the difficulties are blamed on “the cord was around the baby’s neck”. Is this condition – scientifically termed “nuchal cord” – actually dangerous? A new study backs up previous research showing that nuchal cord is not the threat it’s perceived to be. 

A study published this year in the Journal of Perinatal Medicine showed there were no statistically significant differences in outcomes of post-term pregnancies involving a nuchal cord verses no nuchal cord. Drs. Ghosh and Gudmundsson performed color ultrasound on 202 women with post-term pregnancies. Nuchal cords were detected in 69 of the women. There were no significant differences in Apgar scores, umbilical cord anomalies, cesarean section, perinatal death or admission of the baby to the NICU (neonatal intensive care unit).

These findings confirm what has been found in most of the past research on nuchal cord outcomes. A 2006 study from the Archives of Obstetrics and Gynecology was on a much larger scale, looking at the outcomes of 166,318 deliveries during a 15 year study period, 24,392 of which had a documented nuchal cord at birth. The authors, Sheiner et. Al, conclude: “Nuchal cord is not associated with adverse perinatal outcome. Thus, labor induction in such cases is probably unnecessary.” The interesting thing about the Sheiner study is that despite the equivalent outcomes among nuchal cord babies and those without the cord wrapped around the neck, there were higher rates of labor induction and non-reassuring fetal heart tones during labor among the nuchal cord cases.

 These two factors are most likely related. We know without a doubt that induction of labor can cause fetal distress. The fact that there were higher induction rates in the nuchal cord group could very well explain the higher rate of transient fetal distress. Induction is nearly always accompanied by AROM (artificial rupture of membranes), which can cause undue pressure on the cord, which can in turn result in blips in the hearttones. Regardless of the cause, the outcomes were still good. 

Finally, we look at yet another study which demonstrated that nuchal cord does not result in worse outcomes. In a 2005 study looking at the effects of nuchal cord on birthweight and immediate neonatal outcomes, Mastrobattista, et. Al examined the outcomes of 4426 babies, 775 of whom had a nuchal cord. They found that there were no significant differences between the two groups in birthweight, non-reassuring fetal hearttones, Apgar scores below 7, or operative vaginal deliveries. The cesarean rate was actually highest among the women whose babies did not have a nuchal cord. 

The most important thing to keep in mind is that unborn babies do not breathe through their mouth and neck – they receive oxygen through the umbilical cord. This is why it normally doesn’t matter if the cord is around the neck (unless the cord is being compressed too much, which is fairly rare). The baby cannot “choke to death” before she/he is born. What we can conclude from the overwhelming majority of data is that nuchal cord – or “cord around the neck” – is not pathological; that is to say, it’s not an abnormality. It is a normal condition of the umbilical cord and typically causes no problems with the delivery, even though doctors frequently try to convince parents otherwise.

References:

J Perinat Med. 2008;36(2):142-4. Nuchal cord in post-term pregnancy – relationship to suspected intrapartum fetal distress indicating operative intervention. Ghosh GSGudmundsson S. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Malmö University Hospital, Malmö, Sweden.

Arch Gynecol Obstet. 2006 May;274(2):81-3. Epub 2005 Dec 23. Nuchal cord is not associated with adverse perinatal outcome. Sheiner EAbramowicz JSLevy ASilberstein TMazor MHershkovitz R. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Soroka University Medical Center, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel. sheiner@bgu.ac.il

Am J Perinatol. 2005 Feb;22(2):83-5 Effects of nuchal cord on birthweight and immediate neonatal outcomes.Mastrobattista JMHollier LMYeomans ERRamin SMDay MCSosa AGilstrap LC 3rd. Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, TX 77030, USA.

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The Lie of the EDD: Why Your Due Date Isn’t when You Think

300_361878Associated Content, an online publisher and distributer of original content, published the below story on Setp 24, 2008, written by Misha Safranski.

I’ve posted several times about the inherent problems associated with basing due dates on a 28 day menstrual cycle or on ultrasound. The below article provides another way of estimating when your baby will be born.

But remember, it’s always an estimate and baby will be born when she is ready.

 

 

 

http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/1047180/the_lie
_of_the_edd_why_your_due_date.html

We have it ingrained in our heads throughout our entire adult lives-pregnancy is 40 weeks. The “due date” we are given at that first prenatal visit is based upon that 40 weeks, and we look forward to it with great anticipation. When we are still pregnant after that magical date, we call ourselves “overdue” and the days seem to drag on like years. The problem with this belief about the 40 week EDD is that it is not based in fact. It is one of many pregnancy and childbirth myths which has wormed its way into the standard of practice over the years-something that is still believed because “that’s the way it’s always been done”. 

The folly of Naegele’s Rule

The 40 week due date is based upon Naegele’s Rule. This theory was originated by Harmanni Boerhaave, a botanist who in 1744 came up with a method of calculating the EDD based upon evidence in the Bible that human gestation lasts approximately 10 lunar months. The formula was publicized around 1812 by German obstetrician Franz Naegele and since has become the accepted norm for calculating the due date. There is one glaring flaw in Naegele’s rule. Strictly speaking, a lunar (or synodic – from new moon to new moon) month is actually 29.53 days, which makes 10 lunar months roughly 295 days, a full 15 days longer than the 280 days gestation we’ve been lead to believe is average. In fact, if left alone, 50-80% of mothers will gestate beyond 40 weeks. 

Variants in cycle length

Aside from the gross miscalculation of the lunar due date, there is another common problem associated with formulating a woman’s EDD: most methods of calculating gestational length are based upon a 28 day cycle. Not all women have a 28 day cycle; some are longer, some are shorter, and even those with a 28 day cycle do not always ovulate right on day 14. If a woman has a cycle which is significantly longer than 28 days and the baby is forced out too soon because her due date is calculated according to her LMP (last menstrual period), this can result in a premature baby with potential health problems at birth. 

The inaccuracy of ultrasound

First trimester: 7 days

14 – 20 weeks: 10 days 

21 – 30 weeks: 14 days 

31 – 42 weeks: 21 days 

Recent research offers a more accurate method of approximating gestational length. In 1990 Mittendorf et Al. undertook a study to calculate the average length of uncomplicated human pregnancy. They found that for first time mothers (nulliparas) pregnancy lasted an average of 288 days (41weeks 1 day). For multiparas, mothers who had previously given birth, the average gestational length was 283 days or 40 weeks 3 days. To easily calculate this EDD formula, a nullipara would take the LMP, subtract 3 months, then add 15 days. Multiparas start with LMP, subtract 3 months and add 10 days. The best way to determine an accurate due date, no matter which method you use, is to chart your cycles so that you know what day you ovulate. There are online programs available for this purpose (refer to links in resources section). Complete classes on tracking your cycle are also available through the Couple to Couple League. 

ACOG and postdates

One of the most vital pieces of information to know when you are expecting is that ACOG itself (American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists) does not recommend interfering with a normal pregnancy before 42 completed weeks. This is why knowing your true conception date and EDD is very important; if you come under pressure from a care provider to deliver at a certain point, you can be armed with ACOG’s official recommendations as well as your own exact due date. This can help you and your baby avoid much unnecessary trauma throughout the labor and delivery. Remember, babies can’t read calendars; they come on their own time and almost always without complication when left alone to be born when they are truly ready. 

Sources: 

Mittendorf, R. et al., “The length of uncomplicated human gestation,” OB/GYN, Vol. 75, No., 6 June, 1990, pp. 907-932. 
ACOG Practice Bulletin #55: Clinical Management of Post-term Pregnancy

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Motherless Baby Breastfed By Six Women Each Day

Babble, a parenting magazine, posted the below article (written by Jeanne Sager) about volunteer moms breastfeeding a motherless baby.

Enjoy!

Motherless Baby Breastfed By Six Women Each Day
Posted by JeanneSager

A baby without a mom. A bunch of moms still breastfeeding their own babies. It was just meant to be.
You don’t hear about death during childbirth much anymore, (and thank goodness for that), but when Susan Goodrich lost her life shortly after giving birth to her son, one of her most important wishes for her child was fulfilled by a band of impromptu wet nurses, moms who heard a baby needed their help.
Charles Moses Martin Goodrich was born on Jan. 11, but when his dad said he wanted the boy to receive breastmilk right off the bat, he was told the hospital didn’t have a milkbank. A delivery could come in from elsewhere in Michigan, but it would take several days to ship.
Then Robbie Goodrich got a call of condolence from a friend, a mom who was still nursing her one-year-old daughter. Anything the family needed, she said, anything. . . even her breastmilk. It’s when Robbie told his hometown paper that things clicked – he realized other moms might want to help him in his plight, and he called on a family friend to help him round up moms with something to give.
The found twenty total women who set up a schedule – six times a day, Charles has been fed by a different woman (that’s one of the volunteers pictured). And by fed, I mean actually suckling at the breast.That is the most incredible part of the story to me – that these women don’t just pump their milk and ship it over. With children at home (obviously), they drop everything to drive to the Goodrich home and allow a stranger’s baby to nurse. It’s the kind of love only a parent could muster for a child – but these aren’t his parents!
At night, his father feeds him with bottles of milk pumped by the volunteers, and Charles is a happy, healthy baby despite his rough start to life.
The subject became controversial recently with Salma Hayek’s highly publicized feeding of another woman’s child, which some called a publicity stunt. There’s no way these nameless women could be accused of the same thing. More to the point, what they’re doing is life-sustaining while Hayek’s one-off feeding was not going to drastically change a child’s life.
What do you think of this? Would you do it? Or would you just pump your milk and send it over?

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