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Date: | Wed, 2 Jan 2008 18:51:42 EST |
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Dear Friends:
There is pain as pathology and warning (as with a broken leg or tooth) and
there is the pain of hard work as in a marathon or turning the soil to make a
garden. The trouble is that the medications women are given to deal with
their labors also have an impact on the baby, unlike the analgesics one takes for
a root canal or a broken leg.
Of course there is a need for labor pain relief. My protest is the routine
use of it.
Women need something to get through labor. That could be a loving and
supportive environment, encouragement, the freedom to do what they want as in
eating, drinking and moving about. Or that something could be drugs; as hospitals
are set up to give only drugs, (and even insist that women use them) that is
most women will use. When was the last time a woman was given a nice sandwich
or a cup of hot tea in labor? What adult wants ice chips when they are
working hard? If our birth environments changed, our breastfeeding would change
also. Breastfeeding rates diminished in part when birth moved from home to
hospital.
The pendulum has shifted now so much that women who want an unmedicated
spontaneous labor in a hospital in my area are scorned and treated in a less than
embracing manner.
The best we can do now is to keep mothers and babies together. Nissen and
Sepkoski are but 2 researchers that showed that the impact of medications can be
dampened if baby is left with the mother until the first
breastfeeds.....Baby-Friendly hospitals in the US show this too.
Personally speaking, in my labors I asked for a cesearan section (twice) and
my head to be cut off (once) at 8 centimeters dilatation. But because I'd
set up my environment to support an unmedicated labor, and was also fortunate
enough to have a nice physiologic labor that was over within a day........those
things did not happen. Most women can have an experience like that. The
trick is to keep the fear at a minimum.
Hospital obstetrical practices induce fear in women, both subtly and
overtly........medications are more often given to deal with fear than with pain.
Fear makes pain intolerable..........which Dr. Read wrote about 75 years ago.
warmly,
Nikki Lee RN, MS, Mother of 2, IBCLC, CCE, CIMI
craniosacral therapy practitioner
_www.myspace.com/adonicalee
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