Natural Doula Professional Labour
Support Services
Windsor, Ontario Canada
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We've put birth in the same category with illness and disease and it's never belonged there. Birth is naturally safe, but we've allowed it to be taken over by the medical community. -Carla Hartley Having a Baby? First, you should learn as much as you can about all your choices. There are many different ways of caring for a mother and her baby during labor and birth. Birthing care that is better and healthier for mothers and babies is called "mother-friendly." Some birth places or settings are more mother-friendly than others. A group of experts in birthing care came up with this list of 10 things to look for and ask about. Medical research supports all of these things. These are also the best ways to be mother-friendly. When you are deciding where to have your baby, you'll probably be choosing from different places such as: • birth center, 1. Ask, "Who can be with me during
labor and birth?" They will also let a birthing mother have with her a person who has special training in helping women cope with labor and birth. This person is called a doula or labor support person. She never leaves the birthing mother alone. She encourages her, comforts her, and helps her understand what's happening to her. They will have midwives as part of their staff so that a birthing mother can have a midwife with her if she wants to. 2. Ask, "What happens during a normal
labor and birth in your setting?" They will also tell you how often they do certain procedures. For example, they will have a record of the percentage of C-sections (Cesarean births) they do every year. If the number is too high, you'll want to consider having your baby in another place or with another doctor or midwife. Here are some numbers we recommend you ask about.
A C-section is a major operation in which a doctor cuts through the mother's stomach into her womb and removes the baby through the opening. Mothers who have had a C-section can often have future babies normally. Look for a birth place in which 6 out of 10 women (60%) or more of the mothers who have had C-sections go on to have their other babies through the birth canal. 3. Ask, "How do you allow for differences
in culture and beliefs?" For example, you may have a custom that only women may be with you during labor and birth. Or perhaps your beliefs include a religious ritual to be done after birth. There are many other examples that may be very important to you. If the place and the people are mother-friendly, they will support you in doing what you want to do. Before labor starts tell your doctor or midwife special things you want. 4. Ask, "Can I walk and move around
during labor? What position do you suggest for birth?" 5. Ask, "How do you make sure everything
goes smoothly when my nurse, doctor, midwife, or agency need to work with
each other?" Mother-friendly places and people will have a specific plan for keeping in touch with the other people who are caring for you. They will talk to others who give you birth care. They will help you find people or agencies in your community to help you. For example, they may put you in touch with someone who can help you with breastfeeding. 6. Ask, "What things do you normally
do to a woman in labor?" Sometimes birth centers, hospitals, and home birth services use methods that are not proven to be best for the mother or the baby. For example, research has shown it's usually not helpful to break the bag of waters. Here is a list of things we recommend you ask about. They do not help and may hurt healthy mothers and babies. They are not proven to be best for the mother or baby and are not mother-friendly.
A birth center, hospital, or home birth service that does these things for most of the mothers is not mother-friendly. Remember, these should not be used without a special medical reason. 7. Ask, "How do you help mothers stay
as comfortable as they can be? Besides drugs, how do you help mothers
relieve the pain of labor?" Comfort measures help you handle your labor more easily and help you feel more in control. The people who care for you will not try to persuade you to use a drug for pain unless you need it to take care of a special medical problem. All drugs affect the baby. 8. Ask, "What if my baby is born early
or has special problems?" 9. Ask, "Do you circumcise baby boys?" 10. Ask, "How do you help mothers
who want to breastfeed?"
*Reproduced with permission © 2000 by The Coalition for Improving Maternity Services (CIMS).
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| ©2006 Natural Doula.com by Jessica Owchar |