Elena LaVictoire's Library tagged → View Popular
Mommy, What Did You Do in the Industrial Revolution? - Semaine Mondiale pour l'Accouchement Respecté
Excellent article on the state of birth in this country. I had a couple of thoughts while reading it.
A couple of years ago I had a discussion with a woman who had pretty much opted for a Cesarean at her first prenatal visit! She didn't with to be challenged on it either. I never considered the perspective that "high risk" in this country has come to mean "special." And that's how ACOG has come to make it so acceptable.
I also wonder why the feminists and "green" people haven't picked on this. Industrialized birth today takes power away from women. This is just as bad ad the old day when women were tied down during labor, like my mother was, back in the 50s and 60s. Yet other than Ricky Lake, I'm not hearing a peep from them.
As far s the green movement, I guess it's okay to keep the earth clean and pure but to savage women's body with invasive medical procedures seems to be okay.
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The cesarean rate in the US has been rising for decades, and in 2006 hit an all-time high of 31% (Hamilton, 2007.) This record is likely to stand for only a brief time, that is, until figures are
released for 2007. Can it really be that one-third of women are unable to birth without high-level technological support? And is there an endpoint in sight? “In the next decade or so the
industrial revolution in obstetrics could make Cesarean delivery consistently safer than the birth process that evolution gave us.” (Gawande, 2006, 8) Against such an argument, who could hope to
stand? -
Although he lauds the
success—often unheralded-- of obstetrics in saving mothers’ and infants’ lives, I hear within the paean a threnody for the vanishing art. Skilled obstetricians like those legends of the past,
whose names lived on in the maneuvers they devised to usher babies into the world, are vanishing from current practice: goodbye, Lovset; hit the road, Rubin; Mauriceau, it’s been swell, but we’re
through. - 8 more annotations...
injennuous: The Myth of CPD
When I hear about a new mom going to her OB/GYN for a first prenatal appointment and being told that she "probably" is going to need a C-section because she couldn't possibly have a baby naturally, I cringe. I cringe because it happened to me and I went on to have several babies larger than my first one. Here are some other moms who have done the same!
A Quiet Simple Life
This is news to me! Apparently this is only true when the "ideas and how people think on various issues" agrees with how this blogger's ideas and thoughts.
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The truth is I really like to discuss ideas and hear how other people think about various issues and topics.
My Domestic Church: Best of My Domestic Church
A look back at one of my more popular postings from last year Laine's Letter Part 2
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