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Thursday, October 29, 2009

A call for stories

We believe that the birth process is a monumental experience in which a mother should be honored, valued, respected and revered. And yet, we continue to hear stories that express a number of grievances encountered by Moms during their births. Some mothers experience unfair treatment, cause for complaint, disrespect and even abuse during their birth process.
Because a birth may be a rare or even a solitary experience for one woman, she may not pursue official reprimand for any injustice she suffers. However, this choice of inaction proffers a disservice to the women who come after her and encounter similar unregulated affronts.
So we make a call for stories. Stories that explain the grievances you or others may have experienced throughout a mother's pregnancy or birth experience; stories that necessitate action for a higher level of respect and ethical practice among our medical care givers.
We hope that by gathering a collection of stories, we may better unite as one voice. Though we may not be able to change what we have experienced in the past, we may be able to create better, safer circumstances for our sisters that follow us into their time of delivery and initiation into motherhood. This is an open invitation to all mothers, fathers, family members, doulas, medical caretakers or anyone involved in the birth process who wishes to better honor or better advocate for the birthing mothers of our community.

Please email SouthTexasBirthAdvocates@gmail.com

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

"Maternal mortality across the world"

Thanks Beth, for bringing this article to our attention!
The video and full text can be seen at

Maybe we should consider this information as we look at the rates of c-sections in our own South Texas area. Is a c-section always the safest option?


Important Notice: We have an STBA meeting TOMORROW at 11am. If anyone is interested in attending this meeting or future meetings, pleaseemail southtexasbirthadvocates@gmail.com




"The US spends more money on mothers' health than any other nation in the world, yet women in America are more likely to die during childbirth than they are in most other developed countries, according to the OECD and WHO. The BBC's Laura Trevelyan has been trying to find out why.

Four million American women give birth every year, and about 500 die during childbirth or from pregnancy-related complications.

In the richest nation in the world, giving birth is more risky than you would think.

"No American woman should die from childbirth in 2009, we can definitely do a lot better," says Dr Michael Lu, Associate Professor of Obstetrics at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).

In New Jersey, Jim Scythes is bringing up his two-year-old daughter Isabella on his own.

His wife, Valerie, died from blood clots shortly after giving birth to Isabella by Caesarean section.

Jim still cannot believe that Valerie died after giving birth, here in America.

"When Isabella walked for the first time, I sat on the floor and cried, because Valerie should have been there. I believe this could have been prevented and now my daughter will never know her mother."

MATERNAL MORTALITY
One woman dies every minute during childbirth, yet almost all of these deaths are preventable.

In 2001, the UN set itself the goal of slashing maternal mortality by 75% by 2015, but it is nowhere near meeting that target.

Health ministers from around the world are meeting in Ethiopia to work out how to make up for lost ground.

The BBC is publishing a series of reports to mark the occasion.

So why are women in America more likely to die during childbirth than they are in most other developed nations?

The answers are complex. A healthcare system which leaves what Dr Lu estimates are 17 million women of child-bearing age without health insurance could be one factor.

Obesity, poverty and the high rate of C-sections in America all play a part.

Dr Lu says about half of American women are entering pregnancy overweight. "Obesity is a major risk factor for pregnancy-related complications.

"First we need to improve the health of women before they get pregnant, and second we need to improve the quality of maternal care in America."

Shocking story

The Centres for Disease Control (CDC) in Atlanta is the US government agency that collects national statistics on the numbers of women dying during childbirth.

Dr Bill Callaghan of the CDC says the latest maternal mortality data suggests one in four to one in five women who die have heart disease, or diseased blood vessels.

To the extent that we don't explain racial disparity in pregnancy-related mortality, we're going to have difficulty making headway into it
Dr Bill Callaghan
Centers for Disease Control

Could that be due to women being overweight? I asked. "It could be," replies Dr Callaghan, "the obesity epidemic has not spared women of reproductive age."

Dr Bill McCool, at the University of Pennsylvania's School of Nursing, points out that America is far above the World Health Organization's goal of a 15% C-section rate.

"Surgery of any kind has risk," he says, and a C-section is, "still the riskiest way to have a baby.

"In the US, almost one third of women have that procedure for delivery of their baby."


...

the full text of the article can be found at

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8325685.stm

Thursday, October 1, 2009

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2009

Career Fairs

We are collecting literature from different midwifery schools, doula schools, and childbirth education schools. If you would like to attend any of these or bring display materials to present, please email southtexasbirthadvocates@gmail.com

These are the dates that we have so far:
Alice High
School - Sept. 24 6-8pm
Kingsville High
School - Sept. 23 2-4pm in gym
Port Aransas High
School - Oct 2 12:51 - This one will actually be held during a careers class.
Sinton High
School - Nov 24 - Waiting for more info to come in mail
Flour Bluff High
School - March 11 - Waiting for more info to come in mail

MONDAY, JUNE 15, 2009

Natural Family Planning and Physiological Births - by Ann Craigs

Ann has come up with our first real "guest" blog. Thank you Ann! Here it is:

It’s fun to see people’s eyes grow wide when I mention my six physiological births. Four were attended by outsiders and two were assisted by my husband. It’s sad to me however, that when I discuss physiological family planning, people are unaware of what I mean. I learned about natural childbirth from a high school class. I learned about natural family planning from a book.

Not knowing what in the world the title of the book meant, I checked out Breastfeeding and Natural Child Spacing. It was from La Leche League during the time that I was nursing my first baby. The author, Sheila Kippley, absolutely fascinated me.

Did anyone really space babies like this these days? I almost dismissed the idea; I am a nurse and had never heard of such a thing. Now, skip ahead with me a couple of months. Try to imagine my amazement to discover that my breastfeeding pattern, labeled “ecological breastfeeding” by Kippley, was hormonally keeping my monthly fertility cycles away.

My cute baby nursed frequently day and night. We took a nap together each day, plus delayed solids and liquids until around six months. Since my son hated pacifiers, swings, babysitters and schedules, we avoided them. I nicely went without any menstrual spotting or bleeding for over a year.

Although women breastfeed differently, all these very specific behaviors, named “Seven Standards” by Kippley, usually result in impressive, eco-friendly child spacing. I repeated these special circumstances with all my children. Sheila’s 2008 book, The Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding has newer research that should definitely be in nursing school courses. However, the book is written for ordinary moms. I have met many women for years, who are equally pleased with this as I am.

I next learned a broader form of ‘physiological’ family planning. When the breastfeeding infertility stops, I monitor my temperature and cervical signs daily. If not planning a child, we abstain on the fertile days and enjoy marital intimacy on the naturally infertile days. I feel so clean being patch-free, pill-free, shot-free, and latex-free. It’s similar to birthing without drugs, devices, and interventions. I am very respectful of my husband who ‘two-steps’ with me on this. Just as behaviors indicate different stages of labor, so my body signs, jotted down quickly on a chart, indicate my phases of fertility and infertility.

I am indebted to Sheila’s husband, John, as well. This couple just published a slim 2009 book, Natural Family Planning, The Complete Approach. I got a coil-bound version, perfect for home study. In addition to charting, breastfeeding, and special situations, one chapter explains why some use this for moral reasons and another chapter has true stories of how this has improved women’s childbearing years. To preview it, see a free downloadable form at www.nfpandmore.org.


Ann enjoys all her children, physical and spiritual, that she has been around over the years while volunteering as a nurse, breastfeeding counselor and NFP instructor. She enjoys fishing and knitting and wouldn't trade her life for anyone's - well, maybe trade with a midwife :) Recent highlights in her life include the first grandbaby, plus seeing John and Sheila Kippley receive an honorary doctorate from Franciscan University , both events in the winter of 2008.

FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2009

STBA Meeting Minutes-


In attendance: Aletha Craft, Ann Craig, RN, Liz Derry, LVN, Mercy Eizenga, LM, Carrie Kimmel, Beth Overton, CPM, LM

Items Discussed:

Articles to be published on the South Texas Birth Advocates (STBA) blog would be added at the discretion of Carrie Kimmel who maintains the blog.

It was requested that all in attendance write an article for the blog.

The group worked on a mission statement. Wording wasn’t decided on, but everyone agreed that it should include that we want to educate and emower women and promote physiological birth.

It was agreed that our main goal is too promote the education of women about physiological birth.

Discussed were ways to achieve this examples were to have viewings of Orgasmic Birth, The Business of Being Born, or other documentaries and doing Career Days in schools and various Health Fairs.

The First viewing of Orgasmic Birth will be held at Aletha’s house on July 14th at 3pm. The location and expense for holding a larger scale viewing was discussed as well.

Aletha would also try to locate information regarding local health fairs.

Mercy’s assignment was to start calling the local high schools and colleges about attending career days were we would have information on becoming midwives, doulas, childbirth eduation instructors, etc.


SATURDAY, MAY 23, 2009

STBA Pictures

Here are some photos of our first meeting in April. We all gathered on a Tuesday morning at Coffee Waves in Corpus.






SATURDAY, MAY 2, 2009

What is a "physiological birth"?

A friend emailed me the following question:

Hi Carrie,
What do you mean by "physiological birth"? e.g. with no anesthetic drugs/epidural, etc.? without inducing the birth with tocolytic drugs? or do you mean birth in a bathtub? or giving birth in a football player starting position vs. lithotomy position? or something else entirely?

My response:
I'd like to pose the question to the blog readers:
Physiological is a descriptive word used to depict something as normal and natural... Is a birth with no anesthetic drugs/epidural normal and natural? What about births that are induced by tocolytic drugs? Are they normal? Are pools of water or half clad squatting women normal and natural in childbirth?

What do you think?

Physiology... The word.

Physiology: The branch of biology that deals with the normal functions of living organisms and their parts.

Physiological adj


-New Oxford American Dictionary


The term physiological comes from two Greek words physis + logia, nature + logic (study, science).

phys·i·ol·o·gy

Function: noun

Etymology: Latin physiologia natural science, from Greek, from physi- + -logia -logy

Date: 1615

1 : a branch of biology that deals with the functions and activities of life or of living matter (as organs, tissues, or cells) and of the physical and chemical phenomena involved — compare anatomy 2 : the organic processes and phenomena of an organism or any of its parts or of a particular bodily process

phys·i·o·log·i·cal

Variant(s): or phys·i·o·log·ic \-jik\

Function: adjective

Date: 1814


FRIDAY, MAY 1, 2009

Aloha Advocates!

I am looking for advocates who are willing to publish a post or write a comment on one of the following topics/questions. I would also like to hear your priority list for the potential blog topics. Let me know (in the comment section of this post) which topic is most important to you.

Thank you!
-Carrie


1. What is the best way to achieve a physiological birth at your hospital?
(Directed to hospital administrators in the Corpus Christi area)
2. What are doula services?
(Directed to a doula and a mother who has received doula services)
3. What is hypnobirthing and does it really work?
4. How can Yoga help you achieve a physiological birth?
5. What are some of the national issues at hand concerning options for mothers who want a physiological birth?
6. What are students health care professionals learning in the labor and delivery wards of our hospitals?
7. What are the different types of midwifery certifications?
8. In what ways are OB/GYNs trained to provide mothers with a normal and natural birth?
9. A day in the life of a labor and delivery nurse here in the Corpus Christi Area
10. A day in the life of a delivering doctor here in the Corpus Christi Area
11. A day in the life of a midwife here in the Corpus Christi Area

These are just a few topics/questions I plan to explore. I would love suggestions for more!


3 COMMENTS:

Beth Overton, CPM said...

I love the new blog! You did a great job. I can't wait to see how it grows over the next few months. Thanks for doing this! ~ Beth

Liz Derry, LVN said...

I am so excited about this group! I can't wait to have our next meeting. I can really see things changing for the good for women and their families in South Texas.

Mercy Eizenga, LM said...

You are doing a great job. I love the photos of you.