Showing posts with label birth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label birth. Show all posts

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Fundamentals of Relaxation Part 5 - Breathing

In spite of the new technology associated with labor and birth, women are still fearful.  Fear may come from hearing stories, reading articles, or simply by not knowing the full truth about the events of the birthing process.  An important aspect of relaxation for fear is breathing.

Any source that addresses fear, stress or anxiety will also address breathing.  Breathing is an effective and easy way to reduce stress and fear by decreasing the body’s reaction to the stress.  Slow, rhythmic breathing has been shown to lower blood pressure, reduce heart rate, and reduce the secretion of stress hormones such as cortisol. Relaxed breathing also balances O2 and CO2 levels and decrease muscle tension.

Behaviors for coping with severe fear of childbirth or SFOC were related to six domains of childbirth education relaxation: concentration or focusing, support from family or doula, breathing, relaxation and perception of control.  Since breathing helps to maintain focus and relaxation and hence perception of control, breathing seems to be a foundational skill to learn.

For decades, Lamaze has taught patterned breathing to offset the intensity of the contractions. Since Lamaze has become as synonymous to breathing as Kleenex is to tissues, many expectant parents come to childbirth class, regardless of the method, to learning breathing.  While Lamaze still offers instruction on breathing, it is not so much how one breathes as that one does breathing effectively.

In a 2011 article in the Journal of Perinatal Education, author Judith Lothian gives these guidelines for using breathing in labor:

  • Breathing is easily subject to conscious control. Therefore, controlled breathing is easy to learn.
  • Slow, deep breathing is particularly effective. The “right” way to breathe is whatever feels right. There are no rules related to how many breaths per minute, whether to breathe through the mouth or nose, or whether to make sounds. The key here is that the breathing is conscious, not automatic.
  • As labor contractions get stronger and the work of labor gets harder, speeding up the breathing and making it shallower is sometimes, but not always, more effective.
  • Focusing on something, either with eyes closed \or open, can help maintain the rhythm of the breathing.
  • Using conscious breathing in everyday life, either to relieve stress or to increase body awareness and mindfulness, is excellent practice for labor. It is an excellent life skill.
  • Conscious breathing works best in combination with many other comfort strategies. In Lamaze classes, women no longer spend large amounts of time practicing breathing. Women move, change position, slow dance, sway on birth balls, learn massage, and identify the countless other ways they normally relax and find comfort. Each of these comfort strategies can be used in combination with breathing.
  • In restrictive environments, breathing may be one of very few comfort strategies available for women in labor. It is one coping strategy that cannot be taken away.





References:
Lothian, J. (2011) Lamaze Breathing: What Every Pregnant Woman Needs to Know.  Journal of Perinatal Education.  20(2), 118-120.

Salomonsson, B.  (2013). Self-efficacy in pregnant women with severe fear of childbirth.  Journal of Obstetrics, Gynecologic and Neonatal Nursing. 42(2): 191-202.


Turankar, A. et al (2013) Effects of slow breathing exercise on cardiovascular functions, pulmonary functions and galvanic skin resistance in healthy human volunteers – a pilot study.  The Indian Journal of Medical Research.  May 137(5): 916-21. 

Monday, April 29, 2013

International Week for Respecting Childbirth May 20-27


The International Week for Respecting Childbirth (SMAR = Semaine Mondiale Pour L’Accouchement Respecte) is an opportunity to express a common commitment through an international campaign for the respect of the birth. It takes place every year in May. Each Global Week focuses on a specific theme. The theme for 2013 is "Please do not disturb, Birth in progress". (To get more information on this global even, go to www.smar.info.)

Imagine what we could accomplish if we all worked together!

So let’s try it!
International Week for
Respecting Childbirth
May 20-27, 2013

First, friend me on Facebook and encourage all of your peers and colleagues to do the same – then, look for the Facebook Event “International Week for Respecting Childbirth” – join it!

Second, begin now to write blogs, update your Facebook page and Tweet about the importance of attending childbirth education classes.  While this is not quite the Global Theme, you would learn about undisturbed birth and laboring the way the mother wants to labor if you attended childbirth classes!

As birth professionals, regardless of the smaller segment we represent (childbirth educators, doulas, nurses, physicians, midwives, massage therapists, lactation consultants and others), if we band together toward one common goal, we CAN and WILL make a difference.

Are you with me?

Monday, December 10, 2012

A 10 Minute Waterbirth Info Session!

Here are some wonderful water labor and water birth videos from You Tube!


First, some info from Barbara Harper, the world's expert on water labor and water birth:







And from Parma Community Hospital, near Cleveland Ohio:





And now the birth....

 

Tuesday, November 06, 2012

Call The Midwife

If you have not yet seen this delightful and engaging series on PBS/BBC, please follow it on You Tube!


Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Beautiful Belgian Waterbirth

From the award winning childbirth documentary Waterbirth in the 21st Century - filmed with Dr. Herman Ponette at the Henri Serruys Hospital in Ostend Belgium.




Thursday, October 18, 2012

The Perfect Response by Barbara Harper


My long-time friend, Barbara Harper (founder of Waterbirth International), posted this on her Facebook page. I found her dialogue so phenomenal, I asked her permission to reprint.  So here it is..in Barbara’s words….



There was a commentator on the radio in Miami this morning (10/18/12) extolling the virtues of planned cesarean surgery and induction because you can guarantee that your doctor will be there as one reason to "control" the birth of your baby. This was my response:

To the uninformed person who commented on the convenience and safety of inductions and scheduled cesarean surgery instead of waiting for the perfectly timed dance of undisturbed childbirth: 
Barbara Harper

All human beings are programmed by brain wiring and influenced by the environmental signals to initiate the birth process through a complex set of chemical, hormonal and neurological transmitters. The new human needs that process to fully engage and activate parts of the brain that contribute to health, well-being, cardiovascular stability, respiratory function, neurological development and even feelings of love and attachment. 

When we arbitrarily assign a date to chemically initiate the process, the innate programming gets shut down, cannot function in the same way as the biological imperative would have, had things been left alone. The human being perceives this "jump start" as a threat and begins to prepare its body and brain to survive in an environment that is stress filled and possibly life threatening. All of the bodily functions that control the neurological, cardiovascular, respiratory, metabolic adaptive mechanisms are put on high alert and remain there. This over stimulation of the psychoneuroimmunological system creates and lays down the patterns for future problems such as heart disease, high blood pressure, diabetes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and even some psychiatric disorders. 

This may be difficult for the uninformed consumer to begin to see the connections between the use of a simple drug to stimulate the uterine contractions or a surgical procedure to remove a human being from the habitat in which brain development is meant to take place, but the growing field of epigenetics and pre and perinatal psychology are rapidly filling in the gaps in our understanding that what we do in the birth process has life-long consequences on human health, the development of character, mental stability and perhaps even drug addiction. Tall order? Perhaps we are only beginning to realize the long term effects of this violation of an innate biological agenda - because that is what early chemical induction is!

As they say, "don't mess with Mother Nature!"

These scientific principals and the evidence to support this thesis are contained in my forth coming book, "Embracing The Miracle: How Pregnancy, Birth and the First Hour Influence Human Potential."  There are already many books and hundreds of research studies from which to broaden your understanding of allowing nature to fulfill its destiny in the creation of new human beings. Parenting For Peace by Marcy Axeness is a great book for any potential parent or grandparent along with my other book, Gentle Birth Choices .