Ornament

The gentlebirth.org website is provided courtesy of
Ronnie Falcao, LM MS, a homebirth midwife in Mountain View, CA

Ornament

Response to Parenting Magazine Article Downplaying Epidural Risks

The Best Thing You Can Do for Mothers, Babies, Birth and Families is to Become Net Savvy!

I just had my mind expanded this morning by Laureen Hudson's hour long online session on how to use the internet to get a message out. Laureen's session “Creating an Online Presence," gave me a wealth of information in a short time and impressed me with how many people are out there who completely rely on the internet for their information. I needed that, and maybe you do, too.  

  - Ina May Gaskin 

 I just hung up the phone from doing the hour long session with Laureen Hudson on “Creating an Online Presence”.  Laureen’s know-how and expertise were enough to wake up even the birth oldtimers like me and Ina May to the many unused opportunities of the internet.  Laureen’s engaging and easygoing teaching style made even those scary (to me) terms like “hypertext, streaming, wordpress, technorati, feedreader and trackback” start to make sense.  Her passion is to reach the generation of young women who have not yet given birth BEFORE they fall into the black hole of aggressive obstetrics.  I came away from the class today with lots of ways to improve my website and make it more modern, usable and interesting for readers.  This class will run again this coming Friday (August 22) and I heartily recommend it.  
- Gloria Lemay


 
REGISTER NOW! SPACE IS LIMITED! 

Cost: $35 per session 

Each session will be 60 minutes in length 

Creating An Online Presence
Sunday, September 7 at 5:00 p.m. Pacific / 8:00 p.m. Eastern
Friday, September 19 at 12:00 p.m. Pacific / 3:00 p.m. Eastern
Monday, September 22 at 9:00 a.m. Pacific / 12:00 p.m. Eastern 

Search! 
This session will include a case study of Dr. Amy and how we shoot ourselves in the collective feet by visiting and commenting on her website.  (PS Hope you enjoyed the Gotcha! page from our last email!)
Sunday, October 5 at 5:00 p.m. Pacific / 8:00 p.m. Eastern
Friday, October 24 at 12:00 p.m. Pacific / 3:00 p.m. Eastern
Monday, October 27 at 9:00 a.m. Pacific / 12:00 p.m. Eastern   

 

IS AN EPIDURAL BAD FOR A NEWBORN?
Among the findings: 15 % of those who had epidurals developed a fever, raising a red flag about their infants' health; only 1 % of the new moms who had other forms of pain relief or none at all had fevers.
Note that an epidural appears to make it 15 times more likely that you'll have a fever.
. . . (April's note: How many of these infants were separated from their mother's for extended periods of time...having all sorts of tests performed on them??)
Many of them. I have heard a "full septic workup" described as culturing all orifices and doing a lumbar puncture. And then they wonder why they get meningitis.

 
Newborns with infections rarely develop infections (such as a temp rise), so maternal fever is one of the few signs that an infant may be ill. And an infection that's harmless to a new mom, if untreated, can be fatal to her newborn. Some docs, erring on the side of caution, draw blood from these babies for testing and give them shots of antibiotics, which often prolongs their hospital stay up to three days--only to find that most are perfectly healthy. In the study, 86 % of the babies who were tested for infection and 87 % who received antibiotics were born to mom who had epidurals. But of those tested fewer than 1 % were actually ill.
The issue of newborn infection is a hot button for me. If the mom and baby are kept together, and it is primarily the mom holding the baby, chances are very good that the baby won't be exposed to anything the mom isn't exposed to. So the mom's system will very cleverly manufacture antibodies for the baby and pass them along in the breastmilk.

Issues are probably different for preterm babies who can't breastfeed, but for full-term babies who are able to breastfeed, it makes no sense to me that they separate the mom and the baby, depriving the baby of the best immunity possible.

 

This puts expectant moms in a quandary: whether to go for the epidural or to pass on the one pain alleviator that will allow them to experience the ecstasy of childbirth without the agony. . . .
Actually, since the epidural numbs the sensations, the mother's body won't be producing the endorphins that provide that lovely post-birth ecstasy.

The solution to the quandary is to support the laboring woman with non-drug comfort measures - hydrotherapy, massage, hypnosis, emotional and positional support.

 

. . . Experts caution against forgoing an epidural solely for this reason; however, because a new mom's temp may rise even without it. "If a woman labors in a heated birthing room for many hours, the physical effort alone may result in a slight fever, " says David Birnbach, MD, director of obstetric anesthesiology at St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital in New York.
This is a great example of talking out of both sides of their mouth. Unless it happens that women getting epidurals are all put in the hottest birthing rooms, the risk of developing a fever in labor is still 15 times greater with an epidural.

And, by the way, where are the woman's birth assistants who should be holding cool cloths to her forehead? And, in a room as hot as he describes, I'd have them around her shoulders and hips as well.

 

Besides, experts agree that epidurals are the best labor-pain relief available. So that expectant women won't have to factor in the possibility of a fever when considering an epidural, researchers hope to find ways other than a mother's temp to determine whether a newborn has an infection.
Well, this would be nice. But what about in the meantime?

Oh, here, they have all the answers.

 

Meanwhile, if you're expecting, your doctor should go over all the pros and cons of having an epidural so when the time comes you'll be prepared to make the choice that is best for you.
It would be nice if information alone were enough to help moms cope with labor. However, I've found that good labor support goes a lot further towards avoiding an epidural than information alone.

I think they're trying to put "a spin" on the epidural fever studies.

I think they're really saying, "We've got a problem. We don't have a solution. We're working on it."

I don't know why they don't mention that homebirth moms never get epidural fevers. :-)



This Web page is referenced from another page containing related information about Epidurals and Other Drugs

 




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