The gentlebirth.org website is provided courtesy of
Ronnie Falcao, LM MS,
a homebirth midwife in Mountain View, CA
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The AMA wants to make birth centers illegal, along with homebirths,
even though
Read more about the ACOG 2008 Press Release from The Big Push for Midwives and Childbirth Connections You can also educate yourself week-by-week in your pregnancy with theLamaze Weekly Pregnancy Newsletter for Parents |
Nutrition
and Exercise - a resource list from Auburn University
Women stay on active fitness routine during pregnancy [1/9/06]
Here are some of the benefits associated with exercise during pregnancy according to The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists:
Exercise ...
* Helps prepare a woman for labor and childbirth, keeping her body in shape and ready for the endurance needed during delivery.
* Helps new moms get back into shape after delivery.
* Can offer some relief to the fatigue, swelling and back pain associated with pregnancy.
* Can help prevent gestational diabetes.
* Helps expectant women sleep better.
* Helps women manage weight gain during pregnancy.
Benefits of Exercise During Pregnancy and After Pregnancy from BeFit-Mom.
Exercise
during pregnancy 'should be encouraged'
Pregnancy-Related
Changes in Physical Activity, Fitness, and Strength [Medscape registration
is free]
Effects
of physical activity on maternal plasma beta-endorphin levels and perception
of labor pain.
Varrassi G, Bazzano C, Edwards WT.
Am J Obstet Gynecol 1989 Mar;160(3):707-12
"Exercise conditioning during pregnancy seems to be beneficial in reducing
pain perception during labor . . . and in reducing stress levels during
labor."
According to a new study, maternal
exercise during pregnancy has cardiovascular benefits for the developing
fetus.
I especially like the approach offered in Julie Tupler's book, Maternal
Fitness. She also offers a Maternal
Fitness Program in some areas. Her Web sites has a nice page of exercise
links. [Her book makes frequent reference to a stretchy exercise
strap/band, called the Dyna-Band. You can also get the Thera-Band,
a non-latex version, in bulk rolls.]
I've heard a few rave recommendations for this prenatal yoga video -
"Baby & Mom Prenatal Yoga" - available from Acive Videos' Prenatal
& Postnatal Exercise Videos!
Evidence Basis for Exercise Recommendations
from someone who has studied both exercise physiology and midwifery.
She has some very useful insights into group
aerobics classes for pregnant women.
'Eutokia' is a Greek word
meaning happy childbirth. It is the application of the Alexander Technique
to pregnancy and childbirth
Running on Full
- Information about running while pregnant
Athlete With
Child - Can You Still Play When You're Pregnant? - by Monique Cole
Physical Activity Throughout Pregnancy - from the Pregnancy and Postpartum Health pages of the Muskoka-Parry Sound Health Unit in Canada
Exercise During Pregnancy - From an old article in the Endurance Training Journal
FitDay.com is an online diet and
fitness journal; there is a calorie and nutrition counter, a weight loss
tracker, an exercise log, analysis and reports.
One medical study by itself is not conclusive but
a 1998 American Journal of Public Health article reported something remarkable:
If a woman was is 'good physical shape' (i.e. conditioned) and did
heavy exercise (> 2000 kilocalories/week) during pregnancy, she
reduced her risk of a very preterm birth by 96%. (Maternal
Leisure-Time Exercise and Timely Delivery, AJPH, Maureen
Hatch ( m_hatch@smtplink.mssm.edu ), et al., 1998;88:1528-1533).
What does 2000 kilocalories/week mean? Maureen Hatch informed me via email
that this means about 7 hours/week of brisk walking. And they
reported, "After term, conditioned heavy exercisers delivered
faster than nonexercisers." If later studies confirm
these findings, it offers more hope for women who believe in fitness.
Exercise
Physiology in Women [Medscape registration is free] - This isn't about
pregnant women, but it offers a lot of information that might be helpful.
This is a fabulous article from Mothering Magazine:
Asanas
for Mamas: The Pleasure of Prenatal Yoga
By Jo Ann Baldinger
Issue 116, Jan/Feb 2003
Let the Whole Birth Yoga
Audio tape and CD guide you through a wonderfully relaxing and rejuvenating
hour of yoga and meditation especially designed for pregnancy.
Whole
Birth Yoga Resources with Robin Sale.
Prenatal Yoga: A
Complete Home Practice for a Healthy Mother and Baby DVD - this has
3 routines and 3 relaxation sessions. This is an excellent balance
of preparation.
Pregnant Warrior
- The breathing practice of yoga (pranayama) can become one of your greatest
tools during labor helping you to relax through contractions, find relief
from discomforts and put you in a place of feeling stronger and more present
with your experience.
Prenatal Yoga
Cards - The Prenatal Yoga Deck features 10 Breath Cards, a Healthy
Sitting Reference Card, 5 Warm-Ups, 24 Posture Cards, and 10 Meditation
Cards, all designed specifically for mothers-to-be.
Pre-Natal Yoga from Tara
Women's Healing and Yoga
Four Pregnancy
Yoga Exercise Sets
My reference to avoiding deep squatting in the last 4-6 weeks came from
Janet Balaskas' book Easy Exercises for Pregnancy, although there
is no explanation. It is also mentioned in Teaching & Understanding
Optimal Foetal Positioning by Jean Sutton and Pauline Scott,
with a little explanation; basically (as I understand it) that a
deep squat temporarily increases the angle between the spine and
the pelvic brim enough for the head of a baby which is not aligned
correctly to enter the pelvis in the wrong (e.g.: posterior) position.
If I understand what you said correctly, this can be corrected providing
the posterior positioning is picked up and the baby encouraged to
disengage and turn to the correct position, but it seems that in
many areas here not much emphasis is placed on encouraging the baby
to position itself correctly beforehand and if the head was engaged in
a posterior position it probably would not turn on its own before
labour started.
Thanks for the reference.
Basically, a posterior baby that isn't held in place by cord entanglement or some odd placement of limbs is fairly easy to move to an anterior position anytime before 4cm dilation. Given the tremendous potential advantage of squatting during labor and pushing, it seems odd to discourage squatting simply because it might cause something that is easily undone.
It may be that if a woman is working with a care provider who doesn't pay any attention to posterior positions, she might be better off not doing anything that could possibly get her into trouble with a posterior baby. But babies turn posterior all the time - one very common cause is any semi-reclining position.
Maybe there's something big that I'm just not getting here, but if their concern about squatting is the issue of posterior, why don't they spend a little time on teaching an awareness of the baby's position and making sure the baby isn't posterior before practicing squatting?
Anyway, this injunction just doesn't make any sense to me. In
fact, I think squatting is one of the ways that nature helps babies come
on time; before we had chairs, people mostly rested in a squatting position.
This happens to be a great way of making sure the baby's head goes INTO
the pelvis when it fits easily - if it happens not to come out again because
it's a snug fit, then it will help form the forebag and help baby come
while the head is still flexible and IN the pelvis.
Kegels - from the
Web page for the book, Pregnancy & Childbirth Tips
If kegel exercises are not effective, I would bet money that they are being done incorrectly. I had a nurse that works in a colo-rectal clinic tell me, "You childbirth teachers all teach people to do kegels wrong." I asked her how she would recommend doing them and this is what she said:
Imagine that you are out for a night on the town with your husband's boss and his wife. You are dressed up in a very slim fitting, tight dress. And you have gas! You have to hold it in, but because of the tight dress, everyone's going to see you tense up your tummy and legs, so you squeeze only the one muscle in your bottom that will hold in the gas without everyone seeing.
The basic idea is to squeeze it without assisting it with other muscles.
A lot of women will assist the kegel muscle by tensing their butt, thighs
abdomen, etc. If you are doing that, your not working the kegel muscle
effectively. It is easiest to isolate this motion while sitting in a recliner.
Our local PT recommends that women imagine cinching all the apertures
in the pelvic floor, i.e. the urethra, vagina and anus.
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