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Old 07-04-2007, 01:57 PM   #161 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
Again, you are weakening your arugment by appealing to emotions. .....

You want to not include infant mortality rates which is the standard by which this is measured by all organizations including WHO. In my opinion it is like you are covering your ears and saying "la la la la, I don't see that."

It is somewhat crazy to think that women who are part of our very educated and proactive group of mothers would ever be compared to mothers in the poorest sections of the country, befuddled by poverty and illiteracy, and then that so called PROOF thrust in our faces as to why we should go to a hospital to give birth.

Talk about appealing to emotions.

As I said before, many of the women, and I am one of them, who choose freebirth, do it simply because we do not want to have another section.

The debate comes down to this:

Is birth INHERENTLY dangerous?

Based on my research, when a mother is well nourished, has some good information on birth, and even better, is in good shape physically....birth is safe most of the time, for most women.

Why should I, as a healthy woman, subject myself to the insanity of American Birth when I know it can be done a thousand times better in my own bedroom?

Infant mortality is just that, infant mortality of children under a year of age. It is NOT birth mortality. That is not me putting my hands over my ears and yelling "NO, a thousand times no, I will NOT listen".

It is a fact.


In using the straw man argument of infant mortality to dismiss freebirth, so many other factors are left out of the equation.

Economics.

Impact of traumatic birth in hospital on a marriage.

Inability to give birth to more children because of permanent damage during surgical birth, (which is increasing in America).

Liver Toxicity in the baby from too many drugs.

Brain damage in the baby from too many drugs.

Lack of ability to breastfeed, I already shared Dr. Odents studies outlining why surgical birth has such a horrifying impact on milk production.

Lack of immediate post partum bonding, cause baby is in the NICU and momma is getting stitched up.

And the less intangible but equally alarming:

Permanent scarring from episiotomy which can have a horrifying effect on a womans ability to enjoy sex.

As an aside, would you as a mother prefer to have a fourth degree episiotomy with tearing down to the rectum, or would you like to enjoy the mother of all orgasms (as many freebirthers are describing experiencing during couple births) surrounded by candles and soft music and only your lover in the room? Click on this link to watch an amazing birth.

Here is a link to a YouTUBE clip from our childbirth video, A Clear Road to Birth.


I appreciate the time it must have taken you to post all of those tables and links about infant mortality....but this movement is about so much more than the fear of dead babies.

Once again I will ask, Can anyone convince me WHY I should go into a hospital to give birth in 2007?


I am not here to try to convince any of you to have a freebirth. I've done my homework and at this time in our nations history it is the safest, most prudent form of birth I can think of to accomplish the goal of creating a healthy family.

Please convince me how I am wrong in this analysis.

Jenny Hatch
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Old 07-04-2007, 01:59 PM   #162 (permalink)
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Regarding that last line about having babies in hospital with midwives, I don't see why midwives can't deliver at home or birth centers providing there was prenatal care and everyone determined to be healthy.
I know I didn't care much for the hospital such as it was, but I also know there was no way these kids were going to be born at home-too many things went wrong during the pregnancy to risk it. I had complete trust in my physician, bottom line, and, while it didn't go as planned and as smoothly as we'd hoped, the real result of having two healthy babies certainly outweighed sticking to any dream we may have had. Stitches heal, but 15 years later, I still start to cry when I think about how I almost lost them.
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Old 07-04-2007, 02:15 PM   #163 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by ngdawg
Regarding that last line about having babies in hospital with midwives, I don't see why midwives can't deliver at home or birth centers providing there was prenatal care and everyone determined to be healthy.
I know I didn't care much for the hospital such as it was, but I also know there was no way these kids were going to be born at home-too many things went wrong during the pregnancy to risk it. I had complete trust in my physician, bottom line, and, while it didn't go as planned and as smoothly as we'd hoped, the real result of having two healthy babies certainly outweighed sticking to any dream we may have had. Stitches heal, but 15 years later, I still start to cry when I think about how I almost lost them.

Midwives are increasingly under fire in America, even those who provide excellent prenatal care, and deliver according to doctors rules (we call them medwives).


I referred to orgasmic childbirth, here are a couple of testimonials. Compiled by Laura Shanley

My introduction to the concept that birth could be orgasmic came via my college roommate Kim. We were discussing painless birth (I had just read Childbirth without Fear) when Kim casually said, "You know, some women actually have orgasms as they're giving birth. My mom had one with me."

What?! Even as open minded as I thought I was, the concept was almost embarrassing. I imagined this "mother" lying in a hospital bed, having an orgasm in front of a bunch of strangers - and doctors, no less. Yet I was definitely intrigued. If conception feels good, why not childbirth?

In the years to come, I would read about this phenomenon again and again, and although in my own births I was never able to achieve it, I think that in time, it will become more commonplace. Little by little, our culture is ridding itself of the fear, shame, and guilt that keep many of us from experiencing sex - let alone birth - as orgasmic. Perhaps someday, if we can fully accept our sexual natures, more of us will be able to know the joy that the following women have known.


* * * * * * * * * *


"I had been told to expect a 'dogging pain,' but was unprepared for the sensation of sexual ecstasy, the voluptuous feeling of penetration....Crouched on my knees on the little afghan, I caught the infant who rushed from my vagina into the small world between my legs, in the midst of an extraordinary orgasm from the inside out."-From They Don't Call it a Peak Experience for Nothing, by Ruth Claire(Mothering, Fall 1989)

"I feel the baby come down. The sensation is ecstatic. I had prepared somewhat for this being as painful as my last delivery had been. Yet this time the pulse of birth feels wonderful! I am building up to the birth climax after nine months of pleasurable foreplay. With one push the babe is in the canal. THE NEXT PUSH BRINGS HIM DOWN, DOWN INTO THAT SPACE JUST BEFORE ORGASM WHEN WE WOMEN KNOW HOW GOD MUST HAVE FELT CREATING THIS PLANET....HE COMES, AS DO I."
-From Prenatal Yoga and Natural Birth, by Jeannine Parvati Baker

"I had the most sought-after midwife in France - my competent and funny aunt Marie-Therese, whose radical idea it was that childbirth above all should feel sexy. I listened to nothing but gospel music during my pregnancy, a music quite new to me, and to France, and "It's a High Way to Heaven" ("...nothing can walk up there, but the pure in heart...") was playing on the stereo during the birth; the warmth of the singers' voices a perfect accompaniment to the lively fire in the fireplace. My vulva oiled and massaged to keep my hips open and my vagina fluid, I was orgasmic at the end. Petit Pierre practically slid into the world at the height of my amazement, smiling serenely even before he opened his eyes."
-From Possessing the Secret of Joy, a novel by Alice Walker

"Many mothers experience a burning or splitting sensation as the largest diameter of the baby's head passes through the birth outlet. Some actually experience orgasm."-From Mind Over Labor, by Carl Jones, C.C.E.

"In 1968, I gave birth to Robert Kirkpatrick. I was prepared, conscious, and in charge. After 4 hours from the onset of labour, I experienced an orgasm when my baby emerged from my body."-From "Ecstatic Birth: The conscious evolution of a possibility to a present reality," by Binnie A. Dansby; Paper delivered at Congress of the International Society for Pre- and Peri- Natal Psychology and Medicine, Jerusalem, 1989

"I happen to think that having babies is very sexy. The actual birth is so sensuous, very erotic. The feelings we've both had at the birth of each of our babies were so primal."
-Kate Capshaw Spielberg (a.k.a. Mrs. Steven Spielberg), McCall's, May 1999

"I started pushing while Michael supported me as I squatted. Immediately, after one vigorous push I felt Damian coming down. A tremendous excitement filled the kitchen and Michael and I seemed to merge as our eyes met. It was as if we had become one again as we did in a genital embrace. Yes, we were one. It was not just I who was having the baby. Michael was as well. The moment had become ecstatic. Sensations of every kind and color coursed through me. I was one, one with everything....And with that I shouted in sheer delight as I felt Damian coming....out he shot, into the safety of Michael's confident hands."
-From Happy Birth Days, by Marilyn Moran

"Biologically, you are designed to receive great pleasure from your body not only during lovemaking and intercourse, but in birth and breastfeeding, too....Birth offers sexual pleasure on a continuum from pleasant sensations (felt while your uterus rhythmically contracts in early labor if you're relaxed and feeling secure) to an intense birth climax (yes, just like an orgasm) as your baby slithers into the world of your waiting arms."
-From A Good Birth, A Safe Birth, by Diana Korte and Roberta Scaer

"This birth was not only painless, but very pleasurable. We had never read about this aspect, and it took us by surprise. As the baby crowned, I knew from Jean's look and sounds that she was having an explosive orgasm, which rolled on and on. What a long way from the pain and agony of conventional myth! Years later we asked a sympathetic doctor about this. 'Yes,' he said, 'I've seen it a few times. It may even be that many women have orgasms during birth, but interpret them as pain because the sensations are more intense than anything previously experienced and because women are conditioned to expect pain.'"
-From The Home School Challenge, by Donn Reed

"Giving birth is a highly creative act full of orgasmic feelings, and can be a moment of ecstatic pleasure for the mother."
-From "Mental First Aid in Pregnancy and Childbirth," by Joost A.M. Meerloo, M.D. (Child and Family, Fall 1966)

"Pleasure in birth may be the starting point for optimal family relationships. Our knowledge of reproduction suggests there may be a biological reason for connecting pleasure in birth with the best outcome for the baby."
-From "Psychological Factors in Birth and Breastfeeding," by Niles Newton, Ph.D.

"Pushing was absolutely incredible. It felt SO good. I loved the sensation of my daughter's head popping out; and her body coming out was incredible. I made roaring sounds. KT later asked me if I was in a lot of pain and I said I felt no pain at all. I was reaching down into the depths of my being - I felt like I was reaching back through time eternal, into the Great Mother herself - and using my power to push her out. The sounds were sounds of power. And I felt awesomely empowered. It was I could say the best feeling I have ever had. Primal force of life coursing through me. Power of Woman, Power of Birth, Power of Carolyn! If I can do that, I can do anything I set my mind to. The sensation of my daughter's body sliding out of my vagina was orgasmic. I still shudder when I think of how pleasurable that was."
-Caroline S.

"A woman in California was giving birth at home in a portable birth tub and feeling very sexy and loving with her partner. Each time she had a contraction she would cry out, 'Oh, baby, I love it. More...more!' Her windows were open because it was July, and soon a crowd gathered outside her home. When the baby was born amidst shouts of 'Yes!!! Yes!!! Oh, my God, yes!!!' her neighbors gave her a great round of applause. They only realized that it was a birth after they heard the cries of a baby."
-From Gentle Birth Choices, by Barbara Harper, R.N.

"It was the ultimate climax. I felt open, loose and free. Words cannot explain the feeling as my baby's body slithered out. To this day I can still sense that wonderful feeling inside. It makes me tingle."
-From "Unconditional Faith," by Allison Scimeca in the book Unassisted Homebirth: An Act of Love , by Lynn Griesemer

"Yet in a strange way the energy flowing through the body in childbirth, the pressure of contracting muscles, the downward movement of the baby and the fanning open of soft tissues, can be powerfully erotic....[Childbirth] can be the most intensely sexual feeling a woman ever experiences, as strong as orgasm, even more compelling than orgasm."
-From Women's Experience of Sex, by Sheila Kitzinger

"Birth is fundamentally a creative act, as is the act of sexual union....Indeed many women have described giving birth as intensely pleasurable and have discussed it in orgasmic terms....more and more women are enjoying labor and birth with their husbands just as they have enjoyed the sexual experience....Making love, orgasm and giving birth are all inter-connected."
-From Special Delivery, by Rahima Baldwin

"It was ecstatic, wonderful, thrilling. I heard myself moaning - in triumph, not in pain! There was no pain whatsoever, only a primitive and sexual elation....With the most spiraling, fascinating thrill of all, I felt my baby slither out. I wanted to shout with joy."
-From Natural Childbirth and the Christian Family, by Helen Wessel

"My first son was born by unexpected cesarian section. My second was a planned homebirth with a midwife assisting. He was posterior, so it was all back labor and he wouldn't turn. There was a great deal of pain, but in the last few minutes, as much pain as there was, it suddenly swung the other way to huge waves of pleasure as his body came out - an incredible RUSH like nothing I had ever felt before or since. I said to my midwife, Dhyana, 'Wow! What was that thing in the end!?' She said, 'That was The Gift. A lot of my ladies get that.' I held that baby and instantly loved him with my whole being. Maybe this is the way that nature had intended it to be for us. Now, looking back, the only thing I can think is that he went ramrod over my G-spot...all 9 pounds of him."
-From "The Gift," by Susan

"I asked my husband to make love to me as I was in a very romantic mood and wanted to feel him inside me urgently. It was a wonderful experience. I had a few orgasms during contractions - an absolutely delightful sensation. There was no pain at all....(since then) our lovemaking has gone from great to extraordinary."
-From "The Effect of Lovemaking on the Progress of Labor," by Marilyn Moran (Pre- and Perinatal Psychology Journal, Spring 1993)

"Birth has much in common with orgasm; the hormone oxytocin is released, there are uterine contractions, nipple erection, and under the best circumstances for birth, an orgasmic feeling."
-From In Labor, by Barbara K. Rothman

"Birth is a dark, private, and secret opening up of our ancient sexual selves. Birth sensations, when we allow them to be, are actually highly sensual - much like the intense, luscious, squeezing contracting that happens during orgasms experienced in late pregnancy.... the sensations of giving birth are not fierce and violent; they are rapturous - we feel an ever-increasing pressure on our cervix as our body prepares for the sweetest, most intense of orgasms, the lovely culmination of our labors of love: birth. During birth, we pant, scream, and throw our head back - this is sensuality with a purpose: we are taking in extra oxygen, releasing adrenaline into our bloodstream, and widening our pelvic outlet. And when the baby comes out all slick and new, we are in ecstasy, enraptured by the most heightened hormonal load we will ever know."
-From Resexualizing Childbirth, by Leilah McCracken

"At about 3 AM, I got a real feeling that the baby needed to be born, and also a great surge of energy, the first I had felt. Then I made a very astounding discovery. I was able, through prayer, to get knowledge directly from God, that birth is a sexual event, and involves the same mechanisms that the beginnings involve. I was able to get my labor started again and I was in hard labor within 15 minutes. As long as I was alone and able to yield to the sexual joy of the birthing, I was able to experience wonderful orgasmic feelings and no pain at all."
-From Pat Goltz, in the newsletter, The New Nativity, edited by Marilyn Moran

"My body told me to squat, so I did. I hunkered down on two feet, concentrating, knowing without being told that millions of females before me had brought their babies into the world in this ordained position. It felt so deliciously comfortable to squat; I felt the baby move down. Come...COME... COMMMMME!

It was then I began to scream, but not with pain - with joy. With release. I felt an enormous all-body orgasm as I bore down, again, and again, and again, crying out with lust and happiness. The baby was coming, and so was I. I pushed an enormous last push with every fiber of my being; the head and shoulders appeared. By then I was sobbing. I reached under the baby's armpits and pulled out...a child. A living, breathing infant...born perfect. Perfectly beautiful. My daughter."
-From Awakening, by Jen Bradley

"I returned upstairs with some of Stella's dance tapes. Belly dancing to the music, I found that the contractions were much more bearable....Oddly enough, the more obscenely I thrust my pelvis back and forth, the less it hurt. I was amazed! Why hadn't I known that these movements were linked to the act of birthing, I wondered....Moments later, I discovered that all the pelvic thrusting I had been doing in my life - dancing to get a date, making love, and now, giving birth - was integrally connected. All that thrusting had gotten me pregnant, and all this thrusting would help bring a new life into the world. While the drums banged in my head, I was serene knowing that I had found the secret to life: the glorious pelvic thrust."
-From "The Glorious Pelvic Thrust," by Maria Young Alders (Mothering, Winter 1994)

"Birth is always intimate and sexual, although the intimacy and the sexuality can be masked. My own personal experience of the births of my children confirms this. My feelings throughout my wife's labors I can describe only as those of a very close, physical-emotional, sexual union with her and what I felt to be the transcendent force flowing through her. The sensation was warm and soft, like making love, but was also strong, forceful and awesome. Each time the experience changed my life and allowed me a glimpse of the transcendental."
-Lewis E. Mehl, M.D., quoted in "Psychophysiological Aspects of Childbirth," in The Psychology of Birth, by Leslie Feher
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Old 07-04-2007, 02:40 PM   #164 (permalink)
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It is somewhat crazy to think that women who are part of our very educated and proactive group of mothers would ever be compared to mothers in the poorest sections of the country, befuddled by poverty and illiteracy, and then that so called PROOF thrust in our faces as to why we should go to a hospital to give birth.

Talk about appealing to emotions.
My God. Befuddled by poverty and illiteracy. I love it. That's a good one. Nothing in those graphs shows or indicates anything of poverty or illiteracy. In fact that factor alone provides different factors. Nothing I have typed with my fingers in this thread has anything emotional attached to it.

Pick any of the countries that have the lowest infant mortality rate Iceland one of the highest literacy rates and poverty is low, Hong Kong, Canda, Germany, France. See the states that spend more on medicine.

Again, you insert words to push emotion into the discussion (if we can even call it that at this point.)

Quote:
Is birth INHERENTLY dangerous?
What does that mean? Inherently? Dangerous? Another set of emotionally charged words to obfusicate the discussion at hand.

Make your definition, make your clarification for yourself.

I will say that yes it is inherently dangerous because the evidence shows that death of the infant or the mother is greater than zero. Is jaywalking inherently dangerous? Maybe not in the middle of nowhere, but in midtown Manhattan, it has a risk of greater than zero. Again, the idea here minimizing the danger right? You believe and feel that freebirth defined as unassisted birth at home with no intervention of medically trained staff or midwives, provides you better safety. That is your choice.

Since you asked about Perinatal Mortality Rates, there are MANY studies and lots of data. I will cite just two of them.

Quote:
Perinatal mortality (PNM), also perinatal death, refers to the death of a fetus or neonate and is the basis to calculate the perinatal mortality rate. Variations in the precise definition of the perinatal mortality exist specifically concerning the issue of inclusion or exclusion of early fetal and late neonatal fatalities. Thus the WHO ‘s definition "Deaths occurring during late pregnancy (at 22 completed weeks gestation and over), during childbirth and up to seven completed days of life" is not universally accepted. The perinatal mortality is the sum of the fetal mortality and the neonatal mortality.
http://0-www.cdc.gov.mill1.sjlibrary...1/01hus023.pdf


Please note that the trend is downward as medicine has gotten better since the 1950's. If your hypothesis and claims were correct, then the perinatal mortality rate would be growing.

Quote:
Perinatal death associated with planned home birth in Australia: population based study

Quote:
Key messages

In some countries there is a trend towards high risk home births

This study examined perinatal death rates in Australian home births, including both high and low risk births

The death rate in Australian home births was higher than comparable births nationally and home births in other countries

The higher perinatal death rate in Australian home births was due to the inclusion of predictably high risk births and prolonged asphyxia during labour

While home birth for low risk women can compare favourably with hospital birth, high risk home birth is inadvisable and experimental
Despite decades of political and academic debate the relative merits of home versus hospital birth remain unproved. This is likely to remain so. Comparisons that are sufficiently unbiased and large enough to address crucial safety issues are unlikely to be forthcoming. 1 2 Although home and hospital offer different risks and benefits for births, neither has standard care characteristics. In fact the range from safe to unsafe practice may be wider within each location than it is between them. Addressing what constitutes safe birth practice at home may be a more pivotal concern than attempting to quantify the theoretical differences attributable to place of birth.

In the Netherlands, where 30% of births are planned to be at home, there is a widely accepted list of criteria for home birth.3 When home birth is uncommon, opinions and practice can vary more widely. Thus leaflets on informed choice of place of birth in the United Kingdom do not specify any contraindications to home birth. 4 5 Others have advocated home birth for women at high risk of obstetric complications, 6 7 and trends to abandon risk assessment for home birth are apparent in both Australia8 and the United States.9

We evaluated the outcomes of Australian home births and compared these with all Australian births and planned home births elsewhere.

Data on planned home births
A planned home birth was defined as a birth that, at the onset of labour, was intended to occur at home with the assistance of a home birth practitioner. This definition excluded antepartum transfers, unplanned home births, and births where the woman was supported only by family and friends. Home birth practitioners included midwives and medical practitioners, both registered and non-registered, but not Aboriginal traditional midwives.

Data on home births during 1985-90 were from a database of Homebirth Australia, a national consumers' association that kept a register of practitioners attending home births. Practitioners were asked to complete a detailed notification form for each planned home birth. An annual summary of births attended was requested from practitioners who did not submit these forms.

All home birth practitioners, except one in 1988, supplied minimum data for births during 1985-8. For 1989 and 1990, 207 (89.6%) practitioners provided data (24 non-participants). Information on 576 births attended by non-participants during 1989-90 was obtained from their notifications in home birth support group newsletters.

Overall, information was available for 7002 planned home births during 1985-90. Information came from individual notification forms in 5052 (72%) births, from summaries in 1372 (20%) births, and from home birth support group newsletters in 576 (8%) births. Two additional births resulting in deaths were identified from other sources; these were confirmed by state perinatal data collections.

Data on perinatal deaths
Australian perinatal death refers to stillbirth and death within 28 days after birth, of an infant weighing 500 g or more. This definition includes stillbirths and deaths within the first week and late neonatal deaths.

An audit form was distributed to practitioners who had reported deaths during 1985-7 (20 deaths). All practitioners provided data. A similar request was made for the 11 deaths reported in 1988, but only five practitioners complied. For 1989 and 1990, practitioners reported nine deaths directly to Homebirth Australia; a further eight deaths were reported in newsletters in the states with non-participants. In addition, one home birth group notified a death that was matched in the state's perinatal data collection.

Data to supplement incomplete death reports during 1988-90 were sought from state perinatal data collections and registry data in one state. These sources provided additional data on four of the eight deaths identified only through newsletters during 1989-90, and on 13 deaths with minimum information during 1988-90. One state reported an additional death that met the study's criteria.

Overall, information was available on 50 deaths (five of which were late neonatal deaths) eligible for inclusion in this study. Eleven deaths reported to Homebirth Australia did not meet our criteria and were excluded. Of the 50 deaths, 48 were notified by practitioners to Homebirth Australia or home birth newsletters and two came from other sources.

Data analysis and comparisons
Data on home births were compared with all Australian births during 1985-90 and with planned home births elsewhere, identified from a literature search for comparable data from the 1980s and 1990s. The CIA program was used for statistical analysis.10

Although it is not known how often distance to hospital played a role in decisions on transfer, only once was distance cited as a prohibitive factor. Time in transit, when known, was less than 30 minutes for all deaths.

Of 43 deaths with known birthweight, 11 (25.6%) were less than 2500 g of whom four were malformed. Of 44 deaths of known gestational age, eight (18.2%) were preterm (<37 weeks) and seven (15.9%) post-term (42 weeks).

Twenty six deaths (52%) were associated with intrapartum asphyxia, including three cases of shoulder dystocia and one case of meconium aspiration (table 1). The cause of death in eight cases (16%) could not be explained owing to lack of data.

Asphyxial deaths
Three babies, weighing 4295 g, 4600 g, and 6020 g, died from non-anticipated shoulder dystocia; meconium had been noted during labour for two of them. Most other deaths from intrapartum asphyxia occurred in fetuses known to be at increased risk of perinatal asphyxia (table 2).

Of those babies of known gestational age, seven (33.3%) were outside term: one preterm and six post-term. Five asphyxial deaths were associated with malpresentation: four breech presentations diagnosed before labour and one face presentation. Two intrapartum asphyxial deaths occurred in second twins.

In most cases there had been warning signs during labour. Often these occurred early enough to have allowed timely transfer. In seven cases, meconium or bradycardia, or both, were noted several hours before fetal death. In some cases, risk factors and warning signs accumulated without prompting effective action. In none of the intrapartum asphyxial deaths was the fetus alive on arrival in hospital (table 3).

Two deaths occurred in water births (n=344); in both cases the fetal heart had not been listened to during second stage labour.

Comparison with Australian perinatal mortality
During 1985-90 there were just over 1.5 million births in Australia, giving a death rate (including late neonatal deaths) of 10.8 per 1000 compared with 7.1 per 1000 in planned home births (table 4). In the home birth population, however, severe pathology and very preterm pregnancies with the highest risk of mortality are underrepresented. 11 12 For example in home births with known birthweight, only 1.4% were of low birthweight. 11 12 Birthweight specific mortality was calculated only for the years with the most comprehensive data (1985-8). The death rate for infants weighing 2500 g in 1985-8 was 5.7 per 1000 in home births compared with 3.6 per 1000 nationally (relative risk 1.6; 95% confidence interval 1.1 to 2.4).

Intrapartum deaths mainly accounted for the high death rate in home births of babies weighing 2500 g (table 1). Intrapartum death not associated with congenital malformations or extreme immaturity (defined in the home birth group as an infant weighing <1000 g) was three times as frequent in planned home births than it was nationwide (3.0; 1.9 to 4.8) (table 4).

Comparison with home birth internationally
Comparison of data from reports on home births is hampered by large differences in definition and inclusion criteria. A search of the literature during the 1980s and 1990s identified seven studies with definitions and criteria that permitted comparison with the national Australian data. These studies were from Australasia, 13 14 Europe,15-18 and the United States.19 Australian planned home births had a perinatal death rate about twice as high as these countries (table 5).

Practitioners who continued participation in the study during 1989-90 had a perinatal death rate (3.8 per 1000) similar to that reported internationally, while the death rate for the remainder was estimated at 20.8 per 1000. This cannot be explained by under identification of births in the data for non-participants. Deaths may have been more fully ascertained than births, but home birth newsletters reported births for the non-participants with comparatively large caseloads, and the dataset shows no marked difference in the number of births per year. The number of missing births is therefore probably small.

Our analysis has shown cause for concern about some Australian home birth care. Firstly, the mortality is excessively high when considering that severe pregnancy disorders are grossly underrepresented in this population. 11 12 The only category known to be overrepresented is post-term pregnancy (10.7%). Secondly, in most countries the majority of deaths are preterm antepartum deaths and these are largely excluded by the definition of planned home birth. Thirdly, the intrapartum death rate among normally formed infants weighing 1000 g was three times higher than the national average. Fourthly, over half of all deaths were associated with intrapartum asphyxia. All these babies were born at home or if born in hospital were dead before arrival, while those referred after birth were all diagnosed with severe damage. Yet a large number were known to be at increased risk of intrapartum asphyxia before the onset of labour. Many of the deaths had been preceded by warning signs such as the presence of meconium and fetal bradycardia, in addition to pre-existing risks, without any action being taken or only too little, too late. The risk of death in such circumstances should not be underestimated, particularly as the capacity to care for severely asphyxiated babies at home is limited.

When compared with data on planned home birth in other industrialised countries, the perinatal death rate in Australia was much higher. There are several possible explanations for this. Firstly, our detection and ascertainment of deaths may have been better than it is elsewhere. Low participation in population based studies of planned home births is common. A national study from the United States for example achieved only a 67.6% response rate and surveyed registered midwives only.19

Secondly, Australian home birth practitioners might differ from home birth practitioners elsewhere. Home birth practice in Australia is nearly 100% private practice and characterised by low caseloads. On average during 1985-90, 53% of practitioners attended less than five home births a year, and only 13% attended more than 20 home births a year. 11 12 This contrasts with the Netherlands, for instance, where home midwifery caseloads of more than 100 births a year are common.16 It is not known, however, if practitioners in our study also practised in other settings.

Thirdly, our study also included unregistered midwives. However, comparatively few births were attended by unregistered practitioners alone (n=737) and these births did not have a high death rate (2.7 per 1000).

A fourth, and more compelling explanation, is that some home birth practitioners in Australia no longer offer home birth to women at low risk. At least 18 deaths (36%) in this study occurred in twins, post-term and preterm infants, and breech presentations, which would be contraindications for home birth elsewhere. Post-term births had a death rate twice that of other home births, and home birth mortality was 1 in 14 for breech presentation and 1 in 7 for twins. The two largest contributors to the excessive mortality were an underestimation of the risks of perinatal asphyxia in such births and, more generally, underestimation of the significance of fetal distress. This raises questions about other effects of prolonged asphyxia that were not addressed in this study.

We found only one other study, conducted in the United States, on mortality associated with breech, twin, and post-term births at home.9 This study showed excess mortality in such home births and voiced concern about the trend to encourage midwives to engage in high risk practice. We share that concern. Because of the well established risks and the lack of encouraging outcome data, such practice must be labelled as inadvisable and experimental with all ethical safeguards that pertain to clinical experimentation. Overintervention and lack of choice for women with high risk pregnancies, however, could well encourage some to choose home rather than hospital birth. In many Australian hospitals, women with breech presentation or twins, for example, would only be offered caesarean section.

Our study highlights the need for objective guidance on what constitutes safe practice for birth at home. Given the inadequacy of many national datasets, both in size and quality, such guidance must inevitably draw on international data to be valid and reliable. It may also require ongoing audit to detect patterns of avoidable problems. Australian women, like women elsewhere, will continue to choose to give birth at home. They and their infants are entitled to effective care and support in their choice.
Quote:
Intrapartum death
Intrapartum death occurs when a baby dies during labor, typically due to a lack of oxygen. Fortunately, intrapartum death is relatively rare today—small consolation, however, for the families who lose much-wanted babies due to accidents during birth.

Studies have identified a number of factors associated with an increased risk of intrapartum death: preeclampsia (toxemia/pregnancy-induced hypertension), intrauterine growth restriction, prolonged pregnancy (more than two weeks beyond the due date), vaginal breech delivery, previous perinatal death, and even physician (or other caregiver) inexperience.
I can see here that ONE of the reasons that can happen is a physician, but it is qualified with the word inexperience. Not, "backed by pharmaceuticals" or "works in dirty cities, malnourished" and whatever qualifiers you've placed to emotionally charge the discussion. All the other causes happen, they are not qualified nor stated as cannot happen in house or hospital.

from WHO.INT
Quote:
Early neonatal deaths occur during the perinatal period, and have obstetric origins, similar to those
leading to stillbirths. Worldwide, there are over 6.3 million perinatal deaths a year, almost all of
which occur in developing countries, and 27% of them in the least developed countries alone.
Stillbirths account for over half of all perinatal deaths. One third of stillbirths take place during
delivery, and are largely avoidable. Intrapartum deaths (i.e. those occurring during delivery) are
closely linked to place of, and care at, delivery. In developing countries, just over 40% of deliveries
occur in health facilities and little more than one in two takes place with the assistance of a doctor,
midwife or qualified nurse (2).
Compared with earlier estimates, global and regional neonatal and perinatal mortality rates have
slowly declined. Improvements appear to have been more noticeable in South America than in
other regions of the world.
Thanks to public health interventions, under-five and infant mortality rates are decreasing at a faster
pace than neonatal mortality; consequently, neonatal deaths will represent an increasing proportion
of child deaths. This document will allow countries to review their achievements in the area of
maternal and neonatal health and compare their results with those obtained by other countries.
Problems related to early mortality data will, it is hoped, stimulate further research and collection
Executive summary
iv
of population-based data, which will help to improve mortality monitoring and provide health
managers with comparative information about the nature and extent of the problem in their country.
There is plenty of data showing that deaths during birth have dramatically declined as medicine advances. I have cited a few already.
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Old 07-04-2007, 02:57 PM   #165 (permalink)
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Uhm....what do all those testimonials about orgasmic birth have to do with safety and health? Again, we're on one page, you're on another frantically trying to prove...what? That women should disregard medical advancement in obstetrics so they can have orgasms? WTF?
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Old 07-04-2007, 03:11 PM   #166 (permalink)
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"At about 3 AM, I got a real feeling that the baby needed to be born, and also a great surge of energy, the first I had felt. Then I made a very astounding discovery. I was able, through prayer, to get knowledge directly from God, that birth is a sexual event, and involves the same mechanisms that the beginnings involve. I was able to get my labor started again and I was in hard labor within 15 minutes. As long as I was alone and able to yield to the sexual joy of the birthing, I was able to experience wonderful orgasmic feelings and no pain at all."
-From Pat Goltz, in the newsletter, The New Nativity, edited by Marilyn Moran
*shakes his head* I'm so glad that the large human dildo spreading her vagina open got her off. I'm still not sure she spoke to God, though. Maybe that was just the orgasm starting.

As for her and the rest of those "stories", how in the hell do they have any bearing on what we're discussing here?

EDIT: Didn't see ng's post. She said more than I did, I agree with what she wrote.

Last edited by analog; 07-04-2007 at 03:13 PM..
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Old 07-04-2007, 03:49 PM   #167 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sticky
http://neonataldoc.blogspot.com/2006/04/home.html
Quote:
I think that most people who have a home delivery do it because they want a better "childbirth experience". I ask such people, why are you having a baby? What is the purpose of this pregnancy? If it's to have a good experience, skip the pregnancy and go out for dinner and a movie instead. But if it's to have a helathy child, go to a hospital and take advantage of the modern world. It wasn't that long ago that many women and babies died in childbirth. A lot can go wrong. Ten per cent of babies need some type of resuscitation at birth. A good childbirth experience won't make up for the loss of a child. (By the way, this is not a rant against midwives. I have nothing against them, as long as they are certified and deliver babies in the hospital.)
My thoughts exactly.
This is all about selfishness.

Note: By the way I feel the same way about elective c-sections
.

I would have to agree. I then read, "I referred to orgasmic childbirth, here are a couple of testimonials. Compiled by Laura Shanley." It cemented it for me that this discussion isn't about childbirth or protecting the child. It is about making the mother feel good.

It is exactly why this discussion hasn't been a discussion. It has been strictly presented fairly and simply, you don't address any of the points in front of you, but add emotionally charged words and then move the target.

I am glad that you have stopped here. I am very glad. This is a heavily trafficked site, and as you found us, other people looking for more information on freebirth. I hope that people find this and can easily make the decision as to what is good for themselves based on evidence presented in this discussion. I hope that they find this information least biased as far as your normal experiences which you claim you were dogpiled and flamed. I don't wish that upon anyone for their beliefs.

Why you should go to the hospital for childbirth? Because the evidence and statistics show that it is in the child's best interest.

So far your posts all show that your interests seem to be more rooted in the mother's interests. I have gone back and reread all your posts, to make sure that I'm not being biased in my opinion or missing some key element in your presentation of your side of the story.

Quote:
I referred to orgasmic childbirth, here are a couple of testimonials. Compiled by Laura Shanley
Quote:
Many couples who give birth this way describe the experience as supremely intimate and without going into too much detail I have talked to several women who have claimed that giving birth this way "recharged" them sexually.
Quote:
I do want to testify however, that the Joy is much deeper, palpable, and very different from the hospital experiences I had.
Quote:
Joy, pure unadulterated JOY when I give birth.
All these emotionally charged statements have nothing to do with the benefit of the child, but have everything to do with the benefit for the mother. I'm with Sticky, it sounds like you are more about you and your well being than about the well being of the child.
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Old 07-04-2007, 05:19 PM   #168 (permalink)
 
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Exactly, and in order for all this to be OK it has to work out that it is OK for the baby.
That is why we have all this discussion that is better for the baby - babies grow up better adjusted and all that.

I just can't get past the fact that if there is a complication - and the article I posted mentions that there is some type complication (small to large) in 10% pof births - then I don't see how anyone can take the risk with their child.

Ya, fine, the risk may be small, but it is more risky then with a trained asistant or in the hospital. This is just logical.

It has been hard to find any stats on this stuff but I posted (in my last post) about an Indiana community where there were "300 unattended births in the 1980s. The neonatal death rate was calculated as 19 per 1,000 live births, compared with seven per 1,000 for the rest of Indiana."
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Old 07-04-2007, 07:32 PM   #169 (permalink)
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I was looking for the New Scientist Indiana study and haven't been able to find anything on it. I did however stumble upon this Junkfood Science blog entry.

Junkfood Science
Quote:
Uganda: High Maternal Death Points to a Health Crisis

One woman dies every minute during pregnancy or childbirth, adding up to more than 500,000 dead women each year. And this is just the tip of the iceberg. For every woman who dies, there are 20 to 30 others who survive childbirth but suffer debilitating injuries. If we are serious about providing health security to women, we must guarantee universal access to family planning, skilled attendance at birth, emergency obstetric care and services... Complications from pregnancy and childbirth are the leading cause of death among young women aged 15 to 19 in developing countries....

Ensuring skilled attendance in delivery, backed up by emergency obstetric care, would reduce maternal deaths by about 75 per cent. To commemorate the International Day of the Midwife on May 5th, the United Nations Population Fund, (UNFPA) pays tribute to midwives around the world. We join others in voicing our appreciation for the loving care these skilled health workers provide to pregnant women, young mothers and infants. And we call for urgent action to address the shortage of midwives in many countries....

Yet, half of the world's pregnant women still lack access to skilled care at childbirth and the consequences are devastating. Every year, an estimated 529,000 women die from complications of pregnancy and childbirth, four million newborn die, and another four million babies are stillborn....

While Ugandans are desperate for quality prenatal and delivery care, the news from the UK reports on the growing trend for “freebirth”:

Going it alone

Freebirthing involves giving birth alone, without a midwife and often even a partner or friend in attendance ...To prepare for the three-hour labour, Sarah had read everything she could on the subject, and says she “would have known instinctively if anything was wrong....

[T]here is a growing online community of freebirthers or “UC-ers" (unassisted childbirthers) in the US who are celebrating “the primacy of autonomous birth." Laura Shanley, 49, from Boulder, Colorado...believes that “women are the true experts of birth. Birth is sexual and spiritual, magical and miraculous", she says, “but not when it's managed, controlled and manipulated by the medical establishment." ...

[T]here is virtually no historical precedent for this movement: “Since the beginning of time women have turned to other women for help in childbirth. There are one or two very small tribes where giving birth alone is a means of status - but even within those cultures people rush to the woman's side afterwards to make sure she and the baby are OK." ...

Because freebirth is such a fringe movement there have been no studies on it. However, a report in the magazine New Scientist recently quoted a survey undertaken in a religious community in the state of Indiana, where there were more than 300 unattended births in the 1980s. The neonatal death rate was calculated as 19 per 1,000 live births, compared with 7 per 1,000 for the rest of Indiana....
I find this blog entry very interesting because she tries to show both sides. Jenny may try to dismiss the Uganda maternal mortality rates with waving her hand as being compared to "mothers in the poorest sections of the country, befuddled by poverty and illiteracy," What she is missing is the facts that poorer nations and poorer states have higher infant and maternal mortality rates.

Again, I have to thank Jenny for giving me the passion to do the due diligence in researching the actual facts surrounding childbirth.

Quote:
At the beginning of the 20th century, for every 1000 live births, six to nine women in the United States died of pregnancy-related complications....In 1950, 2,960 women died in childbirth. In 1998, 281...There are still too many. The Centers for Disease Control estimates that more than half could be prevented using accepted interventions.

Maternal mortality rates were highest in this century during 1900-1930. Poor obstetric education and delivery practices were mainly responsible for the high numbers of maternal deaths, most of which were preventable. Obstetrics as a speciality was shunned by many physicians, and obstetric care was provided by poorly trained or untrained medical practitioners....During the 1930s-1940s, hospital and state maternal mortality review committees were established. During the ensuing years, institutional practice guidelines and guidelines defining physician qualifications needed for hospital delivery privileges were developed. At the same time, a shift from home to hospital deliveries was occurring throughout the country; during 1938-1948, the proportion of infants born in hospitals increased from 55% to 90%....Medical advances (including the use of antibiotics, oxytocin to induce labor, and safe blood transfusion and better management of hypertensive conditions during pregnancy) accelerated declines in maternal mortality....

From 1915 through 1997, the infant mortality rate declined greater than 90% to 7.2 per 1000 live births... The decline in infant mortality is unparalleled by other mortality reduction this century....
Again, Jenny dismisses this because it is someone within the medical industry stating this information. Yet someone who is not within the industry cannot truly interpret the data and findings as suggested by abaya and sapiens earlier.

Quote:
Is there an answer to helping young people who are feeling such growing distrust and fear of modern medicine and science that they would jeopardize their lives and those of their babies? Perhaps, instead of the mandated high school classes on “humane education,”“healthy eating” or whatever are the other social engineering classes they have to sit through, replace them with some sound medical, scientific and online media literacy could help prevent us repeating history. But it goes beyond critical thinking skills and education. The healthcare industry has some work to do, too. It does itself and consumers a disservice when in the eyes of the public it blurs the distinction between good, credible science and untenable modalities. It's more than the growing incorporation of woo into mainstream practices and healthcare policies. As I was about to post this, I read the commentary by Dr. James Gaulte, M.D. and wish there weren’t so many of these stories of public health and clinical guidelines with troubling conflicts of interests behind them, that profit some and harm others, and steadily erode the public's trust, and wish so many of us didn’t feel the same way:

I don’t know if trust in physicians is lower now than before but I do know that my trust titer has tanked and I am many times more skeptical and critical in regard to medical articles that in the not too distant past I would have read without a nagging doubt about the motives of the authors.

Medicine and science will never be perfect — but we need to find a way to help people regain trust in it and recognize the life-saving benefits and good things modern medicine and science can bring and does bring to our lives. That starts with us.
I must admit Sandy Szwarc, BSN, RN, CCP, the blog author is on point. Jenny is also on point within the same vein albeit misguided and misdirected. Jenny's premise is flawed from the beginning stating that the data isn't available, when it readily is. What is not readily available is data showing that freebirth is better. The best I can find is comparing lack of access to medical facilities and trained professionals has increased mortality rates for the mother and child.

Sandy, Thank You!!! We need more people to make these kinds of claims, "other social engineering classes they have to sit through, replace them with some sound medical, scientific and online media literacy could help prevent us repeating history. But it goes beyond critical thinking skills and education. The healthcare industry has some work to do, too. It does itself and consumers a disservice when in the eyes of the public it blurs the distinction between good, credible science and untenable modalities."

I love Sandy!!!!!

Quote:
You are about to learn of a beverage so dangerous, that we must ban or restrict its sales, or at least enact tax penalties on it to deter consumption. Here's what the research shows:

• Every American who drinks it dies.

• It's been linked to obesity: in fact, bigger people drink the most of it.

• It's associated with type 2 diabetes and all diabetics drink it in especially large amounts.

• All heart attack victims drink it and it's a known factor in heart failure.

There are been hundreds of studies finding these correlations -- correlations so strong they make the evidence irrefutable. This is bad stuff.

Everything you've just read is true. What is it?

Water.

Of course, you could have filled in the blank with anything that today is frequently blamed for obesity, type 2 diabetes, heart disease or premature death: sodas, high fructose corn syrup, dietary fat, carbs, high cholesterol, prediabetes, fast food, snacking, trans fats, watching television and all sorts of things others want to fix in us. And they're all just as spurious as water.

This illustration demonstrates just how easy it is to think that correlations (links between things) mean anything at all. Just because certain lifestyle or dietary habits, laboratory values or numbers on the scale, rise or fall in synch or appear together, doesn't mean they have anything to do with each other. Yet, we hear assertions made every day by mainstream scientists and medical professionals, reputable healthcare organizations, public policy makers and, most of all, media in which correlations are used as proof of a cause. These are taken as facts, not because of any sound evidence, but because they seem intuitively correct and match what "everybody knows."

But correlations taken as cause become even more nonsensical ... and dangerous ... when the link is turned backwards to say:

"Therefore, restricting or eliminating water ("it") will prevent or cure obesity, heart disease or type 2 diabetes."
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Old 07-04-2007, 08:23 PM   #170 (permalink)
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I also PRAY that people researching Freebirth will find this thread and thoughtfully consider the various comments that have been made. I also hope that those who are planning a hospital birth will consider what has been said.

As noted ad nauseum, sharing studies on birth that were conducted during the early 90's do not take into account the very real use of Cytotec for labor induction right now TODAY, the HMO depersonalization of continuity of care, nor the fact that more drugs than ever before are being eaten by pregnant women-both prescribed and over the counter meds. They also do not factor in lifestyle and quality of life issues, economics, or the very real issues surrounding the black hole of obstetrics, post partum care. All of the money, statistics, focus is on the birth event itself...and very little follow up research is being conducted on the long term effects of drugs and surgery American Birth on American Families, including drug addictions, postpartum depression, inability to breastfeed, and bonding disorders.

When Obstetricians ban the use of Cytotec and get the induction rates down to a reasonable level, use the brewer pregnancy diet as the foundation for healthy pregnancy, get the section rates down to a reasonable 10% and ease up the laws against lay midwifery, then I will believe that it has found its soul. Until then? I'm claiming my rights of self determination over my own body and staying home!

During my last freebirth, after doing my own prenatals, two colorado laws kicked in, that should I have chosen to have a midwife attended homebirth, would have precluded me having the peak experience of a successful home birth.

First Law: No midwife is allowed to attend a woman who has gone past 42 weeks at home. Ben was born 42 weeks and 3 days.

Second Law: Midwives must transfer care to an OB if the mothers membranes have been ruptured for more than 24 hours. My water broke three days before Ben was born.

It was almost as if Ben was laughing at those Colorado laws, saying....you can't get me with your stupid rules.

He was born on the very day he was ready to be born, in the quiet and sanctity of our bedroom, surrounded by love and his family.


I predict that as we get more socialized in America birth is going to continue to be a dangerous and deadly event for women and babies. Watch the stats over the next ten years.

I shared the information on ecstatic and sexual birth simply because you are a group that claims an interest in evolution of sexuality and philosopy.

It will be a cold day in hell when a woman experiences total sexual fullfillment during a C-section.

How baby is born has a profound effect on how that child is mothered. And if during the early weeks after the birth mother is recovering from her knife in the belly rather than riding the ecstatic wave of sexual birth, which some women have described as renewing them not only sexually, but also emotionally, spiritually, and physically (and I have felt this renewal), this will also have a NEGATIVE impact on how that mother relates to her child.

You don't have to be a scientist to know that a mother who experiences hormonal ecstasy during birth juxtiposed with a mother who is numbed with belly pain will have amazingly different reactions and connections in her memories of the event.

How many people reading this thread know women who have claimed to their dying day that giving birth was bar none the worst experience of their lives?

My paternal grandmother was one of these women. She had typical thirties hospital birth - knocked out, lots of drugs, huge episiotomy, and forceps to pull out her nine pound sons.

How do you think that impacter her marriage? Her children? Her views of herself as a woman? Her overall sense of feeling at peace with the universe?

I have met many woman who have described birth in those terms.

Yet I get together with a bunch of freebirthers, and the happiness and joy is coming off of them AND THEIR CHILDREN, in waves. Bright eyes, loving and tender nurture at the breast, and an overall feeling of peace in the room.

These are the intangibles of Freebirth. They are not going to show up in a study. They are not going to turn up in some dissertation or professional paper on the so called FACTS of birth. They are not even considered in the equation. But I can testify, THEY ARE IMPORTANT.

And it is in educating women about these intangibles and the very simple and basic facts of natural birth that I find profound satisfaction and joy as a child birth teacher.

What keeps me motivated is the birth stories, the pictures, the videos, the joy, and the absolute KNOWING I have that families are being strengthened and renewed by freebirth.

Does this mean that all mothers will give birth perfectly with perfect outcomes every time? Nope. Some will need professional help, and some will even die. It is going to take several generations before we get to fulfilling that prophecy I mentioned by the prophet Isaiah where he said we would get to the place in our society where "no more would there be an infant of days and man would live to the age of a tree".

To say that reality is all tied up in Medical Birth and Chemical living as practiced right now today in America is just a farce and a delusion of what is real and what is possible.

I want to thank all of you for a stimulating and invigorating discussion. I think it's time for me to go.

All of my work on the internet, including chats like this, are dedicated to the babies who will be born in the future. May they all enjoy a peaceful and gentle entry into the world.

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Old 07-04-2007, 10:50 PM   #171 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenny Hatch
I want to thank all of you for a stimulating and invigorating discussion. I think it's time for me to go.
Oh, thank GOD.
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Old 07-05-2007, 03:30 AM   #172 (permalink)
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The one thing this has done for me is to convince me to make a web page.

Unfortunately, many young women, seeing that the first few pages on Google when you type in "freebirthing", are essentially all pages created by rather devoted advocates of this practice and are all obviously in favour of the practice without considering much of the science (or God-given common sense, but that's another issue).

What is needed is the "con" side of the argument to appear on the first couple of Google pages to offer a more balanced and objective perspective.

It should be pointed out, as I think this gets lost in the shuffle sometimes, that most people are not opposed to home delivery - but with a doctor, nurse or highly trained and licensed midwife in attendance. My own POV is that deliberatelty "going it alone", whoever you are, whatever your background, is inherently selfish and ill-considered, an attempt to find meaning in an otherwise meaningless existence.
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Old 07-05-2007, 03:41 AM   #173 (permalink)
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Amen highthief!!! Well said. Fortunately I have a brain and can think for myself (and I've given birth) so most of the "stuff" thats been posted here by Jenny is going in one ear and out the other. Its the women that are easily brainwashed that I'm worried about.

I cannot, just cannot read this crap knowing how many of us have refuted the crap that has been spread here.

Asking for people to look to their genealogy and then discounting it when we DID? I spent time to gather facts from a rural georgia county that was not "industrialized" or a "big city"...and when my fact dont compliement what you've claimed, you have to totally ignore it (and then misstate what I said)

I really really really feel for women taken in by this and I can only pray that no one loses a child or their life unnecessarily because "god told them giving birth was sexual pleasure" and that they don't need anyone with training at the birth

jesus christ this has been some of the most absurd stuff IMO that I've ever read.
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Old 07-05-2007, 03:51 AM   #174 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TotalMILF
Oh, thank GOD.

She's said that before, though....

Quote:
How baby is born has a profound effect on how that child is mothered. And if during the early weeks after the birth mother is recovering from her knife in the belly rather than riding the ecstatic wave of sexual birth, which some women have described as renewing them not only sexually, but also emotionally, spiritually, and physically (and I have felt this renewal), this will also have a NEGATIVE impact on how that mother relates to her child.
Maybe it affected YOUR mothering, it didn't affect mine.
Quote:
Ben was born 42 weeks and 3 days. My water broke three days before Ben was born.
The life-threatening dangers you put your son through for your own selfish reasons make me shudder. You gambled and that time, didn't lose.
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Old 07-05-2007, 03:57 AM   #175 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ngdawg
The life-threatening dangers you put your son through for your own selfish reasons make me shudder. You gambled and that time, didn't lose.
Yeah, doesn't the placenta or something start to break down at that point, leading to potential damage to the child, which is why women are typically induced if they go past 42 weeks? And that if the membranes break and there is no delivery within 24-48 hours, an increased risk of infection for the infant occurs?
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Old 07-05-2007, 05:50 AM   #176 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenny Hatch
I referred to orgasmic childbirth, here are a couple of testimonials.
Just to take this statement a bit further (sorry to diverge from the medical discussion, folks), I have heard that this is the only rational reason for the existence of the G-spot.

Think about what it takes to stimulate the G-spot. You have to use fingers (or a toy), because you have to reach in, then hook back and apply pressure. How else could you achieve pressure on that spot? A baby's head is perfect.

Think about what happens during a G-spot orgasm. Huge muscular contractions and a large quantity of fluid release. Both of these would be very beneficial in birthing a child.

But, there's no reason that you couldn't achieve this with the right mindset and a midwife, or even an understanding doctor.
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Old 07-05-2007, 06:12 AM   #177 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Redlemon
Just to take this statement a bit further (sorry to diverge from the medical discussion, folks), I have heard that this is the only rational reason for the existence of the G-spot.

Think about what it takes to stimulate the G-spot. You have to use fingers (or a toy), because you have to reach in, then hook back and apply pressure. How else could you achieve pressure on that spot? A baby's head is perfect.

Think about what happens during a G-spot orgasm. Huge muscular contractions and a large quantity of fluid release. Both of these would be very beneficial in birthing a child.

But, there's no reason that you couldn't achieve this with the right mindset and a midwife, or even an understanding doctor.

You are exactly right. Many doctors and midwives have reported women experiencing orgasm during natural birth. I first read about it in Robert Bradley's Husband Coached Childbirth.

Problem with epidural is that it numbs the woman and even if she is fortunate enough to experience this ecstasy during the birth of her child, she won't feel it. Episiotomy also can interfere with the birth climax.

And you are also right that the birth orgasm helps the child to be born. Thanks for sharing.


For the gals who talked about freebirth being all about the mother.

Does anyone here honestly believe that a mother who starts asking her doctor how many drugs she can have during labor soon after her first contraction has her childs best interest at heart?

Doesn't that qualify her as a selfish person, only concerned about her "experience"?


And highthief, I wish you well with your web site.

You are going to have some stiff competition from the freebirthers though. Unassisted Childbirth.com gets 70,000 unique visitors a month, with hundreds of thousands of hits. And with all of the recent media attention, Washington Post article comes out this month, reuters blasted all over the world last month, and Eve magazine in the UK comes out this month, I predict those numbers to double very quickly.

My own sites get pretty good traffic, and because of the way the internet works, those numbers grow exponentially every time a momma shares the good news with her email list. The most gratifying fact of my traffic is the thousands of people who use the "send to a friend" function on both my web site and blog. I feel so much joy thinking of the shifts that are occuring in the minds of parents all over the world as they read this empowering and enlightening information, and then take the leap of faith and actually give birth alone.

But you go for it. It's obvious you have some real passion, you are an articulate spokesperson for the indefensible practice of allopathic birth, and really believe you have the "facts" on your side. You share those facts! And at the end of the year when your site has fizzled out from the five people who have visited it and the freebirth sites have 2 million unique visitors a month, and then 5 million, and so on and so on....just remember this little chat.

I would encourage you to save your time and money and do something productive with your life. You know, give birth to a child or mentor a teen, or raise a puppy, grow a garden, or sing in a choir. And let those gentle activities free your mind from the shackles of science and the tortured world of obstetrics.

Just a little bit of friendly advice!

And now, Adieu.....

Jenny Hatch
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Old 07-05-2007, 06:33 AM   #178 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenny Hatch
As noted ad nauseum, sharing studies on birth that were conducted during the early 90's do not take into account the very real use of Cytotec for labor induction right now TODAY, the HMO depersonalization of continuity of care, nor the fact that more drugs than ever before are being eaten by pregnant women-both prescribed and over the counter meds. They also do not factor in lifestyle and quality of life issues, economics, or the very real issues surrounding the black hole of obstetrics, post partum care. All of the money, statistics, focus is on the birth event itself...and very little follow up research is being conducted on the long term effects of drugs and surgery American Birth on American Families, including drug addictions, postpartum depression, inability to breastfeed, and bonding disorders.
First you say Industrial age information doesn't count:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenny Hatch
Infant mortality rates that are thrown around to disprove homebirth are usually from the height of the Industrial Revolution and compiled at some teaching hospital in a big city, where women were notoriously undernourished and overworked. The fact that they also gave birth in a hospital during that time of no hand washing and no infrastructure in hospital for proper hygiene, also makes the stats suspect. London during the industrial revolution was a very dangerous place to birth a child, yet those stats are often used to compare and contrast the "progress" of medicine the past hundred years.
then you now discount more current statisticis:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenny Hatch
As noted ad nauseum, sharing studies on birth that were conducted during the early 90's do not take into account the very real use of Cytotec for labor induction right now TODAY, the HMO depersonalization of continuity of care, nor the fact that more drugs than ever before are being eaten by pregnant women-both prescribed and over the counter meds. They also do not factor in lifestyle and quality of life issues, economics, or the very real issues surrounding the black hole of obstetrics, post partum care. All of the money, statistics, focus is on the birth event itself...and very little follow up research is being conducted on the long term effects of drugs and surgery American Birth on American Families, including drug addictions, postpartum depression, inability to breastfeed, and bonding disorders.
It is OBVIOUS that you don't understand how and what infant mortality means since it doesn't NEED to include or disclude it. The statistics themselves should be agnostic to those conditions. The data collected is just data. It is up to the person reviewing the data to look at the information provided and then ask the crucial and critical questions that then explain the data. If you don't want to look at the 90's look at the 70's and 80's and compare those to the 50's and 60's. Again, if your cytotec fears had any bearing to the data, there would be some data trend going upwards. But anyone with eyeballs can see in the data I have posted, that the trends go downward.

Looking at the scope of the infant mortality rates (IMR) it is apparent that there is some relationship between prenatal medical care and continued care since they track from birth to age 5.

You narrow the scope, widen the scope, adjust the findings to determine and rationalize your position. Again, it is your choice. It is ulitmately your choice, but it is also your responsibility.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenny Hatch
Did anyone on this board have a doctor ask them what they were eating while pregnant? I never did, not once during the three pregnancies that I went to them for prenatals. Yet it is in fact the key to a healthy pregnancy, great birth, and abundant breastmilk supply.
Again, that is YOUR responsibility. Because your doctor didn't, and YOU didn't bother to inquire, then it is the doctor's fault, that is patently absurd.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenny Hatch
Does anyone here honestly believe that a mother who starts asking her doctor how many drugs she can have during labor soon after her first contraction has her childs best interest at heart?

Doesn't that qualify her as a selfish person, only concerned about her "experience"?
Yes it does. Just like those who want to have a scheduled c-section since they want to control the date and time of the birthing. It speaks to some degree to the character of the individual.
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Old 07-05-2007, 06:33 AM   #179 (permalink)
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i'm glad my mom is not that nutty... she's into the hole 'back to nature organic thing' but when it comes to real medical things, she goes to the doc.
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Old 07-05-2007, 06:39 AM   #180 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Jenny Hatch
...free your mind from the shackles of science...
WTF?
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Old 07-05-2007, 08:15 AM   #181 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenny Hatch
I would encourage you to save your time and money and do something productive with your life. You know, give birth to a child or mentor a teen, or raise a puppy, grow a garden, or sing in a choir. And let those gentle activities free your mind from the shackles of science and the tortured world of obstetrics.

Just a little bit of friendly advice!

And now, Adieu.....

Jenny Hatch
First off, I'm a father, so how I might manage to give birth to a child, I'm not quite sure - perhaps if I don't go see a doctor then I'll be able to miraculously give birth! Perhaps fatherhood is another thing you aren't in favour of?

But what I do know is that I'm honest - you keep saying you're "done" and "finished here" yet keep coming back. Is going back on your word part of this freebirthing nonsense too?
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Old 07-05-2007, 10:28 AM   #182 (permalink)
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Quote:
Jenny Marie Hatch PhDMH
As I read your Natural Family website I encountered you adding some credentials to your name PhD MH, so I double checked as I recalled you didn't have any completed undergraduate, graduate, or postgraduate work.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenny Hatch
But I am not a researcher, a scientist, or a doctor. I have two years of musical theatre training at the university level.
From Jenny's Dissertation on Motherhood
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenny Hatch
Note: Since there is no Criteria, University Curriculum, Certificate, or acknowledged academic cap and gown that could be used to designate myself as a Doctor in the Philosophy of Motherhood, I went out and bought myself a new apron, and offer the words of these ten essays combined with the pictures of my family as evidence and proof of my credentials as a PhDMH!

*Message to any person who has come across this Dissertation –

We Mothers have to know what we are about. Since the world, especially the education establishment, largely holds the daily work we do in contempt, we need to stake our claim and stand tall, confident, and clear on what our efforts mean, not just to us, and our families, but to society as a whole. For anyone who is thinking about becoming a parent, please carefully consider the words that follow.

If you count up the hours spent reading, practical skills mastered, and recognize the contribution to society the amazing gift of yet another gently birthed, nurtured, and nourished child to be enjoyed by all who come in contact with him or her and decide you too deserve to receive the "coveted" PhD MH, go ahead, start putting those little letters after your name!

Welcome to the Motherhood branch of Academia!

Get a new apron, have your husband get you pregnant, throw out all your high-heeled shoes, and happily welcome another blessed child into your home. We have a certain stereotype to proudly thrust in the faces of all who judge us…..it is BAREFOOT AND PREGNANT!!! I can think of few blessed states to be in than barefoot and expecting yet another child into our home. So I happily project this supposedly derogatory cliché’ of Motherhood and combined with the PhDMH letters after my name, will gladly defend this Dissertation in any forum, at any time.

Who said only the hallowed halls of academia and the ivory towers of the Ivy League have the right to bestow Advanced Degrees upon the heads of individual men and women?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenny Hatch
It is somewhat crazy to think that women who are part of our very educated and proactive group of mothers would ever be compared to mothers in the poorest sections of the country, befuddled by poverty and illiteracy, and then that so called PROOF thrust in our faces as to why we should go to a hospital to give birth.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenny Hatch
And let these gentle activities free your mind from the shackles of science and the tortured world of obstetrics.
After reading the above I have a hard time taking you seriously as being "educated" in the classic sense and definition. Perhaps it is as hyperbole as your "murder" definition.

Furthermore, after thoroughly reading your website and other freebirthing websites, I stand in awe. Had it just been as simple as, "This is my choice for my body and my baby" without the rhetoric of Big Pharma and Doctors more intertested in playing golf, I think your movement would have had more support from those that don't understand nor subscribe to your viewpoints. To selectively expound on why the current medical industry with respect to birthing is flawed, and then not to wholly reject the whole system seems hypocritical.
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Old 07-05-2007, 01:26 PM   #183 (permalink)
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
I was looking for the New Scientist Indiana study and haven't been able to find anything on it. I did however stumble upon this Junkfood Science blog entry.
Here is the study that the Guardian article mentioned was covered in the New Scientist.
(I added color to highlight specifics)

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/en...&dopt=Abstract
Quote:
Originally Posted by Study Abstract
We investigated perinatal and maternal deaths occurring among women who were members of a religious group in Indiana; these women received no prenatal care and gave birth at home without trained attendants. Members of the religious group had a perinatal mortality rate three times higher and a maternal mortality rate about 100 times higher than the statewide rates. These findings suggest that, even in the United States, women who avoid obstetric care have a greatly increased risk of perinatal and maternal death.

PIP: All reported perinatal and maternal deaths from 1975 to 1982 among Faith Assembly members living in the state of Indiana were verified. Fetal death and the neonatal mortality rate were defined per 1000 live births; perinatal mortality was the combination of fetal deaths and neonatal deaths per 1000 births plus fetal deaths; and maternal mortality was calculated per 100.000 live births. 344 live births were identified in Elkhart and Kosciusko Counties among religious members during this period. 291 of these mothers (85%) did not have prenatal care, the prenatal care for the remaining 53 (15%) was unspecified. The mothers tended to be aged 20-34, white, married, and have minimum of high school education. 21 perinatal deaths were established among this population sample with 12 fetal deaths and 9 neonatal deaths. 11 fetal and 6 neonatal deaths occurred to members residing in the above 2 counties. Trauma or asphyxia at birth (often as a result of umbilical cord problems) and respiratory problems were responsible for most of the mortality. 6 maternal deaths occurred: 4 due to hemorrhage and 2 caused by infection. During this period there was a total of 61 maternal deaths in Indiana, and thus about 9% of maternal mortality occurred among Faith Assembly members (100% vs. 36% deaths caused by hemorrhage and infection). 3 of the 6 church members who died were 35 or older, and 2% of the births occurred to women 35 or older in these countries. The estimated perinatal mortality rate for this group was 45/1000 live births vs. 18/1000 for the whole state, almost 3 time higher. The fetal mortality rate was 32 vs. 9 for Indiana (significantly higher); and the neonatal mortality rate was 17 vs. 9, respectively. The maternal mortality rate was 872/100.000 live births for church members residing in the 2 counties vs. 9/100.000 for Indiana: an astounding ninety-twofold higher rate.The risk of perinatal and maternal death is greatly augmented even in the US when women do not utilize obstetric care.
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Old 07-05-2007, 01:50 PM   #184 (permalink)
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I really can't believe this thread is still going. I guess some people like to believe their opinion is better proof than cold hard facts. Looking at post #142, It interests me that Afghanistan is #2 on the list. You see... I'm there now. Our unit does a lot of MEDCAP missions (medical relief). I've heard from people about the loss of newborn brothers, sisters, sons and daughters a LOT in the three months I've been here. Oddly enough, there is no medical care or facilities here. Women ALWAYS (outside of maybe Kabul) give birth at home, usually with the aid of a female relative. Must be a great program to have the second highest infant mortality rate IN THE WORLD. What numbers can possibly convince an intelligent, thinking human being that your opinion otherwise is rational? It seems like a great disillusion to me.
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Old 07-05-2007, 02:06 PM   #185 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by highthief
First off, I'm a father, so how I might manage to give birth to a child, I'm not quite sure - perhaps if I don't go see a doctor then I'll be able to miraculously give birth! Perhaps fatherhood is another thing you aren't in favour of?

But what I do know is that I'm honest - you keep saying you're "done" and "finished here" yet keep coming back. Is going back on your word part of this freebirthing nonsense too?

I said I THOUGHT I was finished with this thread, especially since it is obvious you are more interested in talking about medical statistics related to babies who die during the first year of life rather than freebirth and wether or not we are "nuts". As the original poster, you said:


"Am I missing something or is this concept really defensible?"

I have been trying to explain to you the various different reasons that families get in to Freebirth.

Sorry for thinking you were female, it is difficult to determine who is male and female in this forum.


Jenny

Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
As I read your Natural Family website I encountered you adding some credentials to your name PhD MH, so I double checked as I recalled you didn't have any completed undergraduate, graduate, or postgraduate work.



From Jenny's Dissertation on Motherhood





After reading the above I have a hard time taking you seriously as being "educated" in the classic sense and definition. Perhaps it is as hyperbole as your "murder" definition.

Furthermore, after thoroughly reading your website and other freebirthing websites, I stand in awe. Had it just been as simple as, "This is my choice for my body and my baby" without the rhetoric of Big Pharma and Doctors more intertested in playing golf, I think your movement would have had more support from those that don't understand nor subscribe to your viewpoints. To selectively expound on why the current medical industry with respect to birthing is flawed, and then not to wholly reject the whole system seems hypocritical.

We accept the fact that some women will need c-sections. And are even grateful for the times when women really do get the true help they need during birth. I don't reject the whole system, I just reject the way that technology is god in birth.

You forgot to include the KICKER in my introduction to my dissertation.... in that portion you cut and pasted....and it is this:

What do those little letters mean?

Quote:
"To me, the designation PhDMH is a very tongue in cheek attempt to quantify and validate the work we are accomplishing in our own homes. If reading this introduction to my Dissertation has given you a laugh and helped you to gain some perspective on the value of this important work, then I have accomplished my goal.
Jenny Marie Hatch PhD MH

Quote:
(*That name does look official, doesn’t it? Kind of makes you think I know something…Well, I do know something, I know how to make a healthy baby*)"
To get to my Dissertation simply click on this link below. This file is stored on my blog with pictures and video enhancement.



I have had mothers tell me that my Doctor in the philosophy of Motherhood line was a milk snort through the nose moment for them. Spill coffee on the keyboard, choke on breakfast laughing so loud.

It was meant to be humorous, and taken out of the humor context it does look a little silly.

Choosing to be a stay at home mother does tend to bring some condemnation from various circles in our society, and living in the one county in America that has more PhD's than any other place in the world, (Boulder County) the ivory tower is quite high and inpenetrable to those of us who have little more than a high school degree.

Whatever, I know what I am about. And now I believe we are really getting off topic talking so much about me and my sites.

Jenny Hatch

Last edited by Jenny Hatch; 07-05-2007 at 02:14 PM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost
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Old 07-05-2007, 03:00 PM   #186 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenny Hatch
I said I THOUGHT I was finished with this thread, especially since it is obvious you are more interested in talking about medical statistics related to babies who die during the first year of life rather than freebirth and wether or not we are "nuts".
I don't mean to be insulting, but do you understand what perinatal means? If so, how can you insist that the perinatal statistics provided by Cynthetiq are irrelevant in judging the safety of birth? He isn't just supplying infant mortality rates, look more closely at the charts supplied.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenny Hatch
We accept the fact that some women will need c-sections. And are even grateful for the times when women really do get the true help they need during birth. I don't reject the whole system, I just reject the way that technology is god in birth.
At what point in an unsupervised unaccompanied birth attempt by an inexperienced mother trying to listen to her body do you think she would be able to determine "this isn't working, i need immediate medical attention or a c-section?" I am baffled by the logic you claim to follow.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenny Hatch
Jenny Marie Hatch PhD MH

To get to my Dissertation simply click on this link below. This file is stored on my blog with pictures and video enhancement.



I have had mothers tell me that my Doctor in the philosophy of Motherhood line was a milk snort through the nose moment for them. Spill coffee on the keyboard, choke on breakfast laughing so loud.

It was meant to be humorous, and taken out of the humor context it does look a little silly.

....[T]he ivory tower is quite high and inpenetrable to those of us who have little more than a high school degree.

Whatever, I know what I am about. And now I believe we are really getting off topic talking so much about me and my sites.

Jenny Hatch
Something you learn in higher education is that if the evidence is contrary to everything you have thus far learned, question the source. The word 'educated' means something very specific, and I find it offensive that elsewhere you have claimed that you belong to a, quote, "very educated and proactive group of mothers." This directly contradicts your statement that you have little more than a high school diploma (not a "high school degree," incidently).

Let me be very clear: I am not insulting your intelligence. You can be smart (very smart, in fact) without being educated, but you cannot be considered 'very educated' without having undergone (and completed) some sort of higher education.

I find it quite offensive that you would refer to yourself as a PhD in a deceptive manner. Claiming that you use it for anything other than to bolster yourself, and give weight to your opinion, is, in my opinion, merely creating some plausible deniability.
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Old 07-05-2007, 03:45 PM   #187 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by highthief
Yeah, doesn't the placenta or something start to break down at that point, leading to potential damage to the child, which is why women are typically induced if they go past 42 weeks? And that if the membranes break and there is no delivery within 24-48 hours, an increased risk of infection for the infant occurs?
In looking up prolonged gestations(over 41 weeks), I found some interesting tidbits:
There is a general increase in death rates, partially due to some prolonged pregnancies being the result of malformations. Rates are considered small, about 6 in 1,000.
There is an increased chance of the baby inhaling meconium(its first bowel movement) or passing it into the amniotic fluids. This can lead to death.
Uteral-placental circulation should be tested.
The baby starts to lose weight and body fat.
When your water breaks:
If the amniotic fluid is ruptured for more than 24 hours your risk of developing a uterine infection increases dramatically.

Several things about freebirth really bother me, specially if it's decided that neither a doctor or midwife will be part of the process:
1) Breech.
2) Multiple pregnancy(it can be that you wouldn't know you're carrying more than one-happened to my grandmother and, I'm sure, many women before the advent of prenatal testings.)
3) Large baby.
4) Malformations/congenital defects
5) Nutritional deficiencies
6) Miscalculations of time
7) Self-diagnosing
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Old 07-05-2007, 04:10 PM   #188 (permalink)
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Forgive me, but I think this thread might merit it:

http://internetarguing.ytmnd.com/
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Old 07-05-2007, 08:05 PM   #189 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenny Hatch
You forgot to include the KICKER in my introduction to my dissertation.... in that portion you cut and pasted....and it is this:

I have had mothers tell me that my Doctor in the philosophy of Motherhood line was a milk snort through the nose moment for them. Spill coffee on the keyboard, choke on breakfast laughing so loud.

It was meant to be humorous, and taken out of the humor context it does look a little silly.

Choosing to be a stay at home mother does tend to bring some condemnation from various circles in our society, and living in the one county in America that has more PhD's than any other place in the world, (Boulder County) the ivory tower is quite high and inpenetrable to those of us who have little more than a high school degree.

Whatever, I know what I am about. And now I believe we are really getting off topic talking so much about me and my sites.

Jenny Hatch
Out of context is a fair statement, if again you were using it tongue in cheek. But again, you misrepresent your knowledge and credibilty by adding those designators education earned and bestowed by accredited colleges and universities. I am of the opinion that when reading something that deals with medicine and biology, designators of higher education are important factors in author credibility. There is no "kicker" to explain your choice here.

I don't see where I can purchase your books, either by small press, brick and mortar or internet sales only. I can only find electronic versions, which I assume are the only incarnation that exists as far as I can tell. Books are very specific as to what that means, and I must again state that you are stretching definitions to beyond hyperbole. I do hope that one day you can find a publisher who will actually print your manuscript. It can then be properly scrutinized and subject to peer review.

Quote:
Liver and Kidney Cleansing During Pregnancy
An excerpt from Elijah Birth by Jenny Marie Hatch PhDMH

*Note: Jenny is currently working on her fourth book Liver Cleansing during the Childbearing Season. She hopes to have it available soon for purchase. )

The Liver is the master organ for pregnancy. During early gestation the mother’s liver must filter the waste for the baby. My favorite nutrition book (available off the home page of my web site) is The Brewer Pregnancy Hotline. Not only does this book contain all of the research on pregnancy nutrition carefully compiled by Gail Sforza Krebs and medical consulting by Thomas Brewer, M.D, but it also has the best pregnancy diet for making a healthy baby. It also recognizes that many women are drawn to a vegetarian or even vegan diet during the mothering years and has the correct diets for building healthy babies using non-animal foods. Here is a couple of great quotes from the book.
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Old 07-06-2007, 01:11 AM   #190 (permalink)
 
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Your self-designated PhD is not amusing, in any context, to those of us who have actually put in the time and coursework towards getting a bona fide PhD. Since graduating from high school, I have spent the last 10 years in higher education (with several more to go), and I'm not about to put up with someone who jokingly adds a PhD "MH" after her name on a public website. I don't care if you were trying to be funny; that is just total horseshit.
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Old 07-06-2007, 07:35 AM   #191 (permalink)
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Quote:
Your self-designated PhD is not amusing, in any context, to those of us who have actually put in the time and coursework towards getting a bona fide PhD. Since graduating from high school, I have spent the last 10 years in higher education (with several more to go), and I'm not about to put up with someone who jokingly adds a PhD "MH" after her name on a public website. I don't care if you were trying to be funny; that is just total horseshit.
Seconded.

Kills your credibility.

Shows that you really AREN'T educated, so you want to pretend to be.

You're like those people who drive around in sold-at-auction police cars pretending to be a cop. Then, when someone calls you out on your bullshit, you reply with "oh, I do it to mock police officers" or other lame-brained excuse.

If you EVER hope to convince someone with MORE than half a brain, DONT PRETEND TO HAVE CREDENTIALS YOU DON'T HAVE.

Please discontinue breeding.
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Old 07-06-2007, 07:06 PM   #192 (permalink)
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(reads thread) ... (shivers)

I'm sticking to housecats.

Humans are just all bad.
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Old 07-07-2007, 01:29 AM   #193 (permalink)
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Yeah. It's really insulting to even jokingly self-apply a "PhD". People spend 8 - 10 years studying intensely to earn their doctorates and hone their basic skills. You have no formal education in the birthing process. Experience, and reading birthing books, do not count. I don't even get the impression that you have CPR training- [PSA]which, by the way, I recommend everyone take. It's extremely simple: it's a quick, single class but it's invaluable in case of emergency... either cardiac, or in the case of choking/airway obstruction. (PM me if you need help finding a CPR trainer in your area)[/Public Service Announcement]

The fact of the matter is, modern medicine is why neonate deaths are so low (as compared to the entirety of recorded past, and in current third-world countries). Your individual personal experience matters fuckall in the grand scheme of things. Just because you, Madame Consumer, didn't get perfect nutritional and/or prenatal care, and weren't informed that you can ALWAYS specify the level of your medical care as it pertains to medical intervention (up to where the fetus' life is in peril, meaning that you can specify that you do not get a c-section unless absolutely necessary) doesn't mean that your anti-medical-establishment rants are justified. It means your personal experience sucked ass, and you believe that it's a systemic issue rather than a specific one.

Medicaid pays for prenatal care. People with no insurance and no money in general get professional medical prenatal care and nutritional advice. This availability helps to stem trends in populations of low economic status such as premature birth, low birth weight, and complications due to malnutrition/drug habits (including alcohol and tobacco) of the mother. People with no money and/or less education have access to appropriate medical care that will help to ensure the birth of a healthy baby.

Myself personally, as someone who does have formal education in the birth process, I'm shocked and dismayed that you actively profess that modern medicine is useless and out to kill your baby. It's just asinine. Reading birthing books is all well and good. Having enough babies to qualify your vagina as a human clown car is not education. It's experience.

Your experience is meaningless when compared to formal medical education- you insist otherwise, and that's frankly insulting.

You hold no formal training in nutrition in general, prenatal nutrition and care, or the ability to diagnose any medical condition, but proclaim infallible superior knowledge without any substantiative information, let alone proof.

A consortium of midwives hell-bent on home birth? Well excuse me, but with all due respect to midwives, midwives' collective opinions on the care of pregnant women are meaningless when they buck against all established medical knowledge as practiced by doctors and without any research or data to substantiate their very contrary claims. When you're trying to effect change on a medical standard of care, you need to have lots of research and hard data to prove the benefit of changing. I have seen nothing that even glances in the direction of "research" or "data".

I hate to throw it around in this way, but in my professional opinion as a person with formal education in the field which is under discussion, which gives me credible authority to make the following statement against your debate, I have the following to say regarding your overall position:

Shhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh................

Last edited by analog; 07-07-2007 at 01:49 AM..
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Old 07-07-2007, 05:16 AM   #194 (permalink)
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Location: backwater, Third World, land of cotton
*closes eyes and chants*

"There's no such thing as batshit crazy. There's no such thing as batshit crazy. There's no such thing as batshit crazy. There's no such ......"
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Old 07-07-2007, 03:17 PM   #195 (permalink)
peekaboo
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by analog
Having enough babies to qualify your vagina as a human clown car is not education.
This screams bumpersticker!
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Old 07-08-2007, 12:37 AM   #196 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by analog
Having enough babies to qualify your vagina as a human clown car is not education.
Quote:
Originally Posted by ngdawg
This screams bumpersticker!
I can't take full credit... I saw the picture below a long time ago and it was the inspiration for my continued use of the phrase:

(Pic is SFW but contains kids, so I'm not embedding it)
Vagina: It's not a clown car.
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Old 07-08-2007, 08:07 AM   #197 (permalink)
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Oh Really???

"We consider this site to be the best of its kind. Nowhere else on the internet will you find a better assemblage of discussion, knowledge and intrigue. Feel free to browse around to get a feel for the site and see for yourself. We hope that you'll enjoy what you see and want to register and join in the fun.

If you've ever wanted a place to discuss sensitive topics with mature people, and get quality feedback on your thoughts and ideas, look no further. That's what the TFP is all about. This community was founded in 2002 on the statute of mature discourse and the tradition lives on strongly today.

At the TFP, you don't have to worry about immature flaming"



Ha ha ha ha snort, hee hee, heh, heh, ha ha ha

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Old 07-08-2007, 12:58 PM   #198 (permalink)
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you must really not frequent many message boards if you are under the impression you have endured immature flaming here.
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Old 07-08-2007, 01:13 PM   #199 (permalink)
Illusionary
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenny Hatch
"We consider this site to be the best of its kind. Nowhere else on the internet will you find a better assemblage of discussion, knowledge and intrigue. Feel free to browse around to get a feel for the site and see for yourself. We hope that you'll enjoy what you see and want to register and join in the fun.

If you've ever wanted a place to discuss sensitive topics with mature people, and get quality feedback on your thoughts and ideas, look no further. That's what the TFP is all about. This community was founded in 2002 on the statute of mature discourse and the tradition lives on strongly today.

At the TFP, you don't have to worry about immature flaming"



Ha ha ha ha snort, hee hee, heh, heh, ha ha ha

Jenny
Jenny, while I and many others here understand your enthusiasm for your chosen lifestyle, one cannot expect to be protected from criticism simply because we wish it to be so. Your charges of immaturity should be tempered with the acceptance that you are not in a majority when it comes to such adamant belief in freebirthing, Hell I have been alone with my wife for two births and quite frankly would walk out of the room after you talked for 10 minutes.
While you likely took that as an immature comment as well, it was not....it was honesty. Rather than communicating your beliefs in this thread, you have done little but preach them, and few adults wish to be preached to. If you actually want people to listen to your message I would recommend a more subtle approach....as it is you come off somewhat fanatic and do more damage to your cause than good.
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Old 07-08-2007, 04:36 PM   #200 (permalink)
peekaboo
 
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Location: on the back, bitch
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenny Hatch
"We consider this site to be the best of its kind. Nowhere else on the internet will you find a better assemblage of discussion, knowledge and intrigue. Feel free to browse around to get a feel for the site and see for yourself. We hope that you'll enjoy what you see and want to register and join in the fun.

If you've ever wanted a place to discuss sensitive topics with mature people, and get quality feedback on your thoughts and ideas, look no further. That's what the TFP is all about. This community was founded in 2002 on the statute of mature discourse and the tradition lives on strongly today.

At the TFP, you don't have to worry about immature flaming"



Ha ha ha ha snort, hee hee, heh, heh, ha ha ha

Jenny
Whether you've noticed or not (and I'm betting on not), this entire discussion has been populated by mods, past and present and not once were any warnings issued or edits made.
Tec made an astute observation-that all your posts were preaching. Few, if any, questions were answered; instead, we were entertained with such 'facts' as orgasmic birth and subjected to outrageous claims of some mass OB/GYN conspiracy.... I would also go so far as to say that by offending anyone who actually does earn their PhD by 'jokingly' attaching one to yourself, you've killed any possibility of having your position respected as one of esteem.
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