The Hand Massages Actually work (we knew it all along)

April 2nd, 2012 by Ame

Effects of LI4 Acupressure on Labor Pain in the First Stage of Labor

  1. Azam Hamidzadeh MSc,
  2. Farangis Shahpourian MSc,
  3. Roohangiz Jamshidi Orak PhD,
  4. Akram Sadat Montazeri MSc,
  5. Ahmad Khosravi MSc*

Article first published online: 2 MAR 2012

Journal of Midwifery & Women’s Health

Journal of Midwifery & Women’s Health

Volume 57, Issue 2, pages 133–138, March/April 2012

Additional Information(Show All)


Introduction: Complementary and alternative medicines have been used to decrease labor pain for many years. Despite reports that some of these methods reduce pain, increase maternal satisfaction, and improve other obstetric outcomes, they have received limited attention in the US medical literature. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of LI4 acupressure on labor pain in the first stage of labor, on labor duration, and on patient satisfaction.

Methods: A single, blind, randomized clinical trial was performed with eligible women (N = 100) who were at the beginning of the active phase of labor (3–4 cm dilatation of cervix with regular uterine contractions). The women in the acupressure group (n = 50) received LI4 acupressure at the onset of the active phase for the duration of each uterine contraction over a period of 20 minutes, and the women in the control group (n = 50) received a touch on this point without massage. Labor pain was measured using a structured questionnaire of a subjective labor pain scale (visual analogue scale) before the intervention, immediately after the intervention, 20 and 60 minutes after the intervention, and then every hour.

Results: There were significant differences between the groups in subjective labor pain scores immediately and 20, 60, and 120 minutes after intervention (P≤ .001). Active phase duration (3–4 cm dilatation to full dilatation) and second stage duration (full dilatation to birth) were shorter in the acupressure group. The women in the acupressure group reported greater satisfaction.

Discussion: LI4 acupressure was effective at decreasing pain and duration of labor. The participants were satisfied, and no adverse effects were noted.

Attention Dancers and Singers: No Classes Thursday 3/29

March 29th, 2012 by Ame

If you were hoping to attend belly dancing, or parent child music classes tomorrow, unfortunately, Noelle is sick. Please join her again next week, 4/5 for more continued fun.

Free Classes at Any Baby Can

March 28th, 2012 by Ame

Hello all! As we approach a new month just thought I’d post here about the great classes offered at ABC.

Mondays: 6:30-8pm “Baby’s First Three Months”- covers basic newborn care, infant feeding, postpartum adjustment, infant brain development. Last class is a baby shower where participants receieve a gift basket. Classes are FREE! Taught by Erin Stangland

Tuesdays: 10am-12noon, “Incredible Years for Infants” Class is set-up like a play group where parents come with their infants (ideally 0-6 mos at start of class but up to 12 mos is ok) and learn all about infant development as well as self-care in a fun, relaxed environment. A great way for new parents to get out and meet other parents! Classes are FREE and run for 8 wks but parents can join in at any time. Taught by Erin Stangland

Wednesdays: 6-9pm “Be Ready For Baby” childbirth prep classes, 4 wk series, covers everything labor and delivery plus a segment about postpartum care. This class runs on a sliding scale from $0-70, no income documentation required. Taught by Shelley Scotka

And don’t forget our postpartum groups!

http://www.abcaus.org/programs-services/postpartum-services

Any Baby Can is located at 1121 E 7th St, (512) 454-3743. Thanks for passing along this info to your friends and clients!

A baby by any other name…Zoe’s birth story.

March 23rd, 2012 by jenni

Lori and Brandon first emailed on Friday letting us know that after a
post date appt. and experiencing some contractions that she was 2 cm
and 75% effaced and they were going home to rest and take an ambien
and try to sleep. After a few hours we got an update that they
weren’t really able to sleep and were just kindof resting but were
going to get up and take the dogs for a walk and get something to eat.
As the evening wore on the contractions started to get more intense
but weren’t really getting much closer together but by about 2 am they
were getting harder to breath through. After speaking to their OB and
talking with me on the phone it was decided that we would meet at the
hospital and see what our next steps would be.

We all arrived close to 4 am and upon arrival Lori was at 4 and 80%.
After finally getting all the paperwork done Lori was able to labor in
any position and intermittent monitoring was permitted.

We walked the hallways quite a bit and got some really good
contractions going and after some talking decided it was time to call
the family and let them know they could head over. In the meantime
Lori and Brandon decided to get in the shower to see if the warm water
would help with relaxing and get her to dilate more. Lori had some
apprehension about how wet hair would feel in labor so she had brought
a shower cap with her which was very cute! Lori’s parents and
Brandon’s dad all arrived when Lori and Brandon were still in the
shower so I asked them to wait a little bit in the waiting room and
Brandon would come get them shortly. Lori’s sister arrived shortly
after and had brought a birthday cake to celebrate the birth of this
sweet baby girl!

At about 12 it was decided it was time to be checked again and after
hours of laboring Lori was only at a 6 and was very disappointed to
hear that after all her work. Dr. Weihs had offered a few options,
after discussing the pros and cons of each option and Lori and Brandon
decided to go ahead and rehydrate with IV fluids and we would discuss
other options again at 2pm. Lori also asked for her parents and
Brandon’s dad to please wait in the waiting room as she was starting
to feel anxious with them being in there just watching her.

At 2 pm Lori had progressed to a stretchy 7-8 and 100%! That made
everyone happy and Lori was rejuvenated to continue the process
knowing there was not much further to go! Shortly after this point
though good old transition doubts set in, but with Brandon’s
encouragement and sweet words she kept on going and at 3:45 was 9 cm
and starting to feel grunty and a little pushy.

By 4:45 Lori was just about complete with a little anterior lip…we
started with small little pushes to relieve the urge to push and by
5:15 with Dr. Weihs and Nurse Betsey we began pushing in earnest. Lori
reached within herself and found the strength she needed and pushed
for 1 1/2 hours. Baby Girl Miranda was born at 6:45 pm at 7 lbs 3 ozs
and 20.5 inches. She still didn’t have a first name but Jillian was
her middle name but they knew her perfect name would come to them and
were in no hurry to name her.

With a lot of love and teamwork between Lori and Brandon they were
able to work through their labor and accomplish what they set out to
do…a drug free natural labor and delivery.

I opened the door to the hallway to discover a whole crowd of people
waiting to meet this sweet baby girl and they were finally allowed to
come in once Lori was cleaned up and situated. I relayed the details
of the last few hours to everyone and clearly everyone had already
fallen in love with this sweet baby girl.

After a couple of days Baby Girl had a beautiful name…Zoe Jillian Miranda.

The bed is for suckers: Rachel’s Birth Story

March 22nd, 2012 by Ame

Rachel was just shy of 42 weeks when she decided she was ready for her baby. Unfortunately, her cervix was not really cooperating, so on Sunday night she went in to have cervidil administered overnight, in the hopes she would progress past the 0cm she currently owned. At 7am she checked in with me as they were going to start her pitocin drip to report that her doctor informed her that she was a “snug” 1cm. So something, but everyone anticipated a long long day (and night) of labor.

When I arrived at the hospital Rachel was having some contractions, and she reported these contractions were different than the contractions that she had been having for the last month (ones that were driving her crazy and keeping her up at night, with no sustainable labor progress). That was a good thing! Something was different about today’s contractions, which hopefully meant that things were changing down there and this baby was on her way out. I noticed that the nurses were looking a little nervous while watching the heart rate monitor. Baby was having some early and variable decelerations in her heart rate, and it was something they needed to watch. But Rachel was lying on her back, not an optimal place for labor. The first thing I did was get her up, and get her on hands and knees, and get that baby rotated or remove the pressure that was on her head or cord causing those decels. Within a few contractions her heart rate was perfectly fabulous, and the nurses were pleased to let Rachel do whatever positioning she liked.

Rachel was tired of being pregnant, and originally, when the plan was to labor at home as long as possible (eating what she wanted to, luxuriating in bed if it pleased her, etc) she wasn’t thrilled about interventions. But today was a different mantra. She wanted to do anything she could to optimize this potentially long labor and get this baby in her arms. And since it was an induction and she faced interventions from the start, she was willing to change her birth plan to shift her goals. Healthy baby. No cesarean. Fast. When she asked what she could do to make that happen, my answer was (and always is) lots of position changes. Rachel was on board with this plan. And nurse Gina wholeheartedly backed us up by offering wireless monitors.

After some times on hands and knees, Rachel sat and rocked on a birth ball, then took some contractions standing up and leaning over the bed. I did some hand massage and stimulated some acupressure points to help optimize those contractions. Michael had posted a picture of a beautiful beach (which turned out to be their Thailand honeymoon resort) and was helping her relax by imagining the beach. Rachel said she also found it a helpful distraction technique to count as she was breathing in deeply. Michael and I each kept our hands on Rachel the whole morning doing labor massage, back scratching, effleurage, scalp massage, whatever we could do to keep her comfortable and relaxed between contractions. During contractions we offered some counterpressure on her lower back. By 10:30 she was feeling the contractions much more intensely, so Dr. Yium decided to inspect the situation down there. 3cm! And 50%. 3 didn’t sound that exciting to Rachel, although she was glad for the progress.

Dr. Yium thought that breaking her water at this point might help move labor forward. Rachel wasn’t sure if that was something she wanted, so requested of Dr. Yium to explain the risk and benefit of doing this procedure. Normally, Rachel would have erred on the side of patience. But today, she wanted to be efficient. The the major concerns with AROM are risk of infection, being put on a “time clock”, and fetal malpositioning. We talked about all of these things – the risk of infection is kept low by not having routine cervical exams which is what they would employ going forward. Dr. Yium said there is no time clock in her practice AROM or not. And she felt the risk of malpositioning was negligible since the baby was engaged in the pelvis and was in an anterior position. So Rachel said “do it!”.

After the AROM contractions continued to increase in intensity. Rachel decided it was time for the “aquadural” and she and Michael jumped in the shower. Michael held the shower head and used it to massage Rachel, the heat and water taking away some of the pain. They stayed in there for almost an hour, Michael was great support talking her through each intense contraction. When she came out she went back to the bed, to a hands and knees position on the ball, to continue to labor in as optimal position as possible. At this point, Rachel was really vocalizing on her contractions. She would moan with each exhale. And at the peaks of each contraction she would change to quick breathing/panting to get over the intense hump. Michael and I continued to massage her, encourage her, focus her breathing. She was a birthing warrior! Rachel was contemplating an epidural at this point, but it hadn’t been much more than an hour since her last cervical exam. We decided to set the goal to make it to the 2 hour point since last exam (12:30), get an check then, if things were in her favor (5cm or better) then she would order that epidural.

Those 45 minutes of really tough contractions proved again how strong Rachel was. We knew it hurt, and she was working hard. At the 12:30 check, nurse Gina reported she was indeed 5cm and 90%. Awesome place for an epidural. At this point, it’s a downward slope, epidurals aren’t likely to slow down labor progress, and Rachel felt confident that an epidural was the best choice for her now. It took about 45 minutes for the anesthesiologist to get there and get everything set for the epidural, and those contractions continued to be tough. Rachel was moaning and almost grunting with contractions (a sign we love to hear as doulas, grunting is early pushing, and early pushing is a response to the end of transitional labor). The epidural kicked in, and Rachel felt more and more relief with each contraction, but also, a lot of pressure in her bottom. Dr. Yium checked her again after the epidural at 1:30, and she was completely dilated and at a +1 station. I think she actually made it to/through transition on her own, and the epidural just helped her relax and let her body get to the finish line. It also gave her the opportunity to get a quick hour of rest before she could start pushing.

This was actually the first time Rachel had ever lied down in labor. To take a quick nap. She really did her diligence on using gravity and position changes to make her labor progress efficiently. I think that’s the key to success with any induction – stay out of bed. Rachel rocked it.

She started pushing around 3pm, with her baby at a +2. With one test push, nurse Gina immediately knew that Rachel was a good pusher. We got the mirror set up for Rachel so that she could watch and see how she was moving her baby, so that she could know what kind of bearing down was the most powerful for her. She did great, it wasn’t long before we saw baby’s head, and then baby’s head stayed on her perineum without sneaking back up. Dr. Yium was watching baby’s heart rate – it was below 100, which is concerning, and it wasn’t really recovering between contractions to the 140s where she would like it. But she was calm and collected. She said, we could do an episiotomy, or forceps, if we had to, but right now let’s just chill out. I think those word were the motivation Rachel needed to really give it her most on the next few contractions, because that baby was crowning within the next few pushes. Props to Dr. Yium too for being totally laid back and awesome and not all snip happy and rushed to get that baby out. Rachel gave one last big push and the baby’s head literally popped out, enough to startle Michael who jumped up and then startled the rest of us. It was exciting. Shoulders and body slipped out, and baby Nina was placed on her mamas chest at 4:06 pm. She was a little blueish, so the nurses bused her over to the warmer to stimulate her a little more aggressively, and she pinked up immediately and let out a wail. Michael and Rachel both welled up to hear their baby’s first cry, and felt immediate relief and joy that their daughter was here, safe and sound. Nina was returned to her mama, and was wide eyed, bobbing at the breast, and making sucking motions. We were all impressed with how alert she was. Her eyes were wide open pools and she would just gaze at her mom and dad as she nursed (which she did expertly right from the start).

Although it may not have been the labor she had dreamed of when she created her birth plan, I think Rachel was very happy with the results. The two line items she had on her birth plan were 1. Healthy Baby and 2. No cesarean. Done and done. And efficiently so. And with a lot of love. And joy. Welcome baby Nina. You are loved.

It’s Austin Area Birth Center’s 25th Anniversary!

March 20th, 2012 by Ame

Bring your dancing shoes to help us celebrate a quarter-century of happy moms and healthy babies!

Sunday, April 1st, 2012 1 – 5 p.m. AABC North Location

Less than 2 weeks remain before our 25th birthday blowout! Come join us at our north location (4100 Duval Rd.) for a fun-filled trip down memory lane. Get down to funky motown favorites courtesy of Austin’s own Matchmaker Band. For the pint-sized crowd, we will have balloon animals, clowns, face-painting, and train rides…and let’s not forget about the free food! We want to thank you for being a part of the AABC family and for helping us reach this amazing milestone. We look forward to seeing you there!

The Most Scientific Birth Is Often the Least Technological Birth

March 20th, 2012 by Ame

Being a scientist I loved reading this article that talks about the differences in science and evidence based medicine and technology.  Enjoy.

http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2012/03/the-most-scientific-birth-is-often-the-least-technological-birth/254420/2/

If you look at scientific literature, you find over and over again that many interventions increase risk to mother and child instead of decreasing it.

Kenishirotie/Shutterstock

When I ask my medical students to describe their image of a woman who elects to birth with a midwife rather than with an obstetrician, they generally describe a woman who wears long cotton skirts, braids her hair, eats only organic vegan food, does yoga, and maybe drives a VW microbus. What they don’t envision is the omnivorous, pants-wearing science geek standing before them.

Indeed, they become downright confused when I go on to explain that there was really only one reason why my mate — an academic internist — and I decided to ditch our obstetrician and move to a midwife: Our midwife could be trusted to be scientific, whereas our obstetrician could not.

Many medical students, like most American patients, confuse science and technology. They think that what it means to be a scientific doctor is to bring to bear the maximum amount of technology on any given patient. And this makes them dangerous. In fact, if you look at scientific studies of birth, you find over and over again that many technological interventions increase risk to the mother and child rather than decreasing it.

But most birthing women don’t seem to know this, even if their obstetricians do. Paradoxically, these women seem to want the same thing I wanted: a safe outcome for mother and child. But no one seems to tell them what the data indicate is the best way to get there. The friend who dares to offer half a glass of wine is seen as guilty of reckless endangerment, whereas the obstetrician offering unnecessary and risky procedures is considered heroic.

Ethicists talk about birthing choices as if they are informed and autonomous, but I can’t count how many women have said to me they “chose” pain meds during birth even though they were never told the risks.

When I was pregnant, in 2000, and my mate and I consulted the scientific medical literature to find out how to maximize safety for me and our child, here’s what we learned from the studies available: I should walk a lot during my pregnancy, and also walk around during my labor; doing so would decrease labor time and pain. During pregnancy, I should get regular check-ups of my weight, urine, blood pressure, and belly growth, but should avoid vaginal exams. I should not bother with a prenatal sonogram if my pregnancy continued to be low-risk, because doing so would be extremely unlikely to improve my or my baby’s health, and could well result in further tests that increased risk to us without benefit.

According to the best studies available, when it came time to birth at the end of my low-risk pregnancy, I should not have induction, nor an episiotomy, nor continuous monitoring of the baby’s heartbeat during labor, nor pain medications, and definitely not a c-section. I should give birth in the squatting position, and I should have a doula — a professional labor support person to talk to me throughout the birth. (Studies show that doulas are astonishingly effective at lowering risk, so good that one obstetrician has quipped that if doulas were a drug, it would be illegal not to give one to every pregnant woman.)

In other words, if the regular low-tech tests kept indicating I was having a medically uninteresting pregnancy, and if I wanted to scientifically maximize safety, I should give birth pretty much like my great-grandmothers would have: with the attention of a couple of experienced women mostly waiting it out, while I did the work. (They called it labor for a reason.) The only real notable difference was that my midwife would intermittently use a fetal heart monitor — just every now and then — to make sure the baby was doing okay.

My obstetrician and his practice had made clear that they were rather uncomfortable with this kind of “old-fashioned” birth. So we left, and engaged a midwife who was committed to being much more modern. And the birth I had was pretty much as I have described. Yes, it hurt, but my doula and midwife had prepared me mentally for that, assuring me that this kind of special pain did not have to result in fear or harm.

We did end up with one technological intervention: because my son had meconium in his fluid (this means he’d defecated in the womb), the midwife explained to me that right after birth, the pediatricians would be scooping him up to suck out his trachea (his windpipe). The idea was to prevent pneumonia. They did this, and three months later over breakfast my husband presented me the results of a randomized control trial that had just come out: it showed that babies in this situation who only had their mouths and not their tracheas cleaned actually had lower rates of pneumonia compared to those who got the tracheal intervention. Another intervention that turned out not to be worth it.

So why is it that, over a decade later, when the evidence still supports a low-interventionist type of pregnancy and birth management for low-risk cases, we’ve made virtually no inroads to making birth more scientific in the United States.

I put that question to a few scholars who work on this issue. One of them, Libby Bogdan-Lovis of the Center for Ethics and Humanities in the Life Sciences at Michigan State University, happens also to have been my doula. (Lucky me.) Libby noted that a big part of the problem is the way birth is conceived in America — as “dangerous, risky, and in need of control to ensure a good outcome.”

Libby pointed out that institutional strictures contribute to the problem: “Insurance companies generally cover hospital birth, not home birth, they are more inclined to compensate doctors over midwives, they compensate doctors and hospital-based midwives for doing something over doing nothing, and the health care system’s risk management approach backs those who can demonstrate that they did everything possible in terms of intervention.” All this in spite of the fact that, as Libby notes, “attempts to control birth are fraught with real medicalized risk and commonly lead to cascades of interventions.”

Raymond De Vries, a sociologist in the University of Michigan’s Center for Bioethics and Social Science in Medicine, has compared birth in the U.S. to that in the Netherlands, where he is a visiting professor at the University of Maastricht. He finds that, in the U.S., “obstetricians are the experts and the experts have come to see birth as dangerous and frightening.” De Vries suggests that the organization of maternity care in this country — “the limited choices that American women have for bringing their baby into the world, what women are not told about dangers of intervening in birth, and the misuse of science to support the new technologies of birth” — actually constitutes an ethical problem, although we typically do not recognize it as one. Medical ethicists “would rather look to the [comparatively rare] problems of in vitro fertilization and preimplantation genetic diagnosis than to the every day issues of how we organize birth here in the U.S.; they would rather talk about preserving women’s ‘choices’ than to explore how those choices are bent by culture.”

So true. Ethicists love to talk about women’s birthing choices as if they are informed and autonomous, but I can’t count how many women have said to me that they “chose” pain medication during birth even though they were never told the risks of pain medication, never had anyone express confidence in them that they could birth without medication, and were never offered a doula to walk and talk them through the pain. What kind of “choice” is that? As Libby Bogdan-Lovis told me, “Today’s average childbearing woman thinks the notion of an unmedicated birth is the equivalent of suggesting that women should eagerly embrace torture.”

If I wanted to maximize safety, I should give birth like my grandmothers would have: with the attention of a couple of experienced women mostly waiting it out, while I did the work.

I think of all the choices I made, the one that shocked my peers most was not getting a prenatal ultrasound. But just a few years before I became pregnant, a major U.S. study – involving over 15,000 pregnancies — published in the New England Journal of Medicineshowed that routine ultrasounds did not leave babies safer. That work was led by Bernard Ewigman, now chair of family medicine at the University of Chicago and NorthShore University Health System.

I recently called Dr. Ewigman and asked him why so many low-risk pregnancies now involve routine ultrasounds. He suggested that it was partly emotional — people like to “see” their babies — and partly due to the unsubstantiated belief that knowing something is necessarily going to lead to better outcomes than not knowing. But, he agreed, routine prenatal sonograms in low-risk pregnancies (that is, pregnancies in which there have been no problems) do not appear to be supported by science, if the outcome you’re seeking is reducing illness and death in mothers and children. Routine prenatal sonograms don’t seem to be dangerous, but they are also not health-giving.

Dr. Ewigman told me, “The approach you took to your pregnancy was rational and well informed. But most decision-making when it comes to medical issues involving a pregnant woman or baby are not well informed and not based on rational thinking.” He added: “We’re all very interested in having healthy babies and it is pretty easy to make the kind of cognitive errors that people make, and attribute to technology benefits that don’t exist. At the same time, when there are problems in a pregnancy, that very same technology can be life-saving. It is easy to make the [problematic mental] leap that technology is always going to be necessary for a good outcome.”

Dr. Ewigman and I talked about how some people derive false certainty from prenatal sonograms, thinking that if the clinicians see nothing unusual, the baby will be born perfectly healthy. I explained to him that that was one reason I didn’t bother; I knew from my own research on birth anomalies how often sonograms mislead. He observed that our culture has “a real fascination with technology, and we also have a strong desire to deny death. And the technological aspects of medicine really market well to that kind of culture.” Whereas a low-interventionist approach to medical care — no matter how scientific — does not.

I’m not against taking into account, when making birthing choices, the kinds of hard-to-measure outcomes that may matter deeply to some pregnant women. I get that there are some women who don’t want a baby shower like mine, where most of the gifts consist of yellow and green baby clothes, instead of pink or blue. I get that some want to have those fuzzy pictures of the babies in their wombs. I get that some might want to abort if a sonogram were to show a major anomaly.

And I get that some women want a particular experience of birth — I mean, I really get that now that I have had a birth that left me feeling more powerful, more humble, more focused, and more devoted to my lover than I ever thought I could feel.

But I wish American women were told the truth about birth — the truth about their bodies, their abilities, and the dangers of technology. Mostly I wish all pregnant women could hear what Libby Bogdan-Lovis, my doula, told me: “Birthing a baby requires the same relinquishing of control as does sex — abandoning oneself to the overwhelming sensation and doing so in a protective and supportive environment.” If only more women knew how sexy a scientific birth can be.

ALICE DREGER – Alice Dreger is a professor of clinical medical humanities and bioethics at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine. She has written for The New York TimesThe Wall Street Journal, and The Washington Post.

The Get Babied Foundation and Baby Earth would like to invite you to join us at the ParentU Spring Spaaahh Fest!

March 20th, 2012 by Ame

The Get Babied Foundation and Baby Earth would like to invite you to join us at the ParentU Spring Spaaahh Fest!

Vendor Booth and Sponsorship Opportunity

Get Babied! Austin’s only on-call doula collective together with Baby Earth and the Get Babied Foundation, would like to invite you to participate in our Spring Spaaahh Fest. ParentU is our newest series of low cost classes in which guest speakers and teachers will cover a variety of different topics from cloth diapering to sleep issues. ParentU targets and is designed to reach parents all across the spectrum, from expectant to experienced, anyone seeking out new information.

Participating in our Spring Fest is a great way to reach your target market! Our website has thousands of hits and we have worked with hundreds of families in the greater Austin area, all of whom will be invited to our Spring Fest and to participate in ParentU! At our last event we had more than 300 families attend, and many more were reached with our posters and social networking campaigns. This Spring we hope to see more families out, as the event will be bigger and better with BabyEarth on board as our co-sponsor. We encourage participants to incorporate a pampering spa experience or goody as part of their booth.

The Spring Fest will be on May 12, 2012. From 10 AM until 3 PM. Set up will begin at 8:30 AM and breakdown should be completed by 4:30 PM. Booths will all be uniform in size and all outdoors, approximately 10×10 in size. Booth locations will be assigned on a first come first served basis. Vendors must provide their own tables, chairs and tents/canopies. Please let us know if you will need access to electricity.

For more information about Get Babied or the Get Babied Foundation, please visit www.getbabied.com or email jenni@getbabied.com for more information regarding the Spring Spaaahh Fest!

Online registration is available now: here

Booth fees and auction proceeds will benefit the Get Babied Foundation-a TX non-profit and fees paid and the value of items donated may be tax deductible.

The Get Babied Foundation is dedicated to empowering women by offering scholarships for childbirth classes and doulas for labor support. Every Woman Deserves a Doula!

2012 Sponsorship Opportunitity

Vendor Booth, “Schwag Bag” AND Website Sponsor $75.00
-Display space
-Banner display
-Listing as a vendor at the event on all marketing and on the website.
-Opportunity to contribute a flier with coupon or other gift item for our
“schwag bags” to be distributed to all attendees
-A clickable banner on the website displaying your logo and click through
to your website.

$25 discount to any vendors donating prizes to our raffle and silent auction. Please use discount code Spring 2012 to reduce your booth fee if you plan to donate.

Discounts will be given to vendors who opt to donate refreshments and/or a prize for our raffle and/or silent auction.

Is Home birth safe? Heart of Texas Midwives think so.

March 19th, 2012 by Ame

Heart of Texas Midwives
www.HeartofTexasMidwives.com

Statistics from 12-20-2003 to 12-21-2011

# %

Total clients served >20wks 314

Prenatal Transfers 26 8.3 % 4 hypertension, 3 gest. Diabetes, 3 > 42wks,
7 breech, 4 elective, 1 birth defect, 1 low
amniotic fluid, 1 abruption@27 wks→hosp
birth @ 32 wks., 1 > 10lb baby, 1 psycho-social.

Total Labors at Home 287 91.4 %

Successful Home Births 254 88.5 % 88+% of those laboring at home
delivered at home.

Transfers from home in labor 33 11.4 % 16 in-hospital vaginal & 17 cesareans births
all non-emergent, transferred by private car:
25 prolonged labor, 2 pain medication,
4 premature labors, 1 breech, & 1 thick
meconium

Newborn Transfers after homebirth 10 3.4 % 1 meconium aspiration, 1 jaundice,
5 persistent tachypnea, 1 viral infection @
7d & 1 narrow nares and minor respiratory
distress. All < 3day stay. Cesarean Births 27 8.5 % Includes both in labor & prenatal transfers, all non emergent, National C/S rate > 32% (a 53%↑since 1996).

Premature Births < 36 weeks with labor 4 1.27 % 3 healthy babies @ 35 wks w/o NICU stay
1 baby @30 3/7 wks with NICU stay
(National premie rate 12.5%, Texas premie
rate 13.1%).

Apgar < 7 at 5 minutes 0 includes all home births Episiotomy 1 for fetal bradycardia Post Partum Hospital Admissions 6 1.9% 2 repair of >3rd
laceration, 1 hemorrhage,
after home birth 1 retained placental succenturate lobe w/o
hemorrhage, 2 retained placenta requiring
manual removal. None required overnight
stay. No transfusions. No PP infection
requiring transfer or hospitalization.

Breastfeeding at 6 wks >97%

Deaths 0 no stillbirth, maternal, or newborn death

“Birth is as safe as life gets.” Sister Angela Murdaugh CNM, RN

12/2 Get Diapered! Cloth Diapering 101

March 19th, 2012 by victorea

Sunday December 2, 2012 – Sunday December 2, 2012

View MapMap and Directions | Register

Description:

Everything you need to know to get started cloth diapering.  Participants will get to see and touch many types of cloth diapers.  Contact Victoria at victoriaoneal at gmail if you have any questions.

Register