NO BURRARDVIEW DROP IN NEXT WEEK
WEDNESDAY MARCH 21st
NO BURRARDVIEW DROP IN NEXT WEEK
WEDNESDAY MARCH 21st
A teaching video about breastfeeding, mother’s milk, and early contact with the newborn. We see women at ease with their bodies and mothers and babies treated with respect for their skills in nourishing and seeking nourishment. Topics covered in the 45 minute video include: attachment, positioning, sore nipples, blocked ducts, engorgement, mastitis, sleepy babies, increasing milk supply, night feedings, breastfeeding premature infants, pumping and hand expression, breastfeeding twins and toddlers, and the role of support people and prenatal caregivers. Breast is Best was written and directed by obstetrician Gro Nylander, National Coordinator for the Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative in Norway, and produced by the Norwegian Film Institute.
This mainly new version of Breast is Best is revised and extended to also demonstrate e.g the importance of skin-to-skin contact, even in caesarean section, easy feeding at night, step by step feeding cues and latching on, toung-tie, carrying etc. etc.
You may here watch a 7 min. short version. The full version of Breast is Best may be ordered from:
HEALTH-INFO, Video Vital AS, P.O. Box 5058 Majorstua, 0301 Oslo, NORWAY.
HEALTH-INFO@videovital.no
The Childbearing Society is an non-profit society that offers community based prenatal classes in Vancouver, BC, and has operated continuously since 1973. Their classes encourage family centred maternity care, informed decision making and attachment parenting.
I have been an apprentice teacher with the society for over a year now and am now teaching my own solo classes. My next class runs Wednesdays, August 18th to September 29th. To sign up for this or other classes go here.
Childbearing weekly prenatal classes include:
All for $250. A great deal! We also offer weekend workshops, private classes, and breastfeeding clinics.
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I really like these ehow childbirth education videos – especially the one on pain relief.
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Here are some of the babies, whose births I was honoured to be at over the last few months. The births ranged from 3hours to 3days, and I was impressed again and again with the strength, bravery, informed decision making, and trust in birth and in their babies shown by of all the parents.
An article from the Globe and Mail by Carla Wintersgill
Physicians should no longer automatically opt to perform a cesarean section in the case of a breech birth, according to new guidelines by the Society of Obstetricians and Gynecologists of Canada. Released yesterday, the guidelines are a response to new evidence that shows many women are safely able to vaginally deliver babies who enter the birth canal with the buttocks or feet first. Normally, the infant descends head first.“Our primary purpose is to offer choice to women,” said André Lalonde, executive vice-president of the SOGC.
“More women are feeling disappointed when there is no one who is trained to assist in breech vaginal delivery,” he adds. Since 2000, C-sections have been the preferred method of delivery in breech births. Studies suggested that breached births were associated with an increased rate of complication when performed vaginally. As a result, many medical schools have stopped training their physicians in breech vaginal delivery. The problem now, according to Dr. Lalonde, is that there is a serious shortage of doctors to teach and perform these deliveries. With the release of the new guidelines, the SOGC will launch a nationwide training program to ensure that doctors will be adequately prepared to offer vaginal breech births . Continue reading
CBC Radio Podcast
http://podcast.cbc.ca/mp3/whitecoat_20081006_8005.mp3
Dr. Brian Goldman visits a hospital Delivery Room to find the answer to the question that vexes many pregnant women……. why most of their babies will be delivered by a total stranger instead of their own ob-gyn. And he finds out what lengths some Obstetricians will go to, to try to have their patients deliver while they’re on duty.
Another comfort measure tip from my wonderful back up doula Aimee:
Rebozos are a great tool for pregnancy, labour, delivery and parenting. Here Aimée and Jill demonstrate using the rebozo for relieving lower back pain or hip pain prenatally and in labour.
It also helps with the progression of labour as it helps to realign the pelvis in a way that helps the baby wiggle down further which in turn can signal the body to produce more oxytocin (the hormone that tells the muscles of the uterus to contract).
We also demo how to secure the rebozo in the hip squeeze position so that your hands are free for massage, hand holding, or whatever the mom needs. It’s also helpful if the mom wants the hip squeeze *and* wants to be free to walk around. This is my own innovation!
www.AdarBirthServices.com