Thursday, December 25, 2008

Easy Labor or Pushed

Easy Labor: Every Woman's Guide to Choosing Less Pain and More Joy During Childbirth

Author: William Camann

THE FIRST COMPLETE, COMPREHENSIVE GUIDE TO PAIN RELIEF DURING LABOR AND DELIVERY

Far too many expectant mothers find themselves unprepared when labor begins and natural techniques don't effectively manage the pain. This indispensable guide provides reassuring, proven approaches to combining medical and natural techniques to ensure the most comfortable pain-free labor possible. In Easy Labor, you'll discover

• what to expect during labor, and key factors that affect your comfort
• the facts on epidurals, safety concerns, and how effectively they reduce pain
• the pros and cons of pain-relief medications
• complementary and alternative methods, including water immersion, acupuncture, hypnosis, massage, and birth balls
• how your choice of hospital or birth center affects your pain-management options
• techniques to calm and eliminate the specific fears and stresses associated with childbirth

So relax and enjoy your pregnancy, with this important book by your side!

Library Journal

Camann (anesthesia, Harvard Medical Sch.; director of obstetric anesthesia, Brigham and Women's Hosp.) and Alexander, a frequent contributor to parenting and healthcare publications, present a guide to the birth experience in general and, more specifically, to pain relief during childbirth. Recognizing that most women who give birth consider the process to be beautiful and joyful yet also perhaps the most painful event of their lives, the authors detail the options available to make the process easier-possibly even pain-free. They provide a thorough discussion of pain management approaches; document the latest and most effective pharmacological interventions (e.g., advanced epidurals, spinals); and devote substantial sections to alternative methodologies (e.g., Lamaze, water birth, hypnosis). But it is the inclusion of opinions and personal birth stories by mothers and caregiver professionals that gives this book a meaningful touch that is certain to speak to expectant mothers. Considerably newer than Sanjay Datta's Childbirth and Pain Relief: An Anesthesiologist Explains Your Options (2001) and even more up-to-date than Glade B. Curtis and Judith Schuler's Your Pregnancy Quick Guide: Labor and Delivery (2004), this resource is enthusiastically recommended for consumer health collections.-Linda M.G. Katz, Drexel Univ. Health Sciences Libs., Philadelphia Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.



Interesting book:

Pushed: The Painful Truth About Childbirth and Modern Maternity Care

Author: Jennifer Block

A groundbreaking narrative investigation of childbirth in the age of machines, malpractice, and managed care, Pushed presents the complete picture of maternity care in America. From inside the operating room of a hospital with a 44% Cesarean rate to the living room floor of a woman who gives birth with an illegal midwife, Block exposes a system in which few women have an optimal experience. Pushed surveys the public health impact of routine labor inductions, C-sections, and epidurals, but also examines childbirth as a women’s rights issue: Do women even have the right to choose a normal birth? Is that right being upheld? A wake-up call for our times, Block’s gripping research reveals that while emergency obstetric care is essential, we are overusing medical technology at the expense of maternal and infant health.

Kansas City Star

This is a worthwhile book for anyone who cares about reforming our health-care system-right from the start.

BOLD Book Club

[Block] really gets that maternity care is a woman's issue that all people should care about, not just mothers, and she has no agenda through a birth experience or professional work in maternity care. Pushed shines a spotlight on maternity care and asks important questions about the standard practices in America.

Publishers Weekly

According to writer and editor Block (Our Bodies, Ourselves), "the United States has the most intense and widespread medical management of birth" in the world, and yet "rank[s] near the bottom among industrialized countries in maternal and infant mortality." Block shows how, in transforming childbirth into a business, hospitals have turned "procedures and devices developed for the treatment of abnormality" into routine practice, performed for no reason other than "speeding up and ordering an unpredictable... process"; for instance, the U.S. cesarean section rate tripled in the 1970s and has doubled since then. Block looks into a growing contingent of parents-to-be exploring alternatives to the hospital-and the attendant likelihood of medical intervention-by seeking out birthing centers and options for home birth. Unfortunately, obstacles to these alternatives remain considerable-laws across the U.S. criminalizing or severely restricting the practice of midwifery have led trained care providers to practice underground in many states-while tort reform has done next to nothing to lower malpractice insurance rates or improve hospital birthing policies. This provocative, highly readable exposé raises questions of great consequence for anyone planning to have a baby in the U.S., as well as those interested or involved in women's health care. (June)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

Kirkus Reviews

Some terrible truths about being born in the USA. Were there ever any doubts as to the personal being political, this former editor at Ms. and editor of the revised Our Bodies, Ourselves convincingly lays them to rest in a gripping expose of American obstetrics. With extensive field research and thorough historical contextualization, Block reveals some disturbing statistics in this country's birth management and shows how medical views of birth are as subject to change as the whims of fashion. Current interventionist trends in obstetrician-centered care have yielded the ironic phenomenon of natural childbirth in the U.S. becoming an almost anomalous event. Block shows that, in the United States, "well over half of labors are chemically induced or augmented," and "two-thirds of women have their water broken manually"; two years ago, nearly a third of women gave birth by cesarean section, and of those delivering vaginally, another third had an episiotomy. Yet preterm births are rising, cerebral palsy rates remain constant and "women are 70% more likely to die in childbirth in the United States than in Europe." Why? Because, Block argues, what's deemed safe changes: "In the age of evidence-based medicine . . . care is constrained and determined by liability and financial concerns, by a provider's licensing regulations and malpractice insurance. The evidence often has nothing to do with it." Somewhere along the line, probably when barring midwives from the delivery room came into vogue, the notion that "what's best for women is best for babies" was lost; that message Block hopes to deliver anew to her readers. A provocative and hotly controversial analysis of a side of reproductive rightsfeminism seems to have forgot. Agent: Elizabeth Kaplan/Elizabeth Kaplan Literary Agency



Table of Contents:

Acknowledgments     xi
Preface to the Paperback Edition     xiii
Introduction     xvii
Arranged Birth     1
The Short Cut     45
Denied Birth     73
Consequences     109
Mothers' Helpers     149
Underground     177
Criminalized     213
Rights     249
Appendix A     273
Appendix B     277
Notes     279
Index     301

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