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Dynamic Positions in Birth - A Fresh Look at How Women's Bodies Work in Labour (Paperback, 2nd revised and updated edition)
Loot Price: R443
Discovery Miles 4 430
You Save: R29
(6%)
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Dynamic Positions in Birth - A Fresh Look at How Women's Bodies Work in Labour (Paperback, 2nd revised and updated edition)
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List price R472
Loot Price R443
Discovery Miles 4 430
You Save R29 (6%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Most women give birth in hospitals, institutions modelled around
the needs of the people who work there. The delivery room is
designed around the obstetric bed which was designed for the
benefit of the obstetrician rather than the woman giving birth.
Despite research showing the benefit of upright positions in labour
and birth, most women in the UK still give birth in the
semi-reclined position, pushing their baby out against the forces
of gravity. Jowitt argues that unnatural positions make labour and
birth more painful and difficult for modern women than it was for
their ancestors. How did we come to put the needs of care givers
above those of the labouring woman? Is there anything that can be
done? Starting with a short history of birth furniture, Dynamic
Positions in Birth goes on to explore the anatomy and physiology of
labour from an evolutionary perspective. This updated edition
expands Jowitt's new biomechanical model of how the uterus works
first published in the British Journal of Obstetrics and
Gynaecology in 2018 which has profound implications for giving
mothers freedom of movement in labour and birth. It explores how
rethinking positions for labour and birth could benefit mothers and
their babies. Equally important is the need to change attitudes to
birth so that women are encouraged to play a more active part in
the birth of their babies instead of being subjected to clinical
interventions designed to mitigate the adverse effects of labouring
in a starkly unnatural environment. Jowitt argues that it is
possible to give women labouring in hospital a better chance of
giving birth naturally. The book concludes by calling for a fresh
look at the environment for birth. Delivery rooms can be made more
user friendly by introducing furniture designed around women's need
for physical support during labour as well as for the birth, and by
hiding away the more alarming technology unless it is needed. Women
need a less forbidding environment and more encouragement to move
freely and adopt positions which will enhance their chance of
achieving a normal birth.
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