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If I had to name three books expectant parents should read, this
would be one of them.
"Donald Creevy, M.D. Professor of Obstetrics "
In this country one in four women--750,000 each year--undergo
cesarean sections. Most suffer pain and disappointment . . . and
search out ways to aviod the experience again. Filled with
authoritative and practical information, this book points the way
toward safe and positive vaginal delivery for both first-time and
post-cesarean parents.
"The Expectant Parent's Guide to Preventing a Cesarean Section"
details the full consequences of unnecessary cesareans--physical
trauma to mother and baby, maternal-infant separation, increased
risk of maternal illness and death, and greater difficulty in
breastfeeding. Step-by-step procedures provide a compassionate,
well-researched plan for cesarean prevention. You will learn
exactly what safeguards to take during pregnancy and how to use the
author's highly successful guided imagery techniques.
I recently found out something about my daughter that as a father I
should have known. As the father I believed myself to be I should
have found out. It's not important what I found out what is
important is that I realized that as close as I felt I was to my
daughter there were somethings I did not know. I discovered other
fathers in my cohort felt the same way. I am not saying that
fathers should snoop. Frankly, the answers to some of these
questions simply come from having a conversation with our
daughters. Conversation not inquisition As fathers we know that one
day we are rocking her to sleep while watching Elmo on, the next
moment she is trying to get us to watch Lifetime, or is it Oprah?
It is our hope that as time passes and you both get older and wiser
that missed time does not translate into missed opportunities, and
that this book will ensure that your little princess never turns
into a stranger, or you to her. She would love to tell you if you
would just ask. Perhaps she has already told you but you were not
listening. I thank God for putting this book in my heart. I pray
and hope that this book finds its way into other father's hands so
that they will know
If I had to name three books expectant parents should read, this
would be one of them.
"Donald Creevy, M.D. Professor of Obstetrics "
In this country one in four women--750,000 each year--undergo
cesarean sections. Most suffer pain and disappointment . . . and
search out ways to aviod the experience again. Filled with
authoritative and practical information, this book points the way
toward safe and positive vaginal delivery for both first-time and
post-cesarean parents.
"The Expectant Parent's Guide to Preventing a Cesarean Section"
details the full consequences of unnecessary cesareans--physical
trauma to mother and baby, maternal-infant separation, increased
risk of maternal illness and death, and greater difficulty in
breastfeeding. Step-by-step procedures provide a compassionate,
well-researched plan for cesarean prevention. You will learn
exactly what safeguards to take during pregnancy and how to use the
author's highly successful guided imagery techniques.
Sharing Birth is excellent. . . .There isn't a pregnant father
anywhere who would not benefit from reading, or even just skimming,
this book. All you pregnant mothers out there, don't wait for your
husband to discover, purchase, and read this book. Get it yourself
and give it to him. You'll be glad you did. And he will be glad you
did, also. David Stewart, Ph.D., NAPSAC International Give the
expectant father you know a copy of Sharing Birth. It will give him
the information he needs to be prepared for that event whether it
takes place at home, in the hospital, or in a birth center. And for
that his wife, his baby, and he will thank you! Marian Thompson, La
Leche League International This classic, step-by-step guide for
anyone planning to help a woman through labor shows precisely what
to do to reduce the mother's fear and pain during labor, support
her through childbirth, and help her during the first days after
the baby is born, enhancing parent-infant bonding as well as
reducing the chance of postpartum blues. Sharing Birth gives the
father the confidence to take an active part in this miracle, the
birth of a child.
In his breakthrough book, Jones introduces a new, highly effective
method of childbirth preparation using mental imagery. He shows
expectant parents how to prevent the pain and fear associated with
childbirth.
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