Postpartum haemorrhage is a complication that can happen in any birth setting, although it’s more likely in a hospital. Despite the universal application of “active management” as a prevention, the rate of haemorrhage due to uterine atony has been steadily climbing in developed nations.
“Active management of the 3rd stage”, is an intervention for the birth of the placenta, the time when women are most likely to lose a significant amount of blood. It involves injecting the mother with a uterotonic (something to make the uterus contract), usually synthetic oxytocin, as soon as the baby is born, and it may include some other steps like early cord clamping or pulling on the umbilical cord depending on the protocol used. This intervention is applied to all birthing women in all hospitals, birth centres, and homes with few exceptions.
You’d think if every mother everywhere gets this injection, then it must be a good thing. Well, that’s the thing about obstetrics. It tends to take an intervention that might be suitable for some clients in certain situations and applies it to everyone. And the results are increasingly worrisome.
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Postpartum haemorrhage is a complication that can happen in any birth setting, although it’s more likely in a hospital. Despite the universal application of “active management” as a prevention, the rate of haemorrhage due to uterine atony has been steadily climbing in developed nations.
“Active management of the 3rd stage”, is an intervention for the birth of the placenta, the time when women are most likely to lose a significant amount of blood. It involves injecting the mother with a uterotonic (something to make the uterus contract), usually synthetic oxytocin, as soon as the baby is born, and it may include some other steps like early cord clamping or pulling on the umbilical cord depending on the protocol used. This intervention is applied to all birthing women in all hospitals, birth centres, and homes with few exceptions.
You’d think if every mother everywhere gets this injection, then it must be a good thing. Well, that’s the thing about obstetrics. It tends to take an intervention that might be suitable for some clients in certain situations and applies it to everyone. And the results are increasingly worrisome.
Read more
Everyone has an intellectual/mental/emotional operating system – a personal paradigm that serves as a frame of reference containing basic assumptions and ways of thinking. This personal paradigm is the means by which we make sense of the world around us. It helps us to filter, understand, and categorise information and experiences. It helps us to know what is “true” and what isn’t; it guides our responses and our actions.
Humans are designed to be in connection with each other. We operate mostly unconsciously through hormones, synapses, and other magical pathways. Our primary operating system is our para-sympathetic nervous system – our “calm and connected” system. This part of our autonomic nervous system keeps our hearts beating, our lungs breathing, and our food digesting. The main hormone of this system is oxytocin – the hormone of love, trust, bonding, and connection. This is why isolation is so effective at crushing and changing people, and why friends and loved ones can heal and nurture new ideas.
Personal paradigms, once settled and serving us reasonably well are most likely to be changed by 2 things: Great Suffering or Great Love.
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