Between Contractions
Amsy and Stephanie had so many pet peeves to get through that this episode turned into a two-parter. In Part 1, they dig into some of the most common misconceptions, misleading narratives, and outdated practices in birth and postpartum care that they wish people would stop accepting at face value. Pet peeves covered in Part 1: * "The cord was around the neck!" — Nuchal cord is extremely common and almost never the problem it's made out to be. Babies don't breathe through their necks until they're fully born, and the cord continues delivering oxygen even when wrapped around the neck. The Wharton's jelly surrounding the cord acts as a natural cushion against compression. The hosts also call out how nuchal cord is sometimes used after the fact to justify a C-section that may not have been necessary. * Inductions for due dates — Due dates are estimates, not expiration dates. They're calculated from the last menstrual period without accounting for cycle length, ovulation timing, or the actual date of conception — meaning they can be off by a week or more right from the start. Inducing simply because a date has arrived, when the body and baby aren't ready, can mean a long, difficult induction process that parents aren't fully prepared for. * Not eating or drinking in labor — The research does not support restricting food and drink during labor. Labor is an intense metabolic process that requires real nourishment — not a sugar-free popsicle or a cup of low-sodium broth. The hosts point out the irony that hospitals were quick to embrace 39-week induction research but have been slow to act on decades of evidence supporting eating and drinking in labor. * Calling every C-section an "emergency C-section" — The vast majority of C-sections are not emergencies. Planned C-sections for breech or placenta previa, unplanned but non-urgent C-sections for labor stalls, and even relatively quick decisions to pivot to a C-section are not the same as a true emergency — which involves a four-minute delivery window, staff running, and often general anesthesia. Using the word "emergency" for everything both minimizes true emergencies and unnecessarily traumatizes people around births that were, in fact, a considered decision. Evidence On Arrive Trial Article: https://evidencebasedbirth.com/arrive/ [https://evidencebasedbirth.com/arrive/] Amsy Dees - @amsydees.doula // amsydeesdoula.com Stephanie Dawson - @grow.lakeland // growlakeland.com DISCLAMER: The views shared on this podcast are our own and do not represent any specific organization. This podcast is intended for educational and informational purposes only and is not a substitute for medical advice. Please consult your healthcare provider for guidance specific to your care.
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