Friday, May 10, 2013

About Pregnancy & Childbirth: Great Tool for Moms-to-Be

About Pregnancy & Childbirth
Pregnancy & Childbirth
Great Tool for Moms-to-Be
May 10th 2013, 12:19

Text 4 Baby Happy Mother's Day

If you haven't yet signed up for Text4Baby, check out this free text messaging service. It's available in English and Spanish. It is designed to provide you with healthy reminders via text message for you and baby from pregnancy through baby's first year. This Mother's Day, give you and baby this free treat!

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Great Tool for Moms-to-Be originally appeared on About.com Pregnancy & Childbirth on Friday, May 10th, 2013 at 12:19:01.

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Thursday, May 9, 2013

About Pregnancy & Childbirth: Top Baby Names

About Pregnancy & Childbirth
Pregnancy & Childbirth
Top Baby Names
May 9th 2013, 19:10

Sleeping Newborn Baby

The Social Security Administration (SSA) releases the top baby names from the birth certificate data. It's always neat to look at it overall, but there is also the interesting part of looking at it from year to year and state to state. A name that might be in the top ten overall, might not be a popular name in your state and vice versa.

Here are the top ten baby names for boys:

  1. Jacob
  2. Mason
  3. Ethan
  4. Noah
  5. William
  6. Liam
  7. Jayden
  8. Michael
  9. Alexander
  10. Aiden

For girls:

  1. Sophia
  2. Emma
  3. Isabella
  4. Olivia
  5. Ava
  6. Emily
  7. Abigail
  8. Mia
  9. Madison
  10. Elizabeth

How do lists like these influence your baby naming, positively or negatively?

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Top Baby Names originally appeared on About.com Pregnancy & Childbirth on Thursday, May 9th, 2013 at 19:10:06.

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About Pregnancy & Childbirth: Pitocin Puts Healthy Full Term Babies at Risk

About Pregnancy & Childbirth
Pregnancy & Childbirth
Pitocin Puts Healthy Full Term Babies at Risk
May 9th 2013, 08:51

Pitocin

This isn't news to most people who work with laboring women with any frequency, but at a poster presentation this week at the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists' (ACOG) meeting, these were the findings that were reported. When the study looked at over 3,000 full term newborns who had had either a Pitocin induction or an augmentation. Induction with Pitocin was more likely to see a newborn spend more than 24 hours in the neonatal intensive care (NICU) and augmentation, or the speeding up of labor was seen to have infants with lower APGAR scores (newborn assessment).

While we have looked at the risks of Pitocin in labor for moms, it's never before been studied from the point of view of risk to the baby. (Yes, you read that right.)  What is problematic is that 23% of labors are started with Pitocin according to the CDC, that number climbs higher if you talk to moms. While there has been a crack down on deliveries that are elective and done prior to 39 weeks, that's not all inductions. Many are still done before the completion of 42 weeks, which is the deadline recommended by ACOG. This means that many babies are potentially at risk for these complications.

So, what's a mom to do?  Start with asking why an induction of labor is being suggested. Could you wait a few days to see if labor starts on its own? What other options do you have for induction, if waiting isn't the best option? Ask what the risks are to you and baby.  Then ask for time alone to discuss your options and make a decision.

Related:

Tuesday Poster #74: Oxytocin Usage for Labor Induction or Augmentation and Adverse Neonatal Outcomes

Photo © REW

Pitocin Puts Healthy Full Term Babies at Risk originally appeared on About.com Pregnancy & Childbirth on Thursday, May 9th, 2013 at 08:51:07.

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Wednesday, May 8, 2013

About Pregnancy & Childbirth: Cleaning Pacifiers with Your Mouth

About Pregnancy & Childbirth
Pregnancy & Childbirth
Cleaning Pacifiers with Your Mouth
May 8th 2013, 12:43

Pacifier

When it comes to having a baby, let's just say that there is what you expect to do as a parent and reality.  I think this news falls into the reality category. You have a crying baby and the pacifier falls... You pray as you watch it tumble that it will land handle side down. The slow mo fall ends... not as you would have hoped. You invoke the five second rule and then realize that this strategy might not be good enough, so you... quickly pop the pacifier in your mouth, assuming you're getting the majority of the nasty germs off and then pop it back in baby's mouth, praying no one saw you do it.

Well, the good news is, the saliva in your mouth, according to this small study, may ward off allergies. (That's what we're talking about here folks.) They found that infants who had their pacifiers cleaned with parental saliva had fewer allergies and asthma than parents who didn't. Remember, the message is that we're raising our kids to be too germ free, and that might be potentially more dangerous than a bit of dirt. I always think of my grandmother's often heard adage: You have to eat a peck of dirt before you die.

So, will you or won't you?

Source:

Hesselmar, Bill, Sjöberg, Fei, Saalman, Robert, Åberg, Nils, Adlerberth, Ingegerd, & Wold, Agnes E. (2013). Pacifier Cleaning Practices and Risk of Allergy Development. Pediatrics. doi: 10.1542/peds.2012-3345

Photo © Monika Ribbe/Getty Images

Cleaning Pacifiers with Your Mouth originally appeared on About.com Pregnancy & Childbirth on Wednesday, May 8th, 2013 at 12:43:21.

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About Pregnancy & Childbirth: Very Few Moms Request Cesareans

About Pregnancy & Childbirth
Pregnancy & Childbirth
Very Few Moms Request Cesareans
May 8th 2013, 11:53

Cesarean Birth Baby

I'm seeing a lot of news articles recently about cesarean birth, particularly in regards to mothers who request a c-section without having a medical need for one prior to labor.  Childbirth Connection, in Listening to Mothers II found it to be about 1% and an article released from the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) believes it to be about 3%.  Still, I think many media outlets make it seem like it is a much higher number than either of these numbers.

That said, the recommendations have been to carefully counsel and consider the ramifications for both the mother and the baby as well as futures pregnancies. A cesarean is not a risk free surgery, just as vaginal birth is not risk free. But there are different risks that go along with the surgery that can include complications to future pregnancies, including placenta previa or accreta. One mother just died earlier this week giving birth to her sixth child. It is important that all of this is throughly discussed and explained, not glossed over. There are times when the risks of a cesarean birth are the best choice for a specific family. But the take away message should be that few of these requests are really being made, compared to what you might be lead to believe in the media.

What do you think your doctor or midwife should ask if you were to make this type of request?

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Very Few Moms Request Cesareans originally appeared on About.com Pregnancy & Childbirth on Wednesday, May 8th, 2013 at 11:53:42.

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Tuesday, May 7, 2013

About Pregnancy & Childbirth: Wear Your Seat Belt When Pregnant

About Pregnancy & Childbirth
Pregnancy & Childbirth
Wear Your Seat Belt When Pregnant
May 7th 2013, 11:15

Man Takes Pregnant Woman to the Hospital to Have a Baby by Car

Yesterday, the headlines where I live included the death of a woman who was 27 weeks pregnant. She had been ejected from the car during a crash. She was laying in the back, sleeping at the time. My heart is broken for this family. Not only is her life lost, but that of her baby as well.

While I try to make it a habit not to read the comments of the local paper (Who needs that stress?), I did catch a few comments that really shocked me. Many were from women who talked about how awful seat belts were. They complained about how they were uncomfortable and tight. A few openly admitted to not wearing them at all. This was jaw dropping for me. It simply never occurred to me that pregnant women, who normally wore seat belts, would stop in pregnancy.

So here's my public service announcement: Wear your seat belt, even when pregnant. Wear it low, under your belly, but wear it. It's supposed to fit snuggly, not loosely.

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Photo © Getty Images/Bernd Opitz

Wear Your Seat Belt When Pregnant originally appeared on About.com Pregnancy & Childbirth on Tuesday, May 7th, 2013 at 11:15:48.

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Monday, May 6, 2013

About Pregnancy & Childbirth: Negative Pregnancy Tests

About Pregnancy & Childbirth
Pregnancy & Childbirth
Negative Pregnancy Tests
May 6th 2013, 10:06

Negative and Positive Pregnancy Tests

The vast majority of moms here are hoping for a positive pregnancy test. The truth of the matter is, you are also likely to experience at least one cycle where you have a negative pregnancy test. So how will you react?  The response you have might really surprise you. I know that I was surprised in a variety ways many times when I got a negative test result.

Some of my reaction had to do with factors like:

  • How long I'd been trying
  • How sure I was I'd hit the timing target
  • Just a gut feeling

What alters how you react? Did you have any of these feelings when your test was negative?

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Negative Pregnancy Tests originally appeared on About.com Pregnancy & Childbirth on Monday, May 6th, 2013 at 10:06:57.

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