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Women’s Work

Author: AA Gifts

“A woman’s place is in the house… and in the Senate” is a popular saying that has grown out of the woman’s movement in recent years. Besides expressing a woman’s right to work at any job she is qualified for, it connotes the choices women have today. The luckiest of career women who become mothers are those who can ask three questions: “Should I go back to work or be an at home mother for a few months or a few tears?” “If I decide to go back to work, when is the best time-how long should I wait?” “Should I return to my old job or type of work, or should I move on to something different?” Unfortunately, not every woman has these options; economic necessity frequently forces a mother’s return to her old job the day after whatever maternity leave she is entitled to has ended.

If you are one of the lucky ones who can make choices, and you choose to stay home, you may find yourself having second thoughts about your decision after a few weeks of uninterrupted baby care. On the bad days when everything goes wrong, you may feel hemmed in, trapped, and angry. You may be jealous of your spouse who escapes every day to the adult world. And if you go back to work, either because you want to or because you must, you probably will not be entirely satisfied either. First, you will need to come to terms with the daily separation from your baby, then with the fact that you will almost surely miss some “firsts”-the first time she smiles, or turns over, or says “Mama.” In addition, you may be bothered by another problem common to working women. One who does not feel pressure and guilt as she tries to satisfy her responsibilities as a wife, mother, and worker is indeed a rarity, even if she is able to stay home for several months, or even years, after the baby’s birth. As some have put it, she takes on three full time jobs and tries to do all three part time. A fragmented feeling of being too much needed, of being pulled in several directions at once, seems to go with the territory of being a working mother.

Of course, many mothers go back to work very soon after their babies are born and neither they nor their babies suffer. Most are gone from home eight to ten hours a day. A few manage to work at home, to work part time, or to have the advantage of working under the flexible-hours provisions that some forward-looking companies now offer, but every arrangement has its disadvantages.

However, many of those mothers and most medical professionals recommend that you wait, until you can, until your baby is four to six months old before you return to work for several reasons. One, of course, is the matter of your health, both physical and mental. Your recovery will probably be complete by that time and your baby’s sleeping habits are likely to have become fairly well established. Proper rest, nutrition, and exercise remain essential for you, even though time for them becomes more scarce. And along with the roles of worker, spouse, and parent, you should devote at least some time and attention to your own needs.

Helping Your Baby Stop Crying

Author: AA Gifts

Another of your major responsibilities will be to comfort your baby when she is crying. Crying is especially distressing for new parents, who assume something is dreadfully wrong. However, it is perfectly normal for babies to cry. It gives them a certain amount of exercise, and it is, after all, their only way of letting you know that they need something. The difficulty is to figure out what those needs are. In a newborn, there are only a few things a cry will signify. If the baby is not ill or in pain, hunger, the need for a diaper change [within a few weeks, the baby will become used to the feeling of wetness and a wet diaper will not bother him], and the need to be held and comforted. Infants have a characteristic fussy-sounding cry that often seems to reach a peak when they are about six weeks old and tapers off at about three months.

Babies are individuals. Each will tell you in special ways what he needs from you. Many experienced mothers say they can tell the reasons for their babies crying, saying, for example, that the hunger cry is rhythmic and repetitive, the pain cry is loud and shrill, and the ill cry is continuous, whiny and nasal. As the baby grows, he will have more reasons to complain by means of crying; boredom, frustration, loneliness, fear, over- stimulation, and sometimes the overtiredness that prevents sleep. As you get to know your own child better, you will learn to interpret the reasons for crying.

Occasionally, a baby will cry because he is in pain. One traditional cry of pain is the prick of an open safety pin, largely avoided now by the use of specially designed diaper pins and eliminated completely by the use of disposable diapers that need no pins. Another cause for pain is a raveled thread from the baby’s clothes wrapped tightly enough around a finger or toe to cut off circulation. A baby crying because of sickness will usually have other symptoms of illness, such as a fever, diarrhea, or a runny nose. An earache is indicated by the baby’s pulling on, or attempting to pull on his ear. Generally, a healthy baby will have a strong loud cry. If your baby’s cry becomes abnormally weak, consult your doctor right away.

Sometimes, especially if postpartum depression has you in its grip, you and your baby can get into a joint crying cycle. When the baby cries, you get anxious and nervous. The more the baby cries, the worse you feel, and nothing you do seems to help quiet the baby. The baby senses your feelings; your anxiety in turn, makes the baby anxious and uncomfortable; and the child expresses these feelings by crying even more. You dissolve in tears yourself, and neither of you can seem to stop. One way to help both of you to calm down is to take a warm bath together. The skin contact and the warm liquid environment are soothing and may be all you need. However, if you find yourself getting into these cycles with any regularity, talk with an experienced parent or your doctor.

You’ll find some of the things you do to help your baby stop crying are the same as what you do to help him go to sleep. Most of these are warmth, rhythmic sound, and gentle repetitive motion. These three great comforts can be ideally combined when you cuddle your baby closely as you sing softly to him and you rock together in a cozy, padded rocking chair. This will also soothe and rest you, and you will probably find it a more reasonable solution then letting your baby “cry it out,” as some will likely advise you to do to teach him who is “in charge.” Picking up your infant when he cries does not spoil the baby, whatever you may hear from others. Remember, too, to let your baby know that crying is not the only way to get you to show your concern and love. Pick up and cuddle your baby when he is awake and not crying.

Natural vs Medicated Childbirth

Author: AA Gifts

Natural Versus Medicated Childbirth Before leaving the subject of birth and going on to the newborn, we should discuss an important choice; the choice between natural childbirth and medicated childbirth. Your preparation and decision-making and the course of your labor will differ depending on what you prefer.

Having read the previous discussion of labor, you now have some sense of the physical and emotional events of normal spontaneous labor. It is concern about a tear or labor pain that influences many women to choose to use pain-relieving medication in labor.

The Use of Pain Medications or Anesthesia in Childbirth

Pain medication in childbirth has been used for centuries. Alcohol. Opium, and other drugs have been used, though how extensively is not known.

When using pain medications, you make a trade-off in return for relief of pain and tension and possible speeding up of labor, you accept the side effects on labor progress, your mental and physical well-being, or on your baby. You should balance the advantages and disadvantages as they apply in your situation before using or not using a particular medication.

What are the kinds of medications available, how do they work, and what are their risks and benefits? This section provides an overview that will assist you in discussing the subject with your doctor and making a decision on your preferences.

First of all, the choice of natural and medicated childbirth only exists as long as the labor remains normal. Some interventions are painful or stressful and increase the need for pain medications. If, however, you or your baby requires intervention [such as induction of labor, use of forceps, or cesarean section] for medical reasons, you will need pain medication.

Medication for Early Labor

Because the medications that provide the greatest pain relief also tend to interfere with early labor progress, they cannot be used too early, unless you want to stop labor. There are medications available if a very prolonged and exhausting pre-labor or early labor has caused excessive anxiety and worry. Sedatives or barbiturates [sleeping pills or medication] may help you rest. These are given in pill form or by injection, They may temporarily halt your labor while relaxing you or allowing you some sleep. These drugs reach your baby, who cannot easily excrete them, so it is important not to receive large doses. Because babies born with such drugs still in their bodies may have problems breathing or sucking, your doctor will probably only use small doses and will try to be sure that they have worn off before birth.

Tranquilizers are also used in long pre-labors to reduce muscle tension and anxiety. Some also help if you have severe nausea or vomiting. Depending on the drug chosen, you may feel dizzy and confused, your mouth could feel dry, and your blood pressure altered. These drugs also cross the placenta to the baby and may have effects on fetal heart rate, and newborn muscle tone, suckling and attentiveness.

Morphine, a narcotic, may be used in an attempt to stop a long, non-progressing labor. While it may cause you nausea, dizziness, and confusion, it may also do just what you need-put you to sleep and stop your labor temporarily. Narcotics can linger in the baby and can have some effects on behavior and breathing after birth. The greater the amount of the drug given the greater the effect on the baby.

Fatherly Roles

Author: AA Gifts

In the early weeks of the new baby’s life especially, a father can share household responsibilities, being sufficiently supportive and perceptive to see what needs to be done and pitching in to do it. By exercising some control over the number of visitors and the time they are allowed to stay, taking over household errands and performing routine tasks, such as getting some meals and cleaning up after them, doing the laundry, and running the vacuum cleaner, he can help provide the serenity and order that will give the family’s home life a semblance of normality in a time of stress. However inexperienced he is at child care, he can learn within a very short time to be skilled at and to enjoy changing, bathing, and comforting the baby, and if not feeding her, performing the important after feeding task of burping.

Though you will find your child reacting to her father differently as the child grows-your eighteen month old, for example, will enjoy roughhousing with Daddy, but when in trouble will very likely turn only to Mommy-the effect of a close, nurturing relationship with a male figure is good for both boys and girls. The popularity of Fred Rogers for nearly twenty years on public television’s Mister Roger’s Neighborhood indicates how enthusiastically children react to caring presence of men in their lives.

Besides lending a hand around the house and accepting some of the responsibility for the care of his child, the new father often takes the traditionally male responsibilities very seriously. He may feel the financial burden of a third member of the family very strongly, especially if the mother’s income has been important and she does not plan to return to work in the near future. And he may envy his wife her opportunity to stay home with the baby as much as she envies his being able to get out every day.

Men who participate as fully as they can in the birth of their babies and who continue to share the responsibilities of home and children, find the rewards great. Their lives take on a new dimension; their marriages are strengthened and become more meaningful. Fathers can “mother” too, and those who choose to accept that responsibility, are today the norm, not the exception. Reports of surveys bulge with statistics. Here are just a few: Eighty-five percent of fathers are present during their wife’s labor; fifty percent during delivery. Ninety-six percent help with baby and child care; eighty percent do not refuse to change diapers.

Holding and Handling the Baby

Author: AA Gifts

For a new parent who has had no experience with infants either within his or her own family or during the course of a babysitting career, simply picking up and holding a baby is a little scary, dressing one is frightening, and bathing one is downright terrifying. Luckily, infants aren’t able to squirm about much, so you don’t have to worry right away about yours twisting out of your arms or escaping from your grip on the changing table. And babies are tough; they don’t break under the stress of normal handling [Don’t worry about emotional fragility, either. Your baby’s psyche won’t be damaged for life if you are cross, in a hurry, or preoccupied once in a while].

It will be necessary to support your baby’s head with one hand foe about three months when you pick him up and to hold your baby against your shoulder so his head won’t fall backward when you carry him. It used to be common to swaddle babies loosely in receiving blankets, and some parents like to enclose their infant’s arms and legs this way until they are used to holding and carrying them. You’ll soon find yourself going smoothly through the tasks that involve moving and handling your baby subconsciously avoiding the sudden movements and loud noises that frighten or startle babies.

The Importance of Touching

This statement bears repeating: Picking up and holding your baby will not spoil him. The importance of touch to an infant cannot be stressed enough, a fact now recognized to be part of the bonding process encouraged by doctors, it is even said that mothers who are separated from their newborn infants during the first hour after birth are somewhat less confident about their intuitive mothering skills than those who go through the bonding process. Your baby’s skin in his or her most well developed sensory organ immediately after birth, and the largest organ of the body, its stimulation can have a profound effect on the baby’s behavior. Your gentle, confident, and firm touch, will calm your baby as well as assure him of your love.

Foods to Avoid

Author: AA Gifts

Foods to Avoid Recently publicity has been given to a number of foods that may contain micro-organisms that can cause harmful disease in pregnancy. Listeria is an illness caused by bacteria called listeria monocytogenes. Listeria is a mild, flu-like disease in adults, but in a pregnant woman it can cause miscarriage, stillbirth or severe illness in the newborn baby. Listeria can be found in soft cheeses such as Brie, Camembert and blue-veined cheeses, and can also be found in pates. Cooked foods that tend to sit out, such as rotisserie chicken, food in buffet lines or deli counters, can also contain low quantities of listeria and must therefore be thoroughly reheated. Salmonella, which can cause acute food poisoning, may be found in undercooked chicken and in raw or soft-boiled eggs, so some women prefer to avoid these. Recent research has shown high levels of vitamin A are concentrated in liver. High amounts of vitamin A can be harmful, so don’t overdo eating liver as an iron source.

Toxoplasmosis is another organism that causes only mild symptoms in an adult but that can injure the fetus, causing blindness or hydrocephalus, which can cause brain damage. Toxoplasmosis is found in some raw meat, unpasteurized goat’s milk or cheese, unwashed raw fruit and vegetables, and in anything contaminated by cat feces. Someone else will have to empty the cat’s litter box while you are pregnant. Also, keep the cat off all counters and tabletops. Wash them off frequently.

Since a pregnancy is not usually confirmed until six or eight weeks after conception, and it may take a little time for the body to build up depleted stores of vitamins and essential minerals, it is very important to adjust your diet before you become pregnant if at all possible. A good diet will also make you feel stronger and healthier and help you through the demanding months of pregnancy, through the birth itself and through the postnatal period. If you feel better, you will be more likely to enjoy your baby to the utmost.

Preconception Care

As we learn more about how diet, drugs and other substances in the environment might affect an unborn baby, more and more mothers are trying to prepare well in advance for the birth of their baby. Genetic counselors are available if you know of any genetic disorder in the family or if you are at greater risk of having a baby with disabilities. Advice on diet and general health care in pregnancy may be available at your prenatal clinic or your doctor’s office. Talk with your doctor about getting this extra attention if you would like it.

It is worth having your health checked before you conceive.

You might want a Pap smear. You can also have a swab done to check that there are no harmful micro-organisms in the vagina. Recent research shows that thrush and gardnerella, bacteria that causes bacterial vaginosis, may be linked to a difficulty to conceive, that an organism called mycoplasma may be linked to miscarriage, and gardnerella to premature deliveries. Not all such infections cause symptoms normally, but they may cause problems in pregnancy. Checking on them before you’re pregnant maybe wise.

It is also true that the majority of women do not want to wait months to conceive, and many conceive by accident, or experience problems in conceiving, and these mothers may feel guilty that they are not doing the right thing: “We started out with all the best intentions, stopping smoking and drinking, taking vitamin pills and eating only health-foody things without any additives. But it took me nearly two years to get pregnant. By the end I was fed up with the whole thing-we never enjoyed ourselves, we felt guilty about everything we ate or didn’t eat. In the end I just ate what I felt like and let it go at that.”

Genetic counseling is available at many hospitals for those who are worried that they may be at extra risk of having a baby with disabilities-this includes older mothers and those who have some hereditary illness or genetic defect in their family.

“We had genetic counseling at the hospital because I was 40 and my husband was too, and his child by his previous marriage had had problems. There was a blockage at the entrance to her stomach. She had to be operated on at birth, but she’s fine now. We were told doctors could pick up on this with an ultrasound scan, because the baby would not be able to swallow the amniotic fluid, which otherwise would show up in the stomach. The ultrasound was reassuring. By knowing of any problems in advance, our doctors would be set to do immediate surgery after the baby’s birth. I was also concerned about the extra risk of having a baby with Down syndrome-I was surprised at how greatly the risk went up between the ages of 40 and 41. We decided to have the amniocentesis and other tests done because we felt we couldn’t have coped with a baby with severe disabilities. I thought the counseling was very helpful and reassuring.”

Genetic counseling can be helpful. It enables the couple to talk through any worries they have and to put the risks they are facing into proportion. This is especially true for older mothers who may feel this pregnancy is their only chance to have a baby. It can also be helpful in establishing the reasons for any previous babies born with disabilities in the family, or for several miscarriages, and point toward ways of overcoming them. For example, it has been shown that mothers of babies with spina bifida had far fewer affected babies in subsequent pregnancies if they took supplements of vitamin B and folic acid. Some couples who have had several miscarriages have been told this was linked to a genetic problem but that if they kept going they had a chance of having a normal pregnancy, and this has encouraged them to continue trying to conceive.

Baby Sleeping Through the Night

Author: AA Gifts

Parents eagerly anticipate their baby’s sleeping through the night, but an eight hour sleeping period probably not be something that your baby achieves until she is several months old. Someone will very likely advise you to give the baby cereal at the last late night feeding as a way to induce a longer sleeping period. Don’t do it. Your baby’s doctor will tell you when the baby is developed enough [immune system, swallowing mechanism, etc.] to handle solid foods.

A pacifier may help put your baby to sleep. The Leche League discourages the use of pacifiers on the grounds that they may diminish a baby’s need to suck and therefore make her a less efficient nurser.. Some parents disapprove of them, too, probably because they find distasteful the not uncommon sight of a toddler whose sucking needs have long since been outgrown walking around with a pacifier stuck in her mouth like a plug. In fact, some find the sucking that is one of a baby’s instinctual needs somewhat difficult to understand at all. They may feel that extra nutritional sucking indicates that something is lacking in the emotional development of their child, and that therefore they are “bad” parents.

Nothing could be further from the truth. Newborns need to suck; it is their most satisfying form of gratification. The benefits of a pacifier can be seen when a baby’s need to suck goes beyond her need to eat. Infants may awaken a short time after a feeding and indicate what seems to be hunger by trying to put their hands in their mouths or crying, when what they really need is to suck.. Thumb-sucking would be a good substitute if infants could find these natural flesh-and-blood pacifiers when they want them. Since a tiny baby rarely put thumb to mouth at will, a pacifier meets her need to suck and eliminates unnecessary feedings that inconvenience you and may upset the baby’s digestion.

Another possible benefit of pacifiers has been discovered in using them with premature babies. Those who were induced to accept pacifiers in the hospital were found to develop sucking muscles sooner than those who did not take them, and thus were able to be taken off intravenous feedings and fed by mouth sooner.

If you give your baby a pacifier in bed, do take it away when she is asleep, to avoid the baby’s becoming dependant upon it to stay asleep. And never tie it on a string around the baby’s neck. It could cause strangulation. After six months or so, the need foe extra sucking will disappear. If you dislike the pacifier you could probably arrange for it to disappear about the same time.

New Roles for Fathers

Author: AA Gifts

Family life has undergone many changes in the recent decades, and the responsibilities assigned specifically to one or the other to a pair of parents have shifted and become somewhat blurred. There are more single parents today and more never married parents. Many of them shoulder total responsibility for their families. When both parents work outside the home, they learn to share responsibilities for housework and child care as they share the responsibilities of breadwinning. Nearly one million men in the United States are raising their alone. It is no longer cause for eyebrows to be raised and gossips to gather when a divorced father is awarded sole custody of his children. And joint-custody provisions in divorce-described as “equal opportunity in parenting”-have now been adopted by a majority of states. Some men take on the role of househusband, assuming the major part of the nurturing of the children, while their wife’s careers provide financial support.

Still, the traditional nuclear family survives, and in many homes the familiar structure of mother as full-time homemaker and the father as financial provider continues. It used to be customary for the at-home mother to be almost entirely in charge of the house and the children. Today, however, we find fathers taking more interest, helping more often with household chores, and involving themselves more fully in the lives of their children than their father did. They are no longer strict and unapproachable beings who are seen by the children only foe a few minutes a day and demand peace and quiet when they are home. Their relationship with their children is personal and openly loving; they talk about feelings, they show that they care.

There are also more public indications today that men no longer measure their worth only by their achievements outside their homes, as their fathers did before them. Both child care literature and advertising now direct information to “parents” instead of only to mothers; childbirth education classes require the participation of fathers. Parental leave of absence, extended to males in Sweden in 1979, is becoming more common among companies in this country, and federal legislation may soon guarantee men as well as women eighteen weeks of unpaid parental leave from their jobs in any two year period, offering protection for both the employees’ jobs and their benefits during their absences.

Men usually are not able to choose between their children and their work, as some women can, and many have not had the role model of a nurturing father to emulate. However, a father today is apt to involve himself as much as he possibly can from the very beginning of his wife’s pregnancy, sharing the important decisions about the doctor she will see, the birthing environment, and the hospital of which the baby will be born. He may accompany his wife on some of her visits to obstetrician. He participates in childbirth classes, in which he learns to coach his wife during the birth of their child, and then supports and aids her throughout her labor and delivery. Various studies have indicated that delivery times are shorter, anesthetics are used less frequently, mothers and babies are calmer, and infant’s feeding problems are less likely when fathers are present in delivery rooms. After their babies are born, fathers often accompany their wives on visits to the pediatrician, if their work hours allow, and some take their babies for checkups alone.

Signs and Symptoms of Labor

Author: AA Gifts

Signs and Symptoms of Labor During labor the cervix thins and softens and then dilates to allow the baby’s head to pass through the birth canal. When the cervix is fully open it is considered “10cm dilated.” This marks the transition from the first to the second stage.

But before we get to that what are the signs and symptons the expecting couple can appreciate as the first indications that the birth of your child is near. These may be:

Subtle Signs or Symptoms Comments
Vague backache that may cause restlessness Different from the posture related backache commonly
experienced during pregnancy, this may be caused by early contractions.
Several soft bowel movements accompanied by flu-like “sick”
feelings
Probably related to increase in circulating prostaglandins,
which ripen your cervix while causing other symptoms.
“The nesting urge”[an unusual burst of energy resulting in
great activity]
Helps ensure that you will have strength and energy to
handle labor. You should try to avoid exhausting activity.
Preliminary Signs or Symptoms
Helps ensure that you will have strength and energy to
handle labor. You should try to avoid exhausting activity.
Bloody show [passage of blood-tinged mucous from the vagina]
Associated with thinning of the cervix. May occur days before other signs or
not until after progressing labor contractions have begun.
Small break of the bag of waters [amniotic sac surrounding
the baby], causing leakage of fluid.
No contractions May not be associated with spontaneous
labor, although cervical ripening may hasten after a membrane ruptures.
Occurs in ten to twelve percent of labors. Leaking occurs when you change
position, laugh, sneeze, etc., and may continue off and on for hours.
Continuing nonprogressing contractions [”false” labor, or
prodromal labor]. The contractions stay the same over time
Accomplishes softening and thinning of the cervix, although
dilation does not occur until later. Should not be perceived as
unproductive.
Absolutely Clear Signs or Symptoms
Progressing contractions [ those that become longer,
stronger. And closer together with the passage of time]
Are dilating the cervix by the time the contractions are
averaging one minute long and five minutes apart, and feel painful or “very
strong” to the woman. May be felt in the abdomen, in the back, or both.
Breaking of the bag of waters with gush, pop, or leak,
followed by progressing contractions
Labor usually speeds up after the bag of waters breaks.

* Note that all women do not experience all of these signs; the most important ones are the last two. The others are more like warning signs that labor is coming soon.

Forceps

Author: AA Gifts

Forceps Forceps deliveries are carried out after the first stage, when the cervix is fully dilated. Forceps are used if for some reason the baby’s head is not coming down the birth canal or if the baby is in distress and needs to be born rapidly. Premature babies may be delivered by forceps to spare their heads from being too compressed as they come through the birth canal. Forceps are also usually used to protect the baby’s head in a breech birth.

If your baby needs a forceps delivery, you will be asked to lie on your back and your legs will be put into stirrups. You will receive a local anesthetic. An episiotomy will be done to increase the vaginal opening. Forceps will be gently inserted around the baby’s head. Gentle pulling helps the head out. Once the head is born, the rest of the delivery occurs normally. If the baby’s head faces the wrong way, forceps may be used to rotate the baby’s head to help delivery.

Forceps deliveries are very safe and there is little chance of the baby being harmed in any way, although most will have marks on the head from the forceps for a few days after the birth. Forceps deliveries occur more often after a protracted labor where the mother becomes exhausted, where she has had an epidural and cannot feel to push with each contraction or where the baby’s head is large or in the wrong position.

Sometimes a vacuum extractor, also called a ventouse, is used instead of forceps. This is a cup placed on the baby’s head that is operated by a vacuum pump. It can be inserted before the cervix is fully dilated and is used, in conjunction with the mother’s pushing, to deliver the baby. A small circular mark where the cup was placed shows on the baby’s head for a few days after the delivery.

Electronic Fetal Monitoring

Author: AA Gifts

Electronic Fetal Monitoring Once labor is established, the baby’s heartbeat and the strength of your contractions can be measured electronically. It can be reassuring to be able to hear and actually see throughout the delivery that the baby is well and not in distress, though this can also be checked using an old-fashioned ear trumpet or a fetal stethoscope. The disadvantage of electronic fetal monitoring is, you will be attached to a machine during labor. You may feel it is getting more attention than you are! You will not be free to move around. Sometimes the machines do not work well. Some women have noticed that the slightest change in the baby’s heartbeat will lead to intervention, which may not have been necessary.

There is now evidence that continuous electronic fetal monitoring does not make any difference to the labor outcome as far as the baby’s health and safety are concerned, although it results in a higher risk of intervention. However, in any individual case in which monitoring was not performed and a baby dies, the doctor or staff may be sued. For that reason, monitoring is almost always done to protect them, even though there may be no evidence that it is necessary.

Monitoring can be done with an external monitor strapped to your abdomen. Most women find this is awkward because they have to remain still. Also, the monitor has a tendency to slip off during a contraction:

“They kept fussing around; trying to put it back on… I couldn’t concentrate on what I was doing. Most of the time it wasn’t in the right place and we just heard a lot of noise, not the baby’s heartbeat.”

An internal monitor works better and is less restrictive for the mother. However, the waters must be broken and the cervix must be at least 2cm to 3cm dilated for this to be attached to the baby’s head. A tiny scar, like a pinprick, will be left after the monitor is removed but it is unlikely to cause the baby much discomfort. In cases where it is thought the baby may be distressed, a blood sample may be taken from the baby’s head and analyzed.

The Breasts

Author: AA Gifts

The Breasts Whether you choose to breastfeed or not, your breasts will begin making and secreting milk. At first, they make colostrums, the perfect food for a new baby. Within two or three days the colostrum turns to milk. Sometimes when the milk “comes in,” your breasts become very engorged [full to the point of discomfort]. If you are breastfeeding, the best way to prevent excessive engorgement is to let your baby nurse frequently. If your baby is a sleeper or lazy nurser, you may relieve engorgement by expressing [forcing out] milk from your breasts, either by hand or with a breast pump.

If you have decided not to breastfed, effects will be made to reduce milk production. Cold packs, a well fitting bra, or medication may be used to slow down or prevent milk production. Usually within a few days, milk production stops.

Moment of Birth

Author: AA Gifts

Moment of Birth As the baby’s head emerges you will know. You will feel a stretching or burning sensation in your vagina. This is an exiting, intense time. You know the baby is almost here and may be tempted to push as hard as you can to get him out quickly. They could be a mistake, however, because a sudden push to make the baby come out too quickly and damage your perineum [causing tearing]. It is important for you not to push hard at this time. Let your uterus do the work alone. You should breathe rapidly and lightly [pant as animals do during birth]. So the baby can emerge gradually. Your doctor will give you instructions-and help the baby out slowly. You will soon be holding your baby in your arms.

After the head is born, the baby turns to one side and a shoulder and the whole body is born. And what a sense of relief you feel! Labor is over [or nearly so]. You have a baby. It may take a while for it all to sink in. In the meantime, you may be holding your baby and watching as a nurse or doctor examines him and cares foe him.

The Third Stage of Labor

Your job is not quite finished. The placenta still needs to be expelled. The third stage usually lasts from five to thirty minutes. The nurse or doctor will keep a hand on your abdomen to determine when the placenta separates from the wall of your uterus. Then you will be asked to push it out. You may feel some cramps, but there is usually slight discomfort.

The Fourth Stage of Labor

Immediately after birth, while your are holding and admiring your new baby, your doctor focuses on your well-being, The condition of your uterus and vagina is of major concern. It is important that your uterus remain contracted after birth, which keeps it from bleeding as much as when it is relaxed. Most women lose about one cup of blood at the time of birth. While this may seem like a lot. Remember that among the other many changes of pregnancy, your blood supply greatly increased. Thai excess blood is no longer needed, you will lose some of it at the time of birth and will continue to lose some over a period of several weeks [this discharge is called lochia]. Your doctor watches the amount of blood lost immediately after birth and, if necessary, takes measures to reduce this blood loss. These may include massaging your uterus vigorously, asking you to lightly stimulate your nipples, or giving you an injection of a medication [Methergine [methylergonovine] or pitocin [oxytocin]] that will cause your uterus to contract.

Your doctor will also check your vagina to see if you need any stitches. If an episiotomy was performed, you will definitely need stitches. Some tearing of the vagina or the perineum may also have occurred when the baby was born. Although the idea os tearing sounds rather unpleasant, be assured that the tears [or cuts] are usually not serious, and will usually heal rapidly. If necessary your doctor will begin stitching within a few minutes after birth. You will be given a local anesthetic for pain relief if you have not already had one.

Practical Matters in the Third Trimester

Author: AA Gifts

Practical Matters in the Third Trimester As you wind down towards the birth of your baby, you will want to be conscientious about your diet and rest needs. This is the time to take childbirth preparation classes; to prepare your birth plan; to make the decisions on employment, child care, infant feeding, and health care for your baby; and to prepare the baby’s space and equipment. If they have not already done so, this is when most people take a good look at their financial situation, and figure out the impact the birth of the baby will have. There may be a loss of income at least for while, extra bills associated with the birth, other expenses associated with the baby’s equipment, and more. Try to prepare yourself for these financial changes as much as possible so you are not caught in a financial bind because of the birth of your child.

If your income is low, you may qualify for federal or state programs. There are also organizations that can assist you with food, health care, free or low cost baby clothing and equipment, and other help. This is a good time to look into these matters if you have not already. If you have health insurance, find out exactly what it does and does not cover.

Pack your bag a few weeks before your due date and place on top of it a list of any last minute items to add just before leaving.

Suggested Packing List

For Mother in Labor:

  • Toothbrush and toothpaste
  • Massage oil [not lotion] or powder [cornstarch is best]
  • Lip cream or gloss
  • Rolling pin or massage aids
  • Hot-water bottle and camper’s ice [for comfort]
  • Juice or ice-pops [if not supplied by the hospital]
  • Music tapes and a tape recorder [battery operated]
  • Home-birth supplies ordered by your mid-wife

For Partner:

  • Food/snacks
  • Breath mints or toothbrush

Diet during Pregnancy

Author: AA Gifts

Diet during Pregnancy Maintaining a healthy diet during pregnancy is the best thing you can do for yourself and your baby. Junk food can be harmful in pregnancy because it does not provide enough of the vitamins and nutrients the growing baby needs. It is also high in salt and other additives. That increases stress on the liver and kidneys, which have to eliminate the excess sodium from the body. If you eat the right foods, you will be doing the best for your baby. Your doctor may have you take a prenatal vitamin in addition. Be careful of taking large quantities of vitamin supplements otherwise, because some vitamins, notably vitamin A, can be harmful if taken in excess. Also, if you eat healthfully you won’t need to worry about whether you’re putting on the right amount of weight or not; your body will do that automatically.

Weight Gain

It is normal to gain weight in pregnancy. Most additional weight appears during the second three months. The increased weight is the weight of the baby, the placenta, the waters surrounding the baby, increased fluid and tissue in the breasts as they prepare to produce milk, and a greater quantity of blood circulating in the body. Some women also experience fluid retention, which will adjust itself after the baby is born.A normal weight gain during pregnancy is 20 to 30 pounds (9 to 13.5 kg). Some women gain less, others more-this can be normal, too. If you are planning to breast-feed your baby, remember that you will be laying down some stores of fat to feed your new baby and that the pounds will roll off as you produce milk.

Doctors used to worry a lot about “excessive” weight gain in pregnancy, because it can put an additional strain on the body, making high blood pressure and cardiovascular problems more likely. However, this situation was largely a reaction to the exhortations previously made to women to “eat for two;” that is, very heartily. But aiming for the other extreme and trying to stay slim in pregnancy is equally harmful.

It is particularly damaging to try to diet and lose weight in pregnancy unless you are overweight and under medical supervision, because you may be denying your baby vital nourishment. Again, eating the right food is the key. If you eat well, you will feel well, be less inclined to want to “fill up” on sweet things, and your body will gain and shed weight naturally during and after the pregnancy.

A Healthful Diet

A healthful diet means eating a balanced combination of proteins, carbohydrates, fats and vitamins. This can be achieved by eating reasonable quantities of fresh meat and fish, eggs, pasteurized cheese and milk, fresh fruits and vegetables, whole-grain bread and cereals. Fresh green vegetables in particular are full of the minerals and vitamins your body and your baby need.

Avoid Junk Food
  • Avoid foods with “empty” calories, such as:
  • Highly refined, sugary cakes and other desserts
  • Sweet carbonated drinks
  • Cookies
  • Fried and fatty foods, such as potato chips and creamy dips
  • Salty foods (they encourage fluid retention)
  • Drinks such as coffee, tea and cocoa
  • All alcoholic beverages

Prenatal Screening

Author: AA Gifts

Prenatal Screening The majority of mothers over the age of 35 who become pregnant can expect a normal pregnancy and a healthy baby. However, older mothers are at greater risk of developing complications. For that reason, an older mother is screened to detect these at an early stage. Older mothers are also at higher risk of having a baby with disabilities, so most are eager to take advantage of the screening tests available.
There can hardly be a mother who has not worried at some time in her pregnancy whether her baby will be normal, and this may be particularly true for the older mother. Fortunately, a number of screening tests are now offered to women at higher risk of having a baby with severe problems. These tests can be very important in easing the parents’ worries. In cases where an abnormality is shown, the screening enables them to decide whether or not to proceed with a pregnancy. However, it is important to remember that not all abnormalities can be detected in pregnancy and that accidents at birth can also lead to disabilities. The tests eliminate certain problems but do not guarantee the “perfect baby.”

How the Baby Develops

A human embryo is more or less completely formed by the end of the twelfth week of pregnancy. After this time it simply has to grow in size and its organs have to mature to make it capable of living outside the womb. All the major developments take place in the early weeks of pregnancy, which is why it is especially important to look after yourself before you even know you are pregnant. The baby’s spinal column, for example, begins to form in the fifth week of pregnancy. You are likely at this stage to realize that your period is late, but have not had the pregnancy confirmed. In the sixth week arm and leg buds are formed. In the seventh week the beginnings of the fingers and toes are visible and dramatic changes are occurring to the head and face. In the ninth week the nose and mouth take shape. By the eleventh week the genitals are formed, and all the internal organs are functioning.
Abnormalities in a baby are usually caused by genetic problems or by an environmental influence, such as poor diet, the use of drugs in early pregnancy or by hazards in the workplace, such as toxic chemicals or radiation. Genetic problems fall into two categories: those caused by either or both parents carrying a faulty gene, or those that occur when the sperm or egg are formed. In the second case, the formation involves an extra chromosome or part of a chromosome being included in the fertilized egg.

Newborn

Author: AA Gifts

Newborn At first sight, your newborn may not be quite what you had expected. For the first half minute or so, his skin might be bluish grey, and he may appear lifeless. That may be a shock if you are not expecting it, but this is the color of all babies in the uterus. As your baby begins breathing and more oxygen enters his body, his color will turn pinker or ruddier-first the head and body, then the arms and legs, and last the feet and hands.

Your baby will be soaking wet, streaked with blood, and smeared with vernix, a white sticky substance.. Some babies have a great deal of vernix all over their bodies, and some have only small amounts, only in the creases and folds. Vernix is almost like a hand cream, in that it protects the baby’s skin while he is floating in amniotic fluid.

His face may be swollen and he might have long fingernails. You may also be surprised by the size of your baby’s genitals. The size and color subside in a few days, when their genitals take on a more normal appearance.

Immediate Care

Even though most babies do not really need it, care-givers routinely suction babies noses and mouths very soon after birth to remove excess amniotic fluid and mucous. In fact, sometimes they begin suctioning when only the baby’s head is out. It is done with a rubber bulb syringe or with a little jar and tube called a mucous trap. The mucous trap is used if the baby’s airway seems to be very congested or if the baby was under stress during labor and breathing problems are anticipated at the time of birth.

Your baby’s umbilical cord will be clamped in two places close to his abdomen. Then the cord will be cut between the two clamps. Sometimes the father cuts the cord. Otherwise, the doctor does it. Even though there is a spurt of blood when the cord is cut, neither you or your baby will feel it at all, sense there are no nerves in the umbilical cord. Then your baby will be either be placed on your abdomen or taken to a special warm bed in the corner of the room for examination and other care. If he is placed on your abdomen, you will feel the warm, wet baby on your now soft belly. Many women find this a very pleasant sensation.

Your baby is dried off by rubbing briskly with soft towels to keep him from getting a chill [a major concern of your doctor]. Your baby will be wrapped in a warm blanket or two, and his head will be covered. In fact, it is a very good idea to have a warm little hat to place on the baby’s head as soon as possible after the birth because the baby’s head is such a large part of his body that a lot of heat can be lost through it.

Finding out you are Pregnant

Author: AA Gifts

Finding out you are Pregnant Most women want to know they are pregnant as soon as possible, especially if they have had problems conceiving. Over-the counter pregnancy tests available now can tell you whether you are pregnant or not as soon as, or even before, your period is due. They are quite accurate. You can buy them at larger grocery stores and at pharmacies. Each box usually contains two tests, so if the first isn’t positive, you can repeat it a few days later to make sure. They are not cheap, so it may be wise to wait for your period, and take the test if you are late.

“When my period was overdue I did a home test and it was positive. Then my doctor did one and it was negative. We were both disappointed. But my period didn’t start, and I felt pregnant. So I did another home test, which was positive. I called my husband and asked him to come home from work to make sure I wasn’t imagining it. He did and agreed it was positive. But the next test from the hospital was negative too-until the doctor called and said they had made an error. It seemed crazy to us that a home test was so much better than the hospital one!”

Having your pregnancy confirmed early lets you, if you haven’t already, stop all drinking of alcohol, take care of your diet, and get the soonest possible prenatal appointment. Once you know you are pregnant, talk things over with your healthcare professional and explain any preferences you have for the kind of birth you would like, which hospitals you prefer, whether you would like a hospital delivery or a home birth if that can be arranged. Your doctor will know the options in the area and will be able to discuss with you what is best. In practice this is not always the case, and older mothers in particular may find they are only offered a hospital birth or are under strong pressure to have the baby in the hospital. In some areas, your choice of hospital is limited.

The vast majority of births take place in hospitals, and most people still have their prenatal appointments under an obstetrician’s care. Although things seem to have improved in prenatal care, the majority of women find the wait for office appointments is still a problem. There are usually no facilities for occupying the attention of older children and toddlers. In some managed care systems, women complain that they are seen by someone different each time and may not even see the professional they were supposed to see. Many women find the care impersonal and offhand. But despite these kinds of problems, on the whole, older pregnant women do not find themselves much of an oddity at prenatal clinics.

“I realized I could be the mother of the woman sitting next to me, but it didn’t seem to matter. We were both going through the same thing. I was never once made to feel that I was old or doing anything unusual by the other women or by the office staff. I’d guess the average age of mothers at my clinic was 30 to 35. My doctor does specialize in women with potential difficulties and older mothers, and I live in a major metropolitan area. I think all that makes a difference. Still, I was surprised at the number of older women I saw.”

Routine Prenatal Tests

Ideally, you will have seen your doctor before you conceived, or as soon after conception as possible. At your first appointment, your healthcare provider will take your medical history, together with any details of previous pregnancies. You will be weighed. You are likely to be given an internal examination to confirm the pregnancy, check the womb is the size it should be for your dates, check for any abnormalities of the pelvis and check that the cervix (neck of the womb) is tightly closed. A cervical smear (Pap smear) is also usually taken. Lab tests may be done now or at a later visit.

If you have had a history of miscarriage the doctor may agree not to examine you internally at this stage if you wish, though there is no particular evidence to suggest this might cause a miscarriage.

A blood test is also taken to find your major blood group, particularly whether you are rhesus positive or negative. About 85% of the population is rhesus positive. If you are rhesus negative and your baby is rhesus positive, and it is a second or subsequent pregnancy, there is a small chance that you may make sufficient antibodies to rhesus-positive blood to damage your baby’s blood cells. Because of this, if you are rhesus negative, blood samples will be taken at various times throughout your pregnancy to check on antibody levels, which only rarely become too high. Very rarely a baby suffering from rhesus incompatibility may have to be delivered by Cesarean section and receive a blood transfusion.

Rhesus incompatibility is becoming rarer because most rhesus-negative mothers now have an injection of Rh-immune globulin, which prevents them from producing antibodies. If this is done after every delivery or abortion, future babies are safe from rhesus incompatibility.

Your hemoglobin level is checked to make sure you are not anemic (this test will be repeated later in the pregnancy). You are also screened for immunity to rubella (German measles) and for any sexually transmitted diseases.

Your breasts are usually examined at the first visit to check for lumps. They are not being checked to see whether you can breastfeed. No matter what size or shape your breasts or nipples are, you should be able to breast-feed successfully. If your nipples are inverted, you will still be able to breast-feed; you may just need a little extra help at first in getting the baby to latch on properly.

At every visit you will be weighed to check the growth of the baby and to see that your weight gain is satisfactory. Your urine is tested at every visit-the first time it will be screened for any infection. At every other visit it will be tested for the presence of protein in the urine, which could indicate you have pre-eclampsia and to check that you are not developing diabetes.

The abdomen is measured at every visit to check that the womb is growing in size according to your dates. After 20 to 24 weeks your baby’s heartbeat can be monitored with a stethoscope. Your blood pressure is also measured at every visit, because high blood pressure can indicate a number of problems, including preeclampsia. Your ankles and fingers will be checked for puffiness, a sign of water retention.

Pre-Eclam Psia

Pre-eclampsia, also called toxemia of pregnancy, is a disorder of unknown cause. Symptoms include water retention and high blood pressure. If the condition is allowed to progress unchecked, the blood pressure rises further and the mother suffers headaches and even seizures (eclampsia). Pre-eclampsia puts the baby at risk. The baby may not get enough nourishment. Mothers with pre-eclampsia have an increased risk of going into premature labor.

Doctors look carefully for signs of pre-eclampsia or toxemia, because it can be prevented if caught early, and the risk to the unborn baby can be reduced. Although the cause of pre-eclampsia is unknown, it has been linked to poor nutrition in some cases. Older mothers are at greater risk of developing this condition, so it’s important to keep all your regular prenatal appointments.

Pre-eclampsia is usually treated with bed rest. Women with this condition are often admitted to the hospital so they and the baby can be monitored. Usually complete rest takes care of the problem. If it does get worse, the baby may have to be born early by Cesarean-section delivery (C-section).

Amniocentesis

Author: AA Gifts

Amniocentesis Amniocentesis consists of taking a sample of amniotic fluid in the sac surrounding the baby and analyzing it. Amniotic fluid contains some of the baby’s cells, which can be cultured to reveal any chromosomal abnormalities. Amniocentesis can also be used to detect neural-tube defects, because there will be a very high level of AFP in the amniotic fluid in that case. This is much more accurate than the AFP blood test.

Amniocentesis is usually offered to women 35 or older, although the policy may change in the future. Age 35 was chosen originally because at this point it was believed that the risk of potential chromosomal problems with the baby was about the same as the risk of miscarrying the baby as a result of the amniocentesis test. However, amniocentesis is even safer now, so the mother’s age at which the test is recommended is being reconsidered upward.

The risk of miscarriage attached to amniocentesis is small.

Studies used to quote a rate of about 0.5%, but today it is closer to 0.3%. Some doctors dispute whether there is a real risk at all.

However, for older mothers, especially those with a history of miscarriage or infertility and for whom a pregnancy is particularly precious, there is a real fear of inducing a miscarriage. This can make the decision to have an amniocentesis very difficult.

Cindy was unlucky and had a miscarriage a week after her amniocentesis at the age of 39. “I was devastated. I blamed myself. They had told me the risk but it seemed so small. I’d never heard of anyone actually losing a baby. They said it might not have been the amnio that it might have happened anyway. But [the amniocentesis] seemed to me to be the most likely reason, because there was nothing wrong with the baby. It was a girl, and I had wanted a girl. I felt I had gone against nature and been punished. It was a terrible, terrible time for me.

“I did get pregnant again a year later and I had a boy. I decided against an amnio and he is fine. Everything is fine, but now I’m 41 and I may not get pregnant again. If I do, now I don’t know whether to have an amnio or not. I keep thinking that if I hadn’t had one I could now have had two children and my family would be complete. On the other hand, perhaps I should just count myself lucky that I am now a mother and have a healthy child.”

An amniocentesis is usually carried out at about 16 weeks into the pregnancy. This is about the earliest time that sufficient amniotic fluid can be withdrawn for testing. Usually an ultrasound scan will also be done at this time, to help the doctor locate the fetus and to identify the best place from which to draw the fluid. You will be asked to have a full bladder for the ultrasound scan, and then asked to empty your bladder before the amniocentesis is performed.

You will change into an examination gown, and the area on the abdomen where the needle is inserted will be swabbed with antiseptic. The needle is usually inserted without local anesthetic. The doctor directs the needle into the amniotic fluid and takes a small amount of the pale-yellow fluid. When ultrasound is used as well, the danger of the needle hitting the baby or placenta is very small. Most women do not find the procedure painful. They describe a slight cramp or pressure in the womb as the needle passes through the uterine wall. Some women feel a little sore for a day or two afterwards. You are usually advised to take it easy because of the slight risk of miscarriage.

For some women, however, the test is not so straightforward:

“We went along [with it] at 16 or 17 weeks. My husband came and we were all keyed up. They did the scan first and said the baby was lying all spread-out and there were no big pockets of fluid to get the needle into, so it wasn’t worth trying. We had to go back the following week-the anticlimax was awful.”

“While pregnant with Josh at the age of 35, I did worry a lot that he might have disabilities. I was feeling very aware of my age. When I was pregnant with Douglas at 37 I said I wanted an amnio. I was told the risk of this causing a miscarriage was about the same as the risk of the baby having Down syndrome and that I should only consider the test if I was prepared to have an abortion.

“I felt I couldn’t handle having a child with disabilities and that it wouldn’t be fair to the two boys. I had baby-sat for a child with mental disabilities and I had no illusions about how difficult it was and how it had affected her brother. I would certainly have had a termination if anything had been wrong.

“They made light of the procedure, said I didn’t need someone with me, it wouldn’t take long and it wouldn’t hurt. I was I6 weeks pregnant. Allen drove me to the hospital and waited outside. I was not given an anesthetic. Ultrasound was used to locate the baby and the bag of fluid. An enormous-looking needle was stuck into my very tender belly and it was excruciatingly painful. I gripped the nurse’s hand and counted to 60; the nurse kept saying, ‘It doesn’t usually hurt.’ Then it was all over. I was shaking and very distressed. Allen had to help me into the car; there is no way I could have gotten home by myself. I started having contractions when I got home and these lasted for four hours, but I didn’t bleed. I thought, ‘Oh God, what have I done? I’m going to lose the baby.’ I had to stay in bed all day and took things easy the next day.

“Waiting was OK for the first three weeks. Then the results were late, more than four weeks, so I thought something had to be wrong. I started to get very depressed. Although they said they would only tell the mother the results, I couldn’t face calling myself and got Allen to phone from his office. They told him all was well and we were both thrilled, though my mother burst into tears when I told her it was another boy. The whole thing was horrible, but it was still better than another four months of worrying. Now I could look forward to the baby happily.”

Others find the process much easier than they had thought:

“It was simple. I felt nothing. My husband was there and he said, ‘Did you really not feel anything? They seemed to take a ton of fluid!’ Everyone was extremely helpful and reassuring. It was much, much easier than I had imagined it would be.”

Once the test is completed, the drawn fluid is analyzed. Cells in the fluid are cultured and grown over a couple of weeks. Then they are crushed and put under a microscope so the chromosomes can be examined. Very occasionally the test fails and has to be repeated two or three weeks further into the pregnancy:

“I had an amnio at 16 weeks after much thought and consultation. The first one didn’t take, and I had another at 20 weeks, by which time I had felt the baby moving. I couldn’t understand what was wrong with the first test. I was worried it meant something was wrong with the baby.”

The fluid is also tested for high levels of alpha-fe top rote in, which can indicate the presence of a neural-tube defect.

If you are the possible carrier of a genetic disease, tests can be carried out to identify up to almost 80 hereditary diseases. These tests are time-consuming and expensive, so they will only be done if your family has a history of an inherited illness that technicians can test for.

Waiting for the results can be the hardest part of the whole procedure. Usually women are told the results will take three weeks, though sometimes they are received sooner and rarely, later:

“They said the results would take three weeks but it only took two. They had tried to call but we were out, so they wrote us a very nice letter saying all was well.”

You are usually informed by letter or by telephone; you can telephone yourself if the results are overdue. You can also ask to know the sex of the baby if you want to, though some hospitals insist on talking this over with you first:

“We had asked to know the sex of the baby but they were reluctant to tell us. They said to go home and think about it, and asked probing questions about did we want a girl or boy. When they called to say the results were fine, they didn’t volunteer the information. We pressed for it and were told it was a girl. We didn’t really care about the sex, but we both had a slight preference for a girl. We were delighted and it was wonderful to know, which I hadn’t in my earlier pregnancies. In fact, knowing was one of the most important parts of the pregnancy.”

There is some evidence that people who desperately want either a son or daughter have problems adjusting to the baby if they know in advance that it is the “wrong” sex. In the heat of the birth itself, most parents are so pleased to know the baby is all right that they don’t think much about its sex. The baby is there to love and care for. Knowing this fact while pregnant, however, gives a parent time to brood over the as-yet unknown person and sometimes to reject the baby, making it more difficult to adjust when the baby arrives.

This is an individual matter of course and people have different attitudes about it:

“I wanted to know. I thought if it was there in my notes and other people knew, then of course I had the right to know.”

“I told them, ‘Don’t tell me!’ I didn’t want to know-it would have ruined everything, like unwrapping a present before your birthday.”

“If it’s a first baby, I think once you know you feel a little sad no matter what, because you want both - you can’t really decide which your preference is. So when they said it’s a girl, I felt sad in a way that it wasn’t a boy. But it wasn’t that I actually had wanted a boy.”

Most hospitals respect people’s wishes in the matter, but some provide limited counseling to help a couple decide if they want to know or not. Occasionally one partner wants to know the sex and the other doesn’t; this is hard to deal with. If one partner is told and hides it from the other, it puts considerable strain on a relationship at a time when a couple should be as close and open with one another as possible.

Grandparents Good Enough for Daughter-In-Law

Author: AA Gifts

Grandparents Remember when you were absolutely the only one would could Band-Aid a knee, read Hop on Pop, or even cook a hot dog? No one else on Earth but you could sew a teddy bear’s stuffing in or comb out knots or even flush that dead fish just so. You were required, necessary and essential-when you were needed.

Grandparents Those were the days when your child could not live without you. Your grandchild needs you, too. So, how come his mother acts like you’re some type of pox when you come to visit?

Daughters-in-law are not the easiest mothers to please. But, there are a few things to do that might smooth out some wrinkles along the way (no, sorry-not those wrinkles).

You may need to give up your need to be needed. You’re not the first line of defense anymore, and maybe your knees are telling you that’s a happy thing. How many times do you want to get down with the Legos or search for Barbie shoes under the couch? You can be there after Mommy washes the streaming blood off the screaming child’s chin and trundles down to soak the stains out of the new white shirt. You can be there to tell the story of when Daddy fell off his bike and got stitches in the ear he got caught in his spokes-and to hand over the ice cream.

You can be dessert. You don’t have to be meatloaf and broccoli, liver and kale, tofu cubes and soy-milk. You don’t have to be protein and carbs and fiber, vitamins, minerals, antioxidants, life-enhancing flavonoids, or any other such thing. You don’t have to be, you know-nutritious-at all. You can be hot fudge if you want.

That doesn’t mean you’re junk food-don’t go overboard. Maybe a good hot fudge sundae is just the right thing after a day of liver and kale. A perfect apple might be just right after an overdose of chicken nuggets (is it possible to underdose on chicken nuggets? The things they pass off as food today… .). And it’s possible that dessert might be a good walk in the park after a day strapped in a car seat. Dessert might even be some time reading together after an hour in front of the tube. At least with all your experience, you’ll have plenty of ideas on what’s the right treat for any situation, even if the rules on what’s the right meal have changed-and they change all the time.

Your grandchild has parents-and they’re not you. It’s your daughter-in-law’s turn to be required now.

So what if you’re not carrots? Who wouldn’t rather be a cookie?

Shopping with Children

Author: AA Gifts

Shopping with Children I wonder if there is anyone out there who doesn’t dread shopping with children. Who doesn’t look with pity on any fellow mom dejectedly admitting to an afternoon of errands ahead-with toddlers in tow? Even mentioning a grocery store run brings on a shudder and heartfelt condolences. There have been times when I myself borrowed milk from a neighbor rather than face those aisles with my precious little darlings pattering along behind.

Shopping with Children Sometimes, it gets so bad, that I think the children have ruined shopping. My mother would suggest an afternoon at the mall, and I’d look at her as if she were some pod grandma from an alien torture mill. No, I most decidedly do not want to go to the mall, Mother, and watch my kids transform into bounding balls of greed, little proto mega consumers that want everything they see. I’m not ‘Mom’ at the mall; I’m ‘MommommomcanIhave?’.

Now, I understand that commerce is the American way, and ordinarily I do my part for the economy, don’t get me wrong. I like malls as much as any other citizen and enjoy trolling for stuff I want but don’t need. It used to be fun. I even used to like the grocery store-especially when I could score some tasty samples. Oh, and the warehouse super store with the giant everything? I could spend hours, not to mention dollars, there-back in the day.

So what’s a mother to do? I don’t have a clue.

I’m waiting for some age and/or maturity to kick in as my first strategy. Some day my son won’t expect to find baseball cards or lacrosse sticks in the women’s lingerie store, and my daughter won’t want every single stuffed or plastic animal she spies. I don’t hold out much hope that we’ll all agree on a shopping destination anytime soon, but I can foresee the day we’ll manage it better. Groceries, at least, will be attainable, and the neighbors won’t have to lock their refrigerators when they see me coming up their walk.

Another point in favor of just waiting it out: eventually the kids don’t have to go with me. There will come a day when my son whines, “I don’t wanna go!” (but probably in a deeper voice), and I’ll be able to say, “Fine, don’t,” and it will all be legal. My daughter will balk at the thought of the hardware store, and I will be able to leave her home. It will all be fun again, I hope.

In the meantime, of course, there’s the internet. I do online shopping for everything: groceries, clothes, toys, pet meds, and miscellaneous-which everyone knows in a typical American household is the largest category. All I have to do is fire up the hard drive and take off, and it’s a win/win all the way: No kids in tow, no gas guzzled, no globe warmed. And the best part is, I don’t even have to shower! I may miss the leisurely walk and talk through the mall with my mom, but I can make up for it surfing the net, where there are no aisles, no walls, and no worries.

Parental Discipline

Author: AA Gifts

Parental Discipline I highly doubt many people follow the suggestions of the experts from this show and that. These experts recommend would-be-parents set aside time before baby’s arrival to discuss how to handle discipline for the child. I think new parents have their hands full trying to make it through the first pregnancy! Despite my sarcasm, I have to agree on one point; discussing how to discipline a child must be done before the child is in need of discipline!

Parental Discipline When baby boy is nine months old and repeatedly pulling the dog’s tail, how should you react? Some parents will insist a firm voice repeating “No,” along with physically removing the infant’s hand is enough to deter future tail pulling. Another parent may say this behavior warrants a slap on the hand. Different parents parent in different ways. What to do when the opposing parents reside in the same home? This is where communication is key.

Before baby gets to Fido’s tail, bring up the subject. Try role-playing the scenario. Find our where your partner’s disciplinary measures have their roots. Most likely, you will parent as your own parents did. As partners, you can help each other analyze the success of your parents’ methods. Did you stop hitting your sister when your mom spanked your bottom? If not, why repeat the cycle with your own son? If your wife’s parents used the Time Out method with success, why not try it for a while? No matter the decision, it’s one that needs to be made before the hand hits the tail.

Don’t limit the discussion to one behavior or one age. Consider the possibilities as baby turns one, then two, three and so on. What will you do when she hits or throw tantrums? How will you handle her refusal to eat and her defiant act of holding her breath in protest? What about the six year old who comes home from school using words best left to stand-up comics? Will his mouth be washed out with soap? Will you be truthful and explain the inappropriate meanings of the language?

Sure, it may seem pointless to plan the details of Junior’s revoked privileges when he takes the car out at age 14, but talking out possibilities will kick start an open line of communication between parents that will be easier to continue than start down the line. In addition, partners will be able to identify patterns in their spouse’s disciplinary tactics. If your husband’s reaction to most offenses involves quiet time, hugs and ‘I’m sorry’, and your punishments are more severe, involving loss of playtime or grounding, then you can consider yourself forewarned for the future. In such cases, finding common ground on the discipline field will take more work and compromise and possibly some trial and error with the kids.

So, when baby throws sand in the sandbox, you’ll be happy you and your spouse discussed discipline. Now, when she’s 15 and asks to go on a date? I’m sorry to say there is nothing parents can do to be prepared.

Family Day Care

Author: AA Gifts

Day care in a private home or family day care provides a home atmosphere and personalized attention. Typically, a mother of a child takes several others into her home during the day. This is usually less expensive than having a sitter in your home, and if the caregiver is really able to be with several children and still be sensitive to each child’s needs, the situation is a good one. Your child will develop skills by being with other children in a homey atmosphere but won’t be exposed to different workers, as she would be in a day care center.

If you’re considering family day care, meet the person in the setting where your child would be care for. Gear your questions to find out about the care giver’s priorities, interests, strengths, and experience with children. Give him or her pertinent information about your child’s needs [medical history, diet, interests, and idiosyncrasies] and your expectations. Obtain references-the names of other families whose children stay with him or her-and check them out.

General Considerations:

If you are considering family day care or a day care center, gather information on each placement you are considering so that you can compare hours of operation, vacancies, fees, adult to child ratios, and general philosophies about child care. If the center is handling very small babies, the adult to child ratio should ideally be three to one, but no more than four to one. If the children are between two to five years old, there should be one adult to five children.
Arrange to visit the most attractive options. Bring your child and go at a busy time. This way, you can check your child’s response to the caregiver and also watch the caregiver’s style of interaction of other children.

  • Is the caregiver sensitive to the needs of children od different ages [especially at meal time]?
  • How does the caregiver respond to a crisis?
  • If you’re there early in the, how does the caregiver respond to an upset child being left by his parents?
  • Does the caregiver take the time to allow the parents to express concerns/
  • Is the child given enough attention to ease the pain of separation?
  • Are children sensitively helped to make the transition from one activity to the next?
  • When you talk to the caregiver, do you feel as though you would be a member of the “team,” defensive? It is essential for you to feel that the caregiver respects your relationship with your child and your feelings.

Look at the overall cleanliness of the center or home-let your instincts give you a reading on its feel. Does the physical environment seem safe or are there detergents or medicines within easy reach, or such dangers as uncovered light sockets? What kinds of toys are provided? Are they safe? Do they allow for creative play and skill-building? Licensed day care facilities should be able to provide you with a written program description. If you still have questions after your visit, make a phone call or follow-up visit.

Many parents are reluctant to expose a very young baby to the risk of infection outside the home and to take the chance of having an outsider bring disease into the house. Such fears are understandable, but should not be allowed to unrealistically limit your baby’s contact with people and the outside world. Germs are inevitable- you will bring them into your house yourself, and into contact with your baby. You naturally will not knowingly expose your baby to someone who is suffering a terrible cold or other communicable ailment; you can and should watch for such situations in your baby’s day care environment, and elsewhere. This sort of reasonable caution [which includes regular visits to the pediatrician and a regular program of immunizations and inoculations] should ensure that your baby enjoy normal health.

Once your child is placed in out-of-home day care, the only way to be sure that he is safe is to make unannounced visits during the day. If there are rules against this, question the rules.

First Stage of Labor

Author: AA Gifts

First Stage of Labor During the first stage of labor, the cervix thins and softens and then dilates to allow the baby’s head to pass through the birth canal. When the cervix is fully open it is considered “10cm dilated.” This marks the transition from the first to the second stage.

Once labor has begun, contractions tend to become stronger as labor progresses, though they tend not to get closer together than about every three minutes. This means you usually get a break in between to recover from each contraction before the next one begins. Progress is not always uniform; occasionally contractions seem to run into one another, and sometimes a very strong contraction will be followed by a weaker one.

Once the woman is fully dilated, she may experience some strange symptoms. Shivering, trembling, sweating or nausea is all common. Some mothers feel restless and want to change position, often into the position in which they want to deliver the baby. At the end of each contraction the mother may begin to feel that she wants to bear down and begin to push the baby out. When the healthcare professional sees these signals, she will probably want to do an internal exam and check that you are fully dilated. If so, you are ready to begin the second stage. If you are not quite fully dilated, the nurse or midwife may ask you to “pant” during the contractions to help you resist the urge to bear down.

The Second Stage of Labor

Most women having an active labor find that the pushing sensation is a reflex and they can’t stop themselves. Usually women know instinctively to take a deep breath, lowering the diaphragm and putting pressure on the uterus. A series of short pushes at this time can be more effective than one long push. An upright or semi upright position is helpful in promoting the process; if you are lying down you actually have to push the baby uphill because of the angle of the birth canal. Most women also instinctively push with each contraction and rest in between.

With each contraction the baby should descend lower into the birth canal. At some point the baby’s head will become visible from the outside (crowning); this is an exciting moment for a partner or birth companion who is present. The mother can be encouraged to know that the baby is really there and about to be born. Just before the birth, the perineum begins to stretch to its widest. This can cause a stretching and stinging sensation. If you seem likely to tear, an episiotomy may be made (see page 116); otherwise the tissues become numb when stretched further. Once the baby’s head has crowned, it will slip out; another contraction should deliver the shoulders and then the rest of the baby.

When the baby is born it may look strange; somewhat gray colored and slimy with vernix and some blood. (Vernix is a waxy substance that helps protect the baby’s skin from fluids in the amniotic sac.) When the baby draws breath-and usually cries loudly-the color will change to a healthier pink. If the baby is breathing normally you will be able to hold your baby, discover whether it’s a boy or girl, count the fingers and toes and begin to get to know one another. Some mothers will want to put the baby straight to the breast.

The Third Stage of Labor

This is the delivery of the afterbirth. This stage may take up to 30 minutes. The umbilical cord, its job done, may be pulled gently, and the doctor or midwife may press her hand on your abdomen to assist delivery of the placenta. The uterus continues to contract. Your abdomen may be massaged to help the process along. If bleeding is heavy, you may receive medications in an effort to reduce the risk of postpartum hemorrhage.

Soon after the birth is a good time to put the baby to the breast for the first time, because research has shown that the sooner after the birth a baby feeds, the more likely it is that breast-feeding will be successfully established. In nature, the baby’s sucking at the breast helps with delivery of the afterbirth. Not all mothers and babies are ready for a breast-feed, however, so don’t feel rushed; take the time you need to get to know one another.

Pregnant at Last

Author: AA Gifts

Pregnant at Last Women who have spent some time considering pregnancy in general want to make sure they are in the best health and have done everything possible to ensure they have a healthy child. Older women in particular may be anxious to do everything they can to offset the possible risks involved in being an older mother. You can take practical steps in advance to prepare yourself for the healthiest possible pregnancy.

It’s important to check that you are immune to rubella (German measles) before you start trying to conceive. Catching this disease, particularly in the first months of pregnancy, causes severe disabilities in the child or a miscarriage. If you are not immune, you can be vaccinated against rubella before you conceive. It is also a good idea to check whether you may be carrying a sexually transmitted disease. Hard-to-diagnose infections such as Chlamydia, Gardnerella and Mycoplasmas may be implicated in miscarriage and premature delivery. Blood tests for viruses such as cytomegalovirus, which can cause abnormalities in the baby, may also be worthwhile.

Stopping Contraception

If you have been relying on an IUD, you will need to have it removed by a doctor before you conceive. As soon as an IUD is removed, you can get pregnant. If you get pregnant by chance with an IUD in place, it does carry risks for mother and baby. You are more likely to have an ectopic pregnancy-a pregnancy that occurs outside the womb, usually in the Fallopian tubes-and there is a high risk of miscarriage. As many as 60% of such pregnancies end before term. The miscarriages are more likely to occur in the second three months of pregnancy. IUDs are usually removed while you have a period, because the cervix is slightly dilated then and this aids removal.

If you have been taking the Pill, stop taking it two or three months before you wish to conceive. You can use a barrier method, such as the condom or diaphragm, or natural family planning (rhythm method) during this time. (But be aware you are unlikely to use natural family planning effectively if you have not spent some time learning the technique and observing your menstrual cycle.) Studies have shown that women who took the Pill inadvertently in early pregnancy have only a very slight extra risk of having an abnormal pregnancy or a child with disabilities. Those who conceive as soon as they stop taking the Pill face no extra risk.

All the same, it is a good precaution to make sure that your body is free of all drugs before you get pregnant. It also helps to date the pregnancy if you have had one or two normal menstrual cycles before you conceive because this allows for good pregnancy care.

There is, however, some evidence that women who conceive while using spermicides, whether on their own or in combination with the diaphragm, cap or condom, run a slightly higher risk of a miscarriage (and, incidentally, also a greater chance of having a girl). It is obviously better to conceive when there are no traces of spermicide in the vagina. If you intend to try to conceive, it may be a good idea to ask your doctor to do a cervical smear and perhaps to take a swab to check that you do not have any vaginal infection, such as thrush, before you get pregnant. This will usually be done at your first prenatal appointment when you are pregnant anyway, but some women prefer not to have a vaginal examination in early pregnancy, especially if they have had a miscarriage or threatened miscarriage in the past. It also makes sense to clear up any infection before rather than after a pregnancy has begun.