Having A Baby? 10 Questions To Ask PDF Print E-mail
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Having A Baby? 10 Questions To Ask
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7. Ask, "How do you help mothers stay as comfortable as they can be? Besides drugs, how do you help mothers relieve the pain of labor?"

The people who care for you should know how to help you cope with labor. They should know about ways of dealing with your pain that don't use drugs. They should suggest such things as changing your position, relaxing in a warm bath, having a massage, and using music. These are called comfort measures.

Comfort measures help you handle your labor more easily and help you feel more in control. The people who care for you will not try to persuade you to use a drug for pain unless you need it to take care of a special medical problem. All drugs affect the baby.

8. Ask, "What if my baby is born early or has special problems?"

Mother-friendly places and people will encourage mothers and families to touch, hold, breastfeed, and care for their babies as much as they can. They will encourage this even if your baby is born early or has a medical problem at birth. (However, there may be a special medical reason you shouldn't hold and care for your baby.)

9. Ask, "Do you circumcise baby boys?"

Medical research does not show a need to circumcise baby boys. It is painful and risky. Mother-friendly birth places discourage circumcision unless it is for religious reasons. 

10. Ask, "How do you help mothers who want to breastfeed?"

The World Health Organization made this list of ways birth services support breastfeeding.

  • They tell all pregnant mothers why and how to breastfeed.
  • They help you start breastfeeding within 1 hour after your baby is born.
  • They show you how to breastfeed. And they show you how to keep your milk coming in even if you have to be away from your baby for work or other reasons.
  • Newborns should have only breast milk. (However, there may be a medical reason they cannot have it right away.)
  • They encourage you and the baby to stay together all day and all night. This is called "rooming-in."
  • They encourage you to feed your baby whenever he or she wants to nurse, rather than at certain times.
  • They should not give pacifiers ("dummies" or "soothers") to breastfed babies.
  • They encourage you to join a group of mothers who breastfeed. They tell you how to contact a group near you.
  • They have a written policy on breastfeeding. All the employees know about and use the ideas in the policy.
  • They teach employees the skills they need to carry out these steps.

Would you like to give this information (and more) to your doctor, midwife, or nurse?

This information is a part of the Mother-Friendly Childbirth Initiative written for health care providers. You can get a copy of the Initiative for your doctor, midwife, or nurse by mail, e-mail, or on the World Wide Web.

To Get a Copy:

CIMS National Office
PO Box 2346
Ponte Vedra Beach, FL 32004
888-282-CIMS
904-285-1613
Fax 904-285-2120
www.motherfriendly.org
This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

For a copy of both documents by mail, send a stamped self-addressed envelope with $3 (US) to help cover the costs ($4 Canada or Mexico, $5 all others). Bulk prices available.

© 2000 by The Coalition for Improving Maternity Services (CIMS).



 
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Quote

If we want to create a less violent world, we must begin by paying close attention to the "primal period." This is all of the experiences that a human being has from conception to his or her first birthday, and all of the experiences the mother has during that time.

--Suzanne Arms, Birthing the Future