Home Family Matters Labour and Birth Ten Tips for a Normal Birth

Ten Tips for a Normal Birth

Ten Tips for a Normal Birth

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Family Matters - Labour and Birth


 

  1. Choose a place to birth where you're most comfortable and that supports normal birth. This may be at home, in a birth center or hospital.
  2. Choose a healthcare practitioner who supports the six care practices that promote normal birth. Many women have found the care provided by midwives includes less interventions and more labor support.
  3. Don't request or agree to induction of labour unless there's a medical indication. Allowing your body to go into labor on its own is usually the best sign that your baby is ready to be born. Allow your labor to find its own pace and rhythm. Don't focus on the clock and don't use Pitocin to speed up your labor without medical indication.
  4. Plan to move around freely during labor. You'll be more comfortable, your labor will progress more quickly, and your baby will move through the birth canal more easily if you stay upright and respond to the pain of your labor by changing positions. Try rocking, straddling a chair, lunging, walking and slow dancing.
  5. Think carefully about who you want to give you support during labour and birth. Consider hiring a doula or other professional labour support person to give you, your partner, and any other support person who's with you, continuous emotional and physical support.
  6. Ask that your baby's heartbeat be monitored intermittently instead of all the time so that belts, cords or wires do not tie you to a machine or specific place.
  7. Eat and drink as your body tells you to. Drinking plenty of fluids during labor will keep you from getting dehydrated and give you energy.
  8. Use nonpharmacologic pain management strategies. For many women, warm baths and showers give powerful pain relief. Practice using birth balls, massage, hot and cold packs, aromatherapy, focused breathing and other comfort measures learned in Lamaze childbirth classes.
  9. Don't give birth on your back! Upright (e.g. sitting, squatting or standing), all-fours or side-lying positions are more comfortable for you, increase the effectiveness of your contractions and enable you to work with gravity. Push when your body tells you to and ask that support persons give only quiet encouragement. “Cheerleading” or counting is not recommended so that you can work with your body's own cues and rhythm.
  10. Keep your baby with you after birth. Skin-to-skin contact keeps your baby warm and helps to regulate your baby's heartbeat and breathing. Keeping the baby with you in your room helps you to get to know your baby, respond to your baby's early feeding cues and get breastfeeding off to a good start.

    If problems arise, ask questions about the risks and the benefits of any recommended interventions. Understand that sometimes labor and birth don't go as expected. If you're involved with decisions about your care and have good labor support, you're more likely to be satisfied with your birth even if medical interventions are needed.


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