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Info About Water Birth (baby Delivery In Water) - Health - Nairaland

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Info About Water Birth (baby Delivery In Water) by Nobody: 8:54am On Apr 05, 2016
Cc: explorers thread on childbirth process
The Basics of Water Birth

A water birth means at least part of your labor, delivery, or both happen while you’re in a birth pool filled with warm water. It can take place in a hospital, a birthing center, or at home. A doctor, nurse-midwife, or midwife helps you through it.
In the U.S., some birthing centers and hospitals offer water births. Birthing centers are medical facilities that offer a more homelike setting than a hospital and more natural options for women having babies. The use of a birthing pool during the first stage of labor might:

Help ease pain
Keep you from needing anesthesia
Speed up your labor
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), which sets guidelines for pregnancy and childbirth care in the U.S., says a water birth during the first stage of labor may have some benefits but delivering your baby underwater should be considered an experimental procedure with risks. The first stage is from when contractions start until your cervix is fully dilated.

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Studies show water birth during stage one doesn’t improve your or your baby’s medical outcome.

A warm bath might help you relax and help you feel more in control. Floating in water helps you move around more easily than in bed, too.

Some science suggests that the water may lower chances of severe vaginal tearing. And it may improve blood flow to the uterus. But study results about these points aren’t clear.
Stage Two of Labor: Time to Exit the Tub
Things change during the second part of labor. That’s when your cervix is completely dilated and open and you start pushing until the baby is born.

Many doctors say there isn’t enough information to decide how safe or useful water birth is during this period.

Being out of the water for the second part of your labor makes it easier to move fast in case something goes wrong, ACOG spokesman Aaron Caughey, MD, says.

“If you have to do an emergency C-section, it would be foolhardy to risk an extra 4 or 5 minutes to move you out of the water,” says Caughey, chairman of the obstetrics and gynecology department at Oregon Health and Science University.

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Water Birth Risks
Here are some of the rare problems that could happen while water birthing:

You or your baby could get an infection.
The umbilical cord could snap before your baby comes out of the water.
Your baby’s body temperature could be too high or too low.
Your baby could breathe in bath water.
Your baby could have seizures or not be able to breathe.
“It’s important to emphasize the ‘rare’ part. But these are the sorts of outcomes that are severe, like drowning,” says Jeffrey Ecker, MD, who co-wrote the ACOG committee's opinion on water births.

Are You a Good Water Birth Candidate?
Some factors may keep you out of the running for a water birth. You shouldn’t try it if:

You’re younger than 17 or older than 35.
You have complications like preeclampsia or diabetes.
You’re having twins or multiples.
The baby is in the breech position.
The baby is premature.
You’re having a really big baby.
You need to be constantly monitored and it can’t be done in the tub.
You have an infection.
Water Birth Precautions to Take
If you’re thinking about a water birth, talk to your health care professional early in your pregnancy to find out if it’s a service the hospital provides. If so, who will manage your labor and delivery? You may need to find a midwife instead of an OB-GYN.

If it’s not done in a hospital near you, you may have to go to a birthing center or do it at home.

Regardless of where you decide to deliver, having a water birth means you should ask questions about how the labor and delivery are done. Things to look for:

You have an experienced health care professional to help you through the labor and delivery.
High standards are kept to ensure the tub is clean and well-maintained.
Proper infection control measures are in place.
You and your baby are being properly monitored while in the tub as required.
There’s a plan to get you out of the tub as soon your doctor, nurse, or midwife says it’s time.
The water temperature is well-regulated, usually between 97 to 100 F.
You drink water during the birth to avoid dehydration.
Getting into a warm bath too early might slow your labor.

Source: http://www.m.webmd.com/baby/guide/water-birth
Re: Info About Water Birth (baby Delivery In Water) by agarawu23(m): 12:30pm On Apr 05, 2016
Okay
We are reading
Re: Info About Water Birth (baby Delivery In Water) by anncook158: 10:54am On May 30, 2016
The idea of water birth is that the warm waters of the pool will feel like the waters of your uterus (womb) to your baby. Babies born in water are often calm, and cry less than babies born in air.

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