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Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Episode 100 (Epilogue): Pregnancy and Birth Ritual


Birth in the News:

Midwifery Led Continuity of Care Linked to Lower Risk of Premature Birth 

Restricting Food and Drink During Labor Found Unwarranted 


In this episode, Maternally Yours explored different rituals practiced around the world for women in their child bearing years and reflected upon childbirth rituals in America.

We spoke to Midwife and 2011 CNN Hero of the Year, Robin Lim who founded Yayasan Bumi Sehat  in 1995, an Indonesian not-for-profit organization. "Ya ya san" means not-forprofit, "Bumi" means Earth-Mother, and "Sehat" translates as Healthy. Thus she began the Healthy Mother Earth Foundation in response to an overwhelming need for improved maternal health care in Indonesia.

In Bali, childbirth is celebrated by families and women receive help from other mothers after the birth. To support Robin’s ongoing efforts in Bali please visit bumisehatfoundation.org.

We then spoke to Sandi Blankenship, a Certified Professional Midwife who has worked in the United Arab Emirates, China and Jamaica. In Jamaica, Blankenship said that no families were allowed to be in the hospital. Mothers
would hoist newborns against the hospital windows so that their families could see the babe from the parking lot. More experienced mothers comforted first-time mamas through their childbirth while they were also in labor. Moms would also bind their baby’s abdomen with a string to keep the evil away.

In the Arab Emirates, women eat dates during pregnancy to strengthen their uterus and then during labor for energy. If they are experiencing a slow birth, they often eat cinnamon tea to speed up contractions.

In China, every mom has an entire month off so she can focus entirely on taking care of herself and her baby. Their female relatives do all of their housework for them and prepare them nutritiously rich food made with traditional herbs and chinese medicine.

For the last portion of the show, we spoke to Robbie Davis-Floyd. She said that pioneer women would give birth with the assistance of midwives. If a woman was in labor and there was no midwife nearby all of her female neighbors would come to her house. Davis-Floyd said that it was basically a party that celebrated female closeness and friendship.

In the late 1800’s and early 1900’s scientists began to look at the human body as a mechanical thing detached from nature. This was when authoritative knowledge about childbirth first came into fruition. Female bodies were viewed as defective to male bodies. They became viewed as dysfunctional, pathological machines and childbirth became a life process in need of medical intervention.

Over a century ago, obstetricians took over birth and moved 99% of birth into the hospital. Birth became a process of production. In hospitals, the focus is on the product -- producing a healthy child through childbirth rather than making it a healthy, natural experience for the mother and the baby. Standard procedures and standard routines are performed on mothers with no scientific reasoning. These procedures become rituals which are enforced to make the obstetrician feel better about attending birth. “The more procedures the do, the more power they have,” Davis-Floyd said.

 Most of her published articles are freely available on her website www.davis-floyd.com.

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Episode 100: Pregnancy and Birth Ritual


Join Laura and Carmela tonight, Tuesday, August 27th, as we celebrate our 100th episode by traveling around the world to take a look at how other cultures celebrate pregnancy and birth--and then examine our own evolution of birth ritual. We will be joined by globetrotting midwife Sandi Blankenship, 2011 CNN Hero of the Year Robin Lim, and birth anthropologist Dr. Robbie Davis-Floyd. Have questions for our hosts or our guests? Please email us or post to our facebook page.

Tune into WSLR 96.5 LPFM or online at www.wslr.org tonight, Tuesday, August 27th at 6:00pm ET. The program will also available later in the evening via podcast at maternallyyoursradio.com.

For more information or to submit questions for our hosts our our guest, please contact the hostesses of Maternally Yours at MaternallyYoursRadio@gmail.com, or on our facebook page at facebook.com/maternallyyours.

Maternally Yours,
Cheryl, Carmela, Ryan and Laura

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Episode 99: Working Motherhood, Part 3 - Work-From-Home Moms

Join Ryan and Laura tonight, Tuesday, August 20th, as we finish up our summer series on Working Motherhood with a look at moms who choose to make home and office one and the same. We'll be joined by local moms who are working for themselves and for others from the comforts--and challenges--of their own homes. Have questions for our hosts or our guests? Please email us or post to our facebook page.

Tune into WSLR 96.5 LPFM or online at www.wslr.org Tuesday, August 20th at 6:00pm ET. The program will also available later in the evening via podcast at maternallyyoursradio.com.
For more information or to submit questions for our hosts our our guest, please contact the hostesses of Maternally Yours at MaternallyYoursRadio@gmail.com, or on our facebook page at facebook.com/maternallyyours.

Maternally Yours,
Cheryl, Carmela, Ryan and Laura

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Episode 98: Pumping, Working and Nursing

Join Cheryl and Ryan tonight, Tuesday, August 13th, as we discuss the art of pumping, working and breastfeeding. We'll be joined by local experienced pumping and working mamas, as well as by a Lactation Counselor who has successfully worked and pumped. They'll share tips, tricks and support on the balancing act that is working and pumping.  Have questions for our hosts or our guest? Please email us or post to our facebook page.

Tune into WSLR 96.5 LPFM or online at www.wslr.org tonight, Tuesday, August 13th at 6:00pm ET. The program will also available later in the evening via podcast at maternallyyoursradio.com.

For more information or to submit questions for our hosts our our guest, please contact the hostesses of Maternally Yours at MaternallyYoursRadio@gmail.com, or on our facebook page at facebook.com/maternallyyours


Maternally Yours,
Cheryl, Carmela, Ryan and Laura

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Episode 97 (Epilogue): Report from Rwanda


The Ministry of Health in Rwanda has partnered with top US institutions of medicine, nursing, health management, and dentistry who are committed to sending faculty to schools of medicine and nursing, and hospitals throughout Rwanda. One of those institutions sought the services of retired Sarasota obstetrician and perinatologist Dr. Washington Hill and his wife, Neonatal Intensive Care Nurse Pauline Hill. Dr. Washington Hill joined us tonight to discuss their experiences there.

Dr. Hill is board certified in Obstetrics and Gynecology and Maternal-Fetal Medicine and is known through the nation for his expertise in maternal-fetal medicine and high risk pregnancy. Dr. Hill has cared for the mothers and babies at the highest risk in our community for over twenty years. He is now an instructor at the Duke University Medical Center in Kigali, Rwanda, as part of the Human Resources for Health Program.

Dr. Hill discussed what brought him to Rwanda, the work the Clinton Foundation is doing, and what he and his wife have been working on for the past year. We focused a great deal on the value of maternity and prenatal care in Rwanda, and efforts being made to increase women’s access to and proclivity to seek out prenatal care. Dr. Hill highlighted the value of midwives in goals to have every birth attended by a medical health professional in Rwanda. Dr. Hill also discussed how practicing medicine in Rwanda differs from practicing in the United States, and also described differences individuals deal with when going about receiving health care.

Tonight’s tip: Look forward to recovering faster from a natural birth than a scheduled cesarean, which is major abdominal surgery that causes more pain, requires a longer hospital stay and a longer recovery. For more tips to help you go the full 40 weeks, visit the Association of Women's Health, Obstetric and Neonatal Nurses website at health4mom.org.

Birth in the News:

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Episode 97: Report from Rwanda

Join the ConversationTuesday, August 6th at 6pm as Laura and Cheryl welcome back Dr. Washington Hill, maternal fetal medical doctor and recently retired Sarasota Memorial Hospital physician. Dr. Hill has spent the last six months teaching medical students, nurses and midwives in Rwanda, and will share with our listeners his work and experiences there.

Tune into WSLR 96.5 LPFM or online at www.wslr.org Tuesday, August 6th at 6:00pm ET. The program will also available later in the evening via podcast at maternallyyoursradio.com.
For more information or to submit questions for our hosts our our guest, please contact the hostesses of Maternally Yours at MaternallyYoursRadio@gmail.com, or on our facebook page at facebook.com/maternallyyours.

Maternally Yours,
Cheryl, Carmela, Ryan and Laura

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Episode 96 (Epilogue): Cut, Stapled and Mended

Birth in the News:

Professional Golfer Gives Up Lead to Watch Birth of Baby 

Canada's First Male Midwife


In this week's Conversation, we welcomed back bestselling author Roanna Rosewood to discuss her memoir Cut, Stapled and Mended: When One Woman Reclaimed her Body and Gave Birth On Her Own Terms After Cesarean. She discussed feeling compelled to write the book after hearing a constantly judgmental conversation surrounding birth. She discussed the need for women to seek childbirth education and said that we don't spend nearly enough time thinking about birth--and when we do, we're thinking about the wrong things. We need to "peel back the layers and think about what we're thinking and how we're feeling and what's going on with our bodies." When asked about the feeling of separation after her first cesarean, Roanna gave our listeners a reading from Cut, Stapled, and Mended:

"At 5:04 am, I hear my baby's cry. I am a mother. I have a baby. 'It's a boy,' they say, lifting him in front of my eyes. I see as exquisite face covered in white vernix and blood with a head full of thick black hair. He is big and beautiful and he is my son. In a blink, he is gone. They take him ten feet to my right. He is screaming with all of his might. I strain to see him but cannot. He is surrounded by uniformed ones.

Why don't they give him to me? What is wrong? Every instinct in my body demands that I get up and go to him. I can't. I'm tied down. My womb is sitting outside of my body. Drying vomit tickles my cheek. 

They continue working on me, removing the placenta, throwing it and the cord away: pieces of me I had planned to bury in the ground and plant a tree over. It doesn't matter now. My baby needs help. Can't they hear him calling me? Please help my baby. Oblivious, to his loud wails and my silent prayers, they blather on: 'Very vigorous, Apgar nine, seven pounds, eleven ounces...'

Nine is a good Apgar. Why are they ignoring his screams? Why won't they give him to me?

Leaving me, Ben goes to our baby. Papa speaks. Our son stops screaming, recognizing his father's voice from the beginning of time. It is the only familiar element in this new, loud, bright, and waterless world. They look into each other's eyes, seeing each other for the first time. I am relieved that my baby is comforted. I am a mom, byt not really. It's been he sees, ben he bbonds with. I watch Ben's back.

When the uniforms finally finish with my son, Ben carries him to me. He is fresh and clean. All traces of birth--all traces of me--have been wiped from his body. He is beautiful: a present all wrapped up with a cotton cap covering his thick black hair. Or did I just imagine hair? Ben sits next to me, holding him. A uniform releases one of my arms from its cuff. I start to reach out and touch my baby--but my arm won't work. The drugs have rendered my hand too heavy to lift. I watch Ben caress him.

Later, in recovery, the room is dimly lit and warm. The white gowns finally leave. I lie motionless, my arms still unresponsive. Unable to hold my baby, my body shaking uncontrollably, I succumb to sleep. Mom and Laureen help my baby nurse. They hold him in position close to my heart, using my body to provide nourishment to my son, connecting him to what is left of me."

We then talked about the myriad of alternative therapies Roanna underwent between and during her pregnancies to achieve the VBAC she desired, as well as a very important trip to Hawaii that resulted in an unexpected act of self-discovery. 

When asked why she decided to affect change in birth through such a personal outlet, Roanna answered, "Because sterilizing birth doesn't work. That's what we've done is we've tried to sterilize it, we've tried to make it black or white. And when we do that, we're not really speaking the truth."

Finally, Roanna shared her work with the Human Rights in Childbirth organization. "A doctor or a midwife has no more business telling a woman what position to assume to give birth in than she has a right to dictate the position of their next bowel movement. This idea that anybody other than a woman should be making these decisions, and that their job is anything other than supporting a woman unless there is a true emergency, is crazy. It's so crazy that people have accepted that, and Human Rights in Childbirth is changing that. I'm so excited to be part of this movement."

Roanna shared an opportunity for our listeners who would like to buy her book--they can now do so and receive a smorgasbord of gifts from supportive birth workers nationwide.

* You're invited to join The Maternally Yours Collective this Sunday at Station 400 for Books over Brunch. We'll discuss Cut, Stapled and Mended and share your thoughts on the book with its author, Roanna Rosewood, as well.