Labor and birth, a very individualized experience
My patients often
ask me about pain control early in their course of prenatal visits.
My approach is to discuss all the options a woman has. Since there
is no way to predict what kind of labor any particular woman is
likely to have, decisions need to be made as the woman is experiencing
her labor.
"
decisions need to be made as the woman is experiencing her labor."
Some women have very efficient labors. They push well and deliver
their babies within a few hours. They may do well with a variety of
supportive techniques weve found to be helpful such as massage,
showers, birthing balls and intradermal injections of saline to help
back pain. Other women have prolonged, painful, exhausting labors.
They may choose to have pain medication. Epidurals are currently the
most frequently administered form of pain relief. It is a very individual
decision.
Epidurals not what they used to be
In the 25 years Ive been delivering babies, I have witnessed
an increase in the number of patients requesting epidurals. Between
50 and 60 percent of my patients have epidurals. Whats important
to note is these pain medications bear little resemblance to those
administered in previous decades.
Earlier, heavier doses of anesthesia used to control the pain of childbirth
did cause potentially harmful side effects. The epidurals or motor
blocks administered in the 1970s and 80s made it difficult for women
to push. Labor slowed, and there were increased C-sections and forceps
deliveries.
When I was in training in the early 1970s, the narcotics used in childbirth
knocked women out. They were dehumanizing and made it impossible for
women to participate in the birth process. The natural childbirth
movement was largely a reaction to this situation. It was regarded
as the alternative of choice and was favored by politically aware
women who participated in the womens movement in the late 60s.
But obstetric anesthesia has evolved, and theres little similarity
between those medications and what were using now. Many of the
current critics of epidurals are using data from the 1960s and 1970s
as the basis for their objections. Anesthesiologists are now providing
very dilute formulations of drugs, and many women are able to move
about during labor. They are able to push effectively; and when I
look at the data from my patients, I see no increase in C-sections
or forceps deliveries. My experience has been both obstetricians and
anesthesiologists share the same goal: help healthy moms deliver healthy
babies.
"Strong one-on-one support with continual eye contact and physical contact is very helpful."
Role of birth partners
One factor weve found is very helpful to women giving birth
is the presence of a strong labor support partner. That person may
be a spouse, a nurse, sister or friend. Strong one-on-one support
with continual eye contact and physical contact is very helpful.
In the early 1970s, Dr. Strong, who practiced at the National Maternity
Hospital in Dublin, reported very low C-section rates with what he
called, "the active management of labor." He used a drug
called pitocin to stimulate labor and guaranteed his patients delivery
within a reasonable number of hours. He spoke about his technique
in the U.S., and several hospitals tried using his method, but they
were not able to reproduce his results. In addition to pitocin, Strongs
patients were paired with sisters who were labor support specialists,
trained in very effective labor management techniques. These women
would partner with patients and stay with them through delivery of
the baby.
Clearly the labor support partners played an important role in his
practice. In this country as well, research has demonstrated births
attended by midwives often have a lower rates of C-sections. Techniques
used by midwives and other labor support partners can be very helpful
to laboring women, and many women may manage their labor with this
support and do very well without pain medication.
Some women, however, may have had little rest for several days prior
to going into labor. Because of many factors: the size of the pelvis,
the position of the baby, they begin long, prolonged labor in an exhausted
state. These women benefit enormously from epidurals.
"Women need to know what their options are."
Women need to know what their options are. My patients understand
I will be with them and Ill listen to what they tell me about
how they are coping with their pain. We can begin an epidural as long
as a woman is not about to deliver within an hour. It may take as
long as an hour for the anesthesiologist to prepare her and deliver
the medication.
After the epidural takes effect, many women are able to rest a bit
in preparation for delivery. When the baby is born, these moms bond
with their new babies as well as women who dont receive any
pain medication. In fact, they may bond better than women who are
physically and emotionally exhausted from a prolonged, painful labor.
That instantaneous love between a mom and her newborn is a phenomenal
sight to see. That bond and the health of the newborn are not compromised
in any way by the epidural medications we're using now.
Dr. Simon is an
attending gynecologist/obstetrician at Yale-New Haven Hospital and
an assistant clinical professor in obstetrics and gynecology at the
Yale School of Medicine. He is a partner of the County Obstetrics
and Gynecology Group with offices in New Haven, Branford, Clinton
and Wallingford.