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[personal profile] ailbhe
The plumber is here dismantling the bathroom. He's being very industrious. Today the tiles are all coming down and the bath is being replaced, then tomorrow the sink and loo, I think. Emer thinks it's interesting but would prefer everything to stay unchanged, possibly everywhere, for ever. Linnea is less interested.

This morning there was a but on BBC Radio 4 about the ever-increasing use of epidurals and the presenter tried to change it from two people who basically agreed with each other to an argument about a man telling women the pain is necessary and they shouldn't be allowed etc. I ended up crying so now have an SF movies soundtrack playing instead, which is much less stressful.

Epidurals: women wouldn't choose them nearly as much if they were getting adequate midwifery care, and anyone trying to reduce access to epidurals without first fixing the actual problem needs to be poked firmly in the snoot. Both experts on the radio today agreed with me, in spite of the presenter trying to get them to argue.

You must, as Doctor Latchford says, expect some discomfort after childbirth. However, as Mister Smith The Antipodean Gynaecologist says, If it hurts that much we must fix it. That goes for during childbirth too.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-07-13 04:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pocketnaomi.livejournal.com
I agree about induced labor. With my firstborn, I had a natural labor for several hours that they had to stop, because the baby's heart rate was dipping alarmingly. So it took induction to start it up again after she'd been stabilized. I didn't need an epidural before the "break." I did afterwards when they restarted labor forcibly.

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