Cookham Osteopathy and Cookham Doula

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Cookham Osteopathy  and  Cookham Doula THE PINDER ROOM is an osteopath clinic. Gemma Rice DO is our registered osteopath. Gemma Rice BSc DO(Hons), MSc is our registered osteopath.

Jo Piercey is the owner of Cookham Osteopathy but has now retired from osteopathy and practising as a paediatric cranial-sacral specialist and doula. She graduated from the British College of Osteopathic Medicine in London In 2003. In 2006 she completed the MSc in Pediatric Osteopathy. With nearly 20 years of experience, she has built her practice with a focus on professionalism and an honest, calm and caring nature. Gemma is also a yoga teacher. Jo Piercey BSc DO MSc is now retired from osteopathy. She graduated from British School of Osteopathy in 1990 and worked at The Redgrave Clinic for 20 years before opening Cookham Osteopathy at The Pinder Room in February 2010. She has over 30 years experience working with babies, children and mothers and was awarded MSc in Paediatric Osteopathy in 2009. She has completed Phases I-IX Biodynamics with Dr Jim Jealous. She has now retired from osteopathy and is practising as a paediatric cranial-sacral specialist. Jo is also a recognised doula (DUK) having studied under Dr Michel Odent and Liliana Lammer. She has experience in supporting mothers at home, in a birthing centre and at hospital. You can see more details at www.cookhamosteopathy.com/doula. And http://doula.org.uk/content/jo-piercey-doula-profile

19/04/2024
This:  (not written by me but wholeheartedly agree.Use Your Loaf: The Curse of the Baby HatResharing this because I've j...
16/01/2024

This: (not written by me but wholeheartedly agree.
Use Your Loaf: The Curse of the Baby Hat
Resharing this because I've just seen a OBGYN on Instagram criticising doulas and health professionals who share the information about the hazards of hatting newborns.
It’s deeply ingrained, this habit of putting hats on newborns. Search online for images of newborns and almost all of them are togged up in a woolly hat, for all the world like they are about to go outside for a snowball fight. So why do we do it? And why do so many midwives and doctors insist that babies’ heads are covered the minute they emerge from the wardrobe-less confines of the womb?
The answer I mostly get from midwives when I ask is that babies lose lots of heat from their heads and can get cold. This confuses me. I wonder why on earth evolution would have created such a faulty system for our species. So I did a bit of digging. It seems a myth sprang up in the 1970s that led to us all believing that humans lose most of their heat from their heads. Apparently, this myth has it’s origins in a military experiment from the 1950s, in which scientists measured heat loss in soliders in snowy conditions. Because the only part of their bodies uncovered were their heads, it’s hardly surprising that they found the majority of heat lost was from their head. Of course, if they hadn’t been wearing any pants, logic would tell us that they would have lost body heat through their nether regions….heads are not special heat radiators!
And yes, this old research has been debunked many times since then. And yet, when it comes to newborn babies, we still perpetuate this old wives tale. But why does it matter, I hear you ask? Well, I’ll hand over here to Birthkeeper and maternity campaigner, Kemi Johnson:
When we put a hat on the baby immediately post birth, we sabotage the oxytocin flow for the mother because she can’t smell that wet head and stroke it…causing contractions that’ll keep her uterus toned and thus prevent haemorrhage
Someone who has just given birth is in a parallel dimension. Birth is a foreign country; in those minutes after birth, she must travel back to this time and place and re-enter her own body. Parents need to ground themselves in the here and now after their epic quest, by touching, smelling and kissing the baby. Left to themselves, feeling unobserved, parents will lower their faces to that crown that only moments before stretched perineum and heart wide open, and drink their baby in. Watch carefully and you’ll notice it cause uterine contractions.
As a witness to many, many births over the last twenty years, I can relate to this so much. The ritualistic hatting of the baby is all too often the seed that disrupts a physiological birth of the placenta. Rather that remaining safe in their golden bubble of oxytocin immediately after the birth, the midwife asks if they have a hat for the baby, or grabs one knitted by a stranger and swoops in to cover that delicate little scalp. Sometimes there is fuss and noise as people search through suitcases for hats. The hats usually slip off the moment they are put on, so there is repeated fussing around the baby. It wakes the mother up, pulling her out of her dream-like oxytocin high which all too often leads to problems with the placenta being born.
Just a reminder: a newborn’s temperature is regulated by skin to skin contact. The mother’s or birthing parent’s chest is nature’s incubator; if the baby is too cold, blood will rush to the mother’s chest to warm the infant. The birthing environment is almost always toasty warm and if it isn’t, steps can be taken to warm the dyad. Skin to skin also regulates the baby’s heart rate and breathing and increases the chances of breastfeeding getting off to a flying start.
As Carla Hartley, birth activist, says, “No hatting, No patting, no chatting” in those fragile hours after birth. In other words, if all is well, leave the new family be and give them peace and space to greet their newborn.
Jacqui Tomkins is an independent midwife who is equally passionate about this delicate moment as me. Here she is passing on a fascinating fact about the chemical cocktail that a good sniff of that little bonse will provide:
Scientists have discovered an odorless scent molecule called hexadecanal, or HEX, that is released by humans and impacts aggressive behaviour. The HEX molecule is the most adundant molecule released on the newborn’s head. The researchers found that this molecule reduced aggression in males (biologically important as infanticide is a relatively common event in the mammalian world) and increased aggression in females (key to infant protection).
Source: Eva Mishor et al., Sniffing the human body volatile hexadecanal blocks aggression in men but triggers aggression in women, Science Advances (2021). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abg1530
How cool is that, eh? How often do we have to be reminded that we are the pinnacle of millions of years of natural selection? Mother Nature really has designed a pretty damn fine system, if only we can stop meddling for a minute! As Dr Sarah Buckley says,
“mothers’ body heat is sufficient to keep all mammalian babies warm though skin-to-skin contact!”
I’ll add another ripple effect of the hats thing here – the confusion it causes to parents. One minute, you’re on a postnatal ward that is hotter than the surface of the sun, being ordered to keep a hat on your newborn and wrapped up in blankets like a burrito. The next minute you’re at home, being told by a community midwife or health visitor to never put a hat on a baby indoors and being scared witless about overheating the baby. This kind of conflicting advice undermines parents’ confidence in their own parenting abilities and quite possibly erodes their faith in health professionals.
But back to haxadecanal – I’ll leave you with this thought: one definition of hex is to ‘cast a spell or bewitch’, so the baby, literally, hexes the parents! Another meaning of hex is to curse and I think the habit of hatting is just that – a jinx on those precious post birth moments.
Please do feel free to leave me a comment. Did you have a hat put on your baby? How did it feel?
Additional resource for the person who commented on my blog who would like more references in this post. I searched and searched for some actual evidence that term, healthy babies need hats when in skin to skin contact and couldn’t find any. This article https://www.stanfordchildrens.org/en/topic/default...
from stanford university clearly states that even pre-term infants need to be kept warm in ways that does not involve hatting them. If anyone can find me some solid studies that prove that healthy term infants require hats in the first 24 hours of life, I’d love to see it, and will be happy to edit this piece to reflect said information.
Second additional resource for those interested in the traffic light hat scheme that seems to be being rolled out across the NHS. This article sums up my worries!
http://www.analyticalarmadillo.co.uk/.../new-initiative...

Stanford Medicine Children's Health Premature and low birthweight babies may be too immature to regulate their own temperature, even in a warm environment. Even full-term and healthy newborns may not be able to maintain their body temperature if the environment is too cold.

04/11/2023

When you have a newborn, you're so often asked "are they a good baby?".

Well, what is a good baby? One that doesn't swear, fight and get in trouble with the law we'd say!

Babies have been tucked up warm and snuggly in your tummy for 9 months, when they arrive they may be overwhelmed and want cuddling and fuss when learning to feed (read up on the fourth trimester!). This does NOT make them a bad baby, this is all normal behaviour!

So unless your baby is committing fraud from their bedside crib or joy riding your car, please do not label them 'bad' and just enjoy those snuggles!

07/10/2023

Keep feeding to sleep folks ❤

27/07/2023

Seriously.

18/07/2023

Background Many women experience psychological trauma during birth. A traumatic birth can impact on postnatal mental health and family relationships. It is important to understand how interpersonal factors influence women’s experience of trauma in order to inform the development of care that promo...

07/12/2022

You are not a milk factory. As you feed, your child's heart rate slows, their attachment hormones spike, their microbiome is nourished and their brain falls into a deep, restorative calm, much like adult brains do during meditation.⁠

Suckling causes oxytocin release in both mother and child, promoting a felt sense of wellbeing, safety, love and contentment. ⁠

Oxytocin lowers blood pressure and stress reactivity in mothers. In infants, oxytocin increases resilience to stress and drives the formation of more oxytocin receptors in the amygdala (for healthy social behaviour and a lowered risk for anxiety). ⁠

Simultaneous oxytocin release, repeated over time, changes both mother and infant brains, in ways that underpin long term attachment and synchronicity. It literally rewires brains in favour of love and wellbeing.⁠

You are not a milk factory.⁠ You are a retreat, a safe space, a perfect tonic.⁠

You are laying the foundations of long term wellbeing with every feed. ⁠

You are a hero.⁠

Follow on IG:
www.instagram.com/TheBirthImpact

⁠incredible words and by


・・・
📸 ⁠

01/12/2022

Only four days left to donate to the making of this Doula short film. A donation, no matter how small will get you an invitation to the private preview screening when it is completed. https://www.facebook.com/birthdouladoc

A short visual portrait of a woman (and her friends) who are changing the way we think about birth.

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The Pinder Room, Pinder Hall, Lower Road

SL69EH

Opening Hours

Monday 09:00 - 18:00
Tuesday 09:00 - 18:00
Wednesday 09:00 - 18:00
Thursday 09:00 - 18:00

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