House of Healing Hands

House of Healing Hands Founder: Nekaybaw Chattom, Certified Doula and Instructor, Certified Yoni Steam Practitioner

09/20/2023

!!!

07/13/2023

Plenty of time to make plans to be at another good show !

"Avoid seafood high in mercurySeafood can be a great source of protein, and the omega-3 fatty acids in many fish can pro...
06/11/2023

"Avoid seafood high in mercury
Seafood can be a great source of protein, and the omega-3 fatty acids in many fish can promote your baby's brain and eye development. However, some fish and shellfish contain potentially dangerous levels of mercury. Too much mercury could harm your baby's developing nervous system.

The bigger and older the fish, the more mercury it's likely to contain. During pregnancy, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) encourages you to avoid:

Bigeye tuna
King mackerel
Marlin
Orange roughy
Swordfish
Shark
Tilefish"

Don't take chances. Know what foods to avoid during pregnancy.

"Doulas nurture and support the birthing person throughout labor and birth. Their essential role is to provide continuou...
06/11/2023

"Doulas nurture and support the birthing person throughout labor and birth. Their essential role is to provide continuous labor
support to the mother, no matter what decisions the mother makes or how she gives birth. Labor support is defined as the therapeutic presence of another person, in which human-to-human interaction with caring behaviors is practiced (Jordan,2013).

Importantly, the doula’s role and agenda are tied solely to the birthing person’s agenda. This is also known as primacy of interest. In other words, a doula’s primary responsibility is to the birthing person—not to a hospital administrator, nurse, midwife, or doctor.

A doula can provide labor support via the four pillars of labor support. In the textbook Best Practices in Midwifery, the author describes three pillars of labor support as emotional support, physical support, and advocacy. In the book Optimal Care in Childbirth, informational support is also listed as a pillar of support.

Physical support is important because it helps the birthing person maintain a sense of control, comfort, and confidence. Aspects of physical support provided by a doula may include:

Soothing with touch through the use of massage or counter pressure
Helping to create a calm environment, like dimming lights and arranging curtains
Assisting with water therapy (shower, tub)
Applying warmth or cold
Assisting the birthing person in walking to and from the bathroom
Giving ice chips, food, and drinks
Emotional support helps the birthing person feel cared for and feel a sense of pride and empowerment after birth. One of the doula’s primary goals is to care for the mother’s emotional health and enhance her ability to have positive birth memories (Gilland, 2010b). Doulas may provide the following types of emotional support to the birthing person and their partner:

Continuous presence
Reassurance
Encouragement
Praise
Helping the birthing person see themselves or their situation more positively
Keeping company
Showing a caring attitude
Mirroring—calmly describing what the birthing person is experiencing and echoing back the same feelings and intensity
Accepting what the birthing person wants
Helping the birthing person and partner work through fears and self-doubt
Debriefing after the birth—listening to the mother with empathy
Informational support helps keep the birthing person and their partner informed about what’s going on with the course of labor, as well as provides them with access to evidence-based information about birth options. Aspects of informational support include:

Guiding the birthing person and their partner through labor
Suggesting techniques in labor, such as breathing, relaxation techniques, movement, and positioning (positioning is important both with and without epidurals)
Helping them find evidence-based information about different options in pregnancy and childbirth
Helping explain medical procedures before or as they occur
Helping the partner understand what’s going on with their loved one’s labor (for example, interpreting the different sounds the birthing person makes)
Advocacy is a pillar of support that is considered controversial by some for two reasons: first, the word advocacy has several meanings and definitions, and second, doulas differ on their beliefs about whether or not advocacy is part of their role.

In an important paper about the concept of advocacy in the nurse’s role, Kalaitzidis and Jewell (2015) compiled all of the existing definitions of patient advocacy. They found that in the past, the most common definitions of advocacy were “pleading the cause of someone” or “speaking on behalf of someone.” Advocacy can also be defined as “supporting an individual or group to gain what they need from the system” or supporting a person in their right to self-determination.

Advocacy has long been considered an essential component of the nurse’s role. However, while some doulas believe that advocacy is a part of their role, others have been specifically trained that advocacy is not part of their role at all. For many years, DONA International, the first doula training and certification organization, has stated in their standards of practice that advocacy is part of the doula’s role, as long as the doula does not speak on behalf of the client (DONA Code of Ethics, 2015).

Advocacy can take many forms—most of which do not include speaking on behalf of the client. Some examples of advocacy that doulas have described include:

Encouraging the birthing person or their partner to ask questions and verbalize their preferences
Asking the birthing person what they want
Supporting the birthing person’s decision
Amplifying the mother’s voice if she is being dismissed, ignored, or not heard, “Excuse me, she’s trying to tell you something. I wasn’t sure if you heard her or not.”
Creating space and time for the birthing family so that they can ask questions, gather evidence-based information, and make decisions without feeling pressured
Facilitating communication between the parents and care providers
Teaching the birthing person and partner positive communication techniques
If a birthing person is not aware that a provider is about to perform an intervention, the doula could point out what it appears the nurse or physician is about to do, and ask the birthing person if they have any questions about what is about to happen. For example, if it looks like the provider is about to perform an episiotomy without the person’s consent: “Dr. Smith has scissors in his hand. Do you have any questions about what he is wanting to do with the scissors?”
Taking into account the past definitions of advocacy for nurses, and the desire of many doulas to support the birthing person but not speak in place of them, I’d like to propose a new definition of advocacy in the context of doula care:

Advocacy is defined as supporting the birthing person in their right to make decisions about their own body and baby."
https://evidencebasedbirth.com/the-evidence-for-doulas/

WHAT IS A DOULA?The word "doula" comes from the ancient Greek meaning "a woman who serves" and is now used to refer to a...
06/11/2023

WHAT IS A DOULA?
The word "doula" comes from the ancient Greek meaning "a woman who serves" and is now used to refer to a trained and experienced professional who provides continuous physical, emotional and informational support to the mother before, during and just after birth; or who provides emotional and practical support during the postpartum period.

Clinical studies have shown working with a doula provides:

50% reduction in cesarean rates
25% reduction in the length of labor
60% reduction in the rate of epidural use
40% reduction in the need for forceps
Higher breastfeeding rates

"Early African American midwives were important members of their community, even among enslaved individuals. Slave owner...
06/11/2023

"Early African American midwives were important members of their community, even among enslaved individuals. Slave owners used these medical practitioners to ensure the health of their reproducing enslaved women and their newborn infants to expand their labor force. It was also common for midwives to attend to the slave master’s wives during birth as well. A good midwife might receive pay for their labor and be allowed to journey long distances to work, granting them a level of mobility that was rare for most enslaved individuals. As a result, these medical practitioners could maintain community connections and ancestry records even when households disbanded and members of the family were sold off.

After Emancipation, African-American midwives, often known as “Granny Midwives,” continued to work with both black and white women in rural and remote parts of the South. Often hospitals were rarely accessible and there were few willing or trained doctors available to serve these populations, making midwives the only viable option for expectant mothers. However, the role of the midwife would change in the latter half of the twentieth century as the practice of delivering babies became a medical specialty."

https://nmaahc.si.edu/explore/stories/historical-significance-doulas-and-midwives #:~:text=According%20to%20the%20CDC%20%2C%20Doula,more%20likely%20to%20initiate%20breastfeeding.

06/11/2023

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