Sacred Strength Birth Services

Sacred Strength Birth Services Providing gentle and nurturing support to families during pregnancy, birth, and beyond.

As I finish midwifery school I am not actively taking new clients at this time.

08/05/2022

Mutual Aid request: Please consider sending a few bucks to this sweet family. You can send funds via Venmo to Kelsi and she will pass it to the family. Venmo:

09/01/2020
Happy International Day of the Midwife to ALL of the amazing midwives out there! Sending love and gratitude to those tho...
05/05/2018

Happy International Day of the Midwife to ALL of the amazing midwives out there! Sending love and gratitude to those those midwives who have taught and mentored me as I navigate my own path to Midwifery! Im endlessly grateful to the midwives who have held space and cared for me in pregnancy, birth, and loss. The wisdom and traditions of midwives have inspired me for manny years and I’m excited to continue my path to Midwifery!

What’s in your prenatal?
03/08/2018

What’s in your prenatal?

Folic Acid Exposure in Utero is Associated with Development of Food Allergy

I just prepared a bulk order of my postpartum sitz bath herbs!
02/09/2018

I just prepared a bulk order of my postpartum sitz bath herbs!

Absolutely!
02/05/2018

Absolutely!

They believe the procedure has no meaningful health benefits.

"Ahavah BirthWorks was created in response to the devastating health disparities impacting communities of color, includi...
01/21/2018

"Ahavah BirthWorks was created in response to the devastating health disparities impacting communities of color, including extremely disproportionate infant and maternal mortality rates; up to 4 times higher than non-black birthing parents. Despite barriers to sustainability for birth organizations owned and operated by birth workers of color, including lack of funding and low Medicaid reimbursement rates, Ahavah BirthWorks continues to support high-risk families - and remains the only doula organization in Minnesota serving a primary demographic of African American families - but Ahavah is in need of our support."

Support 'Health Equity for MN: Support Ahavah BirthWorks' by donating or sharing today!

Do your research!
01/20/2018

Do your research!

The Center for Disease Control (CDC) recommendation that mothers with influenza be separated from their babies and not breastfeed makes no sense.

Mothers with influenza should continue to breastfeed. Here is why:

Influenza is infectious, as are most viral infections, BEFORE the person even realizes they are sick. The incubation period of influenza is said to be 1 to 4 days. Therefore, a person can be infectious 1 to 4 days before even realizing they have been infected. Breastfeeding mothers and babies share their environment and thus, wherever the mother picked up the infection, it is also likely the baby did as well.

Furthermore, just because you develop a fever, or cough, does not automatically mean you have influenza since winter is the season of many viral upper respiratory infections which are not always easy to distinguish one from another. Furthermore, not all people will rush down to get tested for influenza with the first time they cough and so the diagnosis will be delayed in most people once they do realize they are sick.

To separate a mother from her baby and ban breastfeeding has serious possible consequences. For babies as well as for toddlers, being refused the breast can be very emotionally traumatic, without necessarily preventing the illness in the baby/toddler, who might already have been infected. Furthermore, the stress of separation may actually increase the risk of illness in the infant/toddler. Not being able to breastfeed is likewise traumatic for the mother and may mean that at the time she is ill, engorgement increases her suffering and the task of having to maintain her supply and diminished milk supply from not breastfeeding.

Has the CDC forgotten the immunological protection that breastfeeding provides for the breastfeeding baby/toddler? Why is influenza different from most other infections? It's not. In fact, it is well known that babies who are breastfed remain healthy even when the mother falls ill with an infectious illness and if they do get sick, breastfeeding helps them get better faster. No other organization, including the WHO, has ever included influenza in the list of illness requiring stopping breastfeeding.

Breastfeeding mothers who have contracted influenza should get appropriate treatment and continue breastfeeding. In case their treatment includes antiviral medications such as oseltamivir (Tamiflu) or others, they are not a contraindication to breastfeeding.

Not only does the recommendation not make sense for protecting the baby from the infection, but as the family is living together, they almost always have been exposed and infected with the influenza virus. So who will be designated to take care of this baby?

Additionally, “interrupting” breastfeeding is term that takes for granted that it is simple to stop breastfeeding and subsequently to resume which is not the case.

Read more about how breastfeeding protects babies when a mother is sick: https://ibconline.ca/maternal-illness1/

Love this advice and this program! PLEASE! Take time to heal after your birth! Your pelvic floor will thank you!
01/12/2018

Love this advice and this program! PLEASE! Take time to heal after your birth! Your pelvic floor will thank you!

Your focus in the first 6 weeks after having a baby should be on bonding/caring for baby and recovery, not exercise. Too often the media portrays celebrities in bikinis just a few short weeks after giving birth and praises them for how amazing they are. Guess what? In addition to those images being�...

This is an amazing deal!
01/12/2018

This is an amazing deal!

twin cities birth photographer

11/19/2017

💗

11/18/2017

I love listening to these birthers explain their journey choosing a care provider and birth location. It is so important to spend the time to find the right provider!

Address

1043 Humboldt Avenue
Saint Paul, MN
55118

Telephone

+13123501675

Website

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Our Story

I am a birth doula as well as a placenta preparation specialist serving families in St. Paul & Minneapolis as well as surrounding areas. As a birth doula I provide gentle and nurturing support to families during pregnancy, birth, and beyond. Birth Doula Services $1350 Before birth: I provide two prenatal meetings (generally in your home) to get acquainted, to prepare and/or review your birth plan, to review comfort measures, and to review potential prenatal care options as well as potential birth procedures. During Labor/Birth: I provide continuous emotional, physical, spiritual support for you and your partner during your labor and the birth of your baby. After Birth: I provide support for up to 3 hours directly after the birth of your baby. I also make two postpartum visits during the first month after your baby is born. As a placenta preparation specialist I offer a variety of placenta preparation services to new mothers of the Twin Cities who understand the immeasurable benefits of this amazing organ. Placenta Encapsulation $275 In order to allow you and your partner most optimal rest I will pick up the placenta within the first 24 hours after birth. I will deliver the capsules to your home after the process has been completed, which typically takes two days.