Birth-Ed by Jodi

Birth-Ed by Jodi Childbirth Education
Perinatal Pelvic Biomechanics Specialist
Placenta Processing Services

What to expect: •Hands On Labor Support Skill Training•What  Labor and Birth looks like for you, your baby, and your hor...
08/25/2025

What to expect:
•Hands On Labor Support Skill Training
•What Labor and Birth looks like for you, your baby, and your hormones
•Shared Decision Making Activities
•Emotional and Social Considerations Around the Perinatal Period

📨 To Register: Message or Email birthedwithconfidence@gmail.com

We learn about physiologic birth: specifically:
•How to physically prepare your body to best support baby's journey during labor and birth
•How your birth hormones support the birthing process
• What baby's role is in birth and why this is so very important

We also learn:
• pain management and relaxation techniques
•how to be an active participant in your experience through shared decision making
•the emotional and social considerations around the perinatal Period
•Class 3 may offer a tour of a hospital environment
• Class 4 includes newborn and postpartum care. Experienced parents may opt out of this class.

You are encouraged to bring a labor support partner and/ or your doula to this workshop
Please reach out to your medical insurance company about Childbirth education reimbursement.

What to expect:•Hands On Labor Support Skill Training•What  Labor and Birth looks like for you, your baby, and your horm...
08/25/2025

What to expect:
•Hands On Labor Support Skill Training
•What Labor and Birth looks like for you, your baby, and your hormones
•Shared Decision Making Activities
•Emotional and Social Considerations Around the Perinatal Period

📨 To Register: Message or Email birthedwithconfidence@gmail.com

We learn about physiologic birth: specifically:
•How to physically prepare your body to best support baby's journey during labor and birth
•How your birth hormones support the birthing process
• What baby's role is in birth and why this is so very important

We also learn:
• pain management and relaxation techniques
•how to be an active participant in your experience through shared decision making
•the emotional and social considerations around the perinatal Period

You are encouraged to bring a labor support partner and/ or your doula to this workshop
Please reach out to your medical insurance company about Childbirth education reimbursement.

A little more than eleven years ago I learned what birth is supposed to look like.I learned in a pool in my dining room ...
07/25/2025

A little more than eleven years ago I learned what birth is supposed to look like.
I learned in a pool in my dining room on a sunny day.
I had experienced four of my own births prior to that one and attended many others as a NICU Nurse.
A home birth midwife once told me, "... Once you go home, you never go back [to the hospital]"
-that wasn't my midwife.
My midwife told me, "I think you are going to have a hard fight" when I told her I was taking my first labor and delivery job.
It was my mission to give each patient I took care of in the hospital their best chance at their best birth possible. One person each shift.
Childbirth Education has afforded me the opportunity to broaden that reach.

This little post-it marking my locker at work might look silly compared to the decorated name tags on my coworker's.
It was a scribble marking some thing or other left for me by her long before she left us. A little piece of the legacy I serve.

Time to Broaden the reach again 💜

Approximately 9% of women experience postpartum post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) following childbirth. Most often, ...
06/14/2025

Approximately 9% of women experience postpartum post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) following childbirth. 

Most often, this illness is caused by a real or perceived trauma during delivery or postpartum.

Birth is old. Science is new. I walk in both worlds, leaning to the old.We must assume we actually know very little  and...
05/30/2025

Birth is old. Science is new.
I walk in both worlds, leaning to the old.
We must assume we actually know very little and TRUST this ancient perfect design.

T. W. W. Wansbrough of Chelsea (London) introduced his ni**le shields to the medical profession in the July 23, 1842, issue of the Lancet. He wrote: "Among the modes of treatment published in The Lancet for this painful and distressing affection, I have been surprised that no mention is made of the leaden shield. I have recommended it for the last thirty years with invariable success, even where half the ni**le has sloughed away before I saw the patient. It is moulded by the plumber from thin sheet lead, over a wooden ni**le, and forms a receptacle for the natural one, which, from the oozing of the breast, is constantly immersed in a solution of lactate of lead, and speedily effects a cure."

In this class we learn about: Pelvic biomechanics and body balancing•we practice stretches, postures, and exercises to b...
02/26/2025

In this class we learn about:
Pelvic biomechanics and body balancing

•we practice stretches, postures, and exercises to be used in pregnancy to balance and prepare the body for birth
• we learn how to position the laboring body to best support the baby's journey through the pelvis during labor and birth.
*This segment is especially helpful for those who have had a previous long or difficult birth due to baby's position

You are encouraged to bring someone who will be helping you as a bedside labor support person. This could be your spouse or partner, a family member or friend. In addition, your Doula is also very welcome! 💕

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/19pvmwgEYt/
01/21/2025

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/19pvmwgEYt/

As I was working to catch up on my reading and podcasts that I go through, I came across some very exciting news.

Dr. Stu Fischbein OBGYN of Reteach Breech and Birthing Instincts, alongside Rixa Freeze of Breech Without Borders successfully published a Twin Homebirth Study in a peer reviewed journal. This is a huge deal as there has never been a study done like this, and the parameters and outcomes of this study are incredible. To get into some of the statistics discovered in this study-
Twin Homebirths: Outcomes of 100 sets of twins in the care of a single practitioner.

Transfers prior to labor- 31. 1 true cholestasis, 1 true IUGR, 4 cases of twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome (TTTS) of the 21 mono-di pregnancies, and some preterm labor and pprom (waters breaking preterm pre-labor) cases.

69 sets of twins went into labor at home. 8 transferred during labor, resulting in 6 cesarean deliveries and 2 vaginal births.
91.3% of twin births resulted in a successful vaginal birth. Vaginal birth of twins for multips (mothers of one or more children) was 97.9%. Vaginal birth of twins for Primips (first time mothers) delivering twins was 77.3%. In this study, mothers with no previous vaginal births having a VBAC with twins were included in the primip category, despite having 1 or more previous cesarean deliveries.

61 sets of twins were born at home with 1 maternal postpartum transfer and 1 neonatal postpartum transfer. This included 5 twin VBACs with no previous vaginal deliveries and 1 twin VBAC with at least one prior vaginal delivery.

The single newborn transfer was due to Transient Tachypnea of the Newborn (TTN), a benign condition that resolved without treatment. The average delivery was 39 weeks 0 days, range 35-42wks. On average, Twin A had an APGAR of 8 and Twin B an APGAR of 7 at 1 minute. There were no statistical differences in APGAR scores based on birth interval, the time between baby A and baby B is born. The rate of maternal blood loss did increase with the birth interval (40+min).

There was only one emergent transfer during labor, indicated by intense maternal uterine pain. This can be a sign of uterine rupture, so the team decided on hospital transfer by ambulance. During surgery (indicated for suspected uterine rupture) there was no uterine window or rupture detected and the cause of the intense pain was unknown.

63.9% of the mothers with successful births at home had an intact perineum with no tearing, 27.9% had a first degree tear, 6.6% (4 women) had a 2nd degree tear, and 1 woman who was also a primip had a third degree tear (1.6%). There were no episiotomies. There were no neonatal deaths. There were no maternal deaths.

25% of hospital twins are born vaginally in the hospital setting, leaving a 75% rate of cesarean for twins born at the hospital. This study had a cesarean rate of 8.7%. The current USA overall cesarean rate is 34%. The World Health Organization states that a cesarean rate above 15% is concerning, as only about 10% of women should medically need a cesarean. Women deserve information and opportunity to make an informed decision that is right for them. As it stands, if a provider has not had breech vaginal training, about 1 in 20 of their patients will be an automatic cesarean. About 5.5% of pregnancies will have a breech twin or breech singleton. That is 1 in 20 clients that they can not serve, but can only offer a cesarean.

Below is linked the recently published study, as well as the podcast where Dr. Stu and Rixa Freeze discuss the study.

Twin Home Birth study:
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0313941

Rixa joins at 14 minutes and goes through her background and the process of peer review. At 42 minutes, the discussion of the study begins.
https://redcircle.com/shows/93749277-4626-4bd4-8469-ed3c1c1bf4d2/episodes/f175751e-d0ac-40f8-bdfb-1da6d200ddcf

Have I ever asked you to ponder the direction the water in your toilet spins when flushed??🚽Go do it right now... Then y...
01/15/2025

Have I ever asked you to ponder the direction the water in your toilet spins when flushed??🚽
Go do it right now... Then your neighbor's... Then quite literally anyone's toilet this side of the equator...
Now believe me.
Babies rotate CLOCKWISE 🤯
(There has to always be THAT exceptional baby but hey! For the most part. I have met one ever🙄)

Now, My Brilliant Peers, let's think on how we can better help Babies and Birth through a better understanding of just this!

First, it is important to understand the idea of dextro-rotation. Put simply – clockwise rotation.

If we look back into the obstetrical literature even as early as the 1930’s we see there that they noted that babies rotated into the most open parts of the pelvis, which is clockwise.

Additionally, there are three types of muscle fibers in the uterus. On the outer layer, the muscle fibers run from top to bottom. These layers draw up as the pregnant uterus contracts in response to labor and are responsible for dilation. The middle layer of uterine fibers are made up of fibers in a figure eight pattern and the innermost layer of muscle fibers are circular fibers the fibers of the two inner layers work together to help the baby rotate through the cardinal movements during labor and help baby align with the pelvis.

Both the powers and the passage encourage clockwise rotation of the baby through the pelvis.

https://tucsondoulas.com/does-babys-position-matter-pt2/ #:~:text=Both%20the%20powers%20and%20the,%2C%20LOP%2C%20or%20LOT%20position.

THE MID PELVIS The most narrow part of the pelvis.The home of the pelvic floor muscle complex.(with a button hole openin...
11/16/2024

THE MID PELVIS
The most narrow part of the pelvis.
The home of the pelvic floor muscle complex.
(with a button hole opening at the anterior to allow baby through)
The place where the baby, who has ideally entered the pelvis looking at the mother's hip, now rotates.
🤔Imagine doing a head spin on a crooked floor...
CREATING BALANCE IN THESE SOFT TISSUES is the key to optimal rotation and your BEST BIRTH 💫
I CAN HELP! 🙋‍♀️



Graphic (and wondrous resource 💕) https://linktr.ee/Nmidwife71?fbclid=PAZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAAaZJgnLyjfVOfyBEk2TYB5lkMUmFe5INIyAQj-WFTdPzYHd36cncJ3V91ik_aem_zr5uKolQPtR0nhVSd4BTFg

🐻‍❄️
10/16/2024

🐻‍❄️

A Story, for your pleasure...
Have you heard this one before?
Once upon a time I took a hypno birthing class. (Why I did this with my 6th pregnancy is another story, completely)
The brilliant doula who taught the class knew I worked in Labor and Delivery. She told me, if you ever have a patient with an occiput posterior "OP" presentation baby, encourage them to get into an open knee chest position with their head significantly lower than their bum...
I thought nothing of it.... Just stored that info away somewhere in the back of my brain...
Then one night my co worker was really struggling to support her patient who likely had an OP baby, was suffering while attempting to cope with the associated pain, and it was looking like a surgical birth was likely...
I told her, "A doula once told me to get them into a particular position and it might help." Everyone was up for anything at that point. We did it and asked the provider to humor us to support the patients strong desire for a vaginal delivery...
35 minutes she stayed in my now Self Proclaimed "Polar Bear Position" before needing to vomit. (Don't fret the vomiting, story readers. Vomiting, you see, is something us Birth Workers get very excited about. It means labor is progressing to the transition phase)
She had a baby vaginally an hour after.
A spark ignited in my soul. "What else is there out there??!"
The rest is history.



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Troy, NY

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