Archive | 2012

Let’s review: Twelve things you shouldn’t say to Dr. Amy … unless you want to appear very foolish

This piece has received more comments than any other I have written, 1000+ and counting. It first appeared 2 years ago, but rarely a week goes by without someone asserting one or more of the following in the comments sections. Clearly, some people need a review. It seems like every day a new visitor parachutes […]

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Henci Goer rejects the nonsense of Gaskin, Harper and other birth advocates

Although Henci Goer’s new book, Optimal Care in Childbirth, suffers from serious deficiencies, it does have one important virtue. I’ve often written that Henci Goer is one of the few (perhaps the only) professional childbirth advocates who actually reads and understands the scientific literature. She may cherry pick the evidence and she may try to […]

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In the face of staggering death toll head midwife relentlessly promotes normal birth

I first wrote about the problem last year. Promoting normal birth is killing mothers and babies: Gill Edwards, a leading clinical negligence solicitor with the firm Pannone, is in no doubt why these fatal mistakes continue. ‘Too often, we see a desire for autonomy, sometimes verging on arrogance, on the part of some midwives,’ she […]

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No, Ina May, the cervix is not a sphincter

It must be awesome to have followers so gullible that you can make up whatever you want, no matter how idiotic, and your supporters will believe you. Ina May Gaskin, the ultimate fraud, should know. She makes it up as she goes along and homebirth advocates, among the least knowledgeable people alive on the subject […]

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Optimal care in childbirth for whom?

Earlier this month I wrote about Henci Goer’s problem with scientific evidence on display in her latest book Optimal Care in Childbirth. Her problem is that the scientific evidence does not support her preferred methods of care. No problem! She simply created excuses as to why she and her supporters can blithely ignore the scientific […]

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Perineal tears, midwifery care and the gap between rhetoric and reality

The Motherlode column in The New York Times has performed a public service by highlighting a relatively common problem that receives little attention: severe perineal tears, a known complication of vaginal birth. Ashley Nelson describes her experience: … In addition to the tear, doctors would later find a rectovaginal fistula, wherein a passage forms between […]

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Why are homebirth advocates lauding a sexual predator?

I’ve been getting lots of emails about People Magazine’s article on Kimberly Van Der Beek’s homebirth. Kimberly is the wife of sitcom star James Van Der Beek. Facing a C-section for a breech baby, Kimberly met with Dr. Stuart Fischbein, “an angel in the birthing world,” who ultimately presided over the breech homebirth of her […]

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Except for the nerve damage, the baby was “unscathed”

How selfish and immature do you have to revel in the homebirth of a baby who suffered nerve damage as a result? An initial check reveals a brachial plexus palsy in her right arm, a tender neck, and some bruising, but otherwise Virginia has come away unscathed. Melanie, you ought to stop congratulating yourself for […]

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The firemen ruined my hearth experience

OMG, Mamas, I am so traumatized by my latest hearth experience. I was planning to go entirely natural at home and then everything was ruined by the firemen. The story of this trauma begins with my last hearth experience. I was so uneducated that I believed all the fear mongering around fire in our society. […]

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Sheila Kitzinger and the ultimate first world problem: I didn’t have an orgasm in childbirth

Childbirth activist and social anthropologist Sheila Kitzinger has helpfully identified the ultimate first world problem: I didn’t have an orgasm during childbirth. That’s what I took away from today’s piece in The Telegraph entitled Is childbirth orgasmic? I think not, Sheila Kitzinger. Don’t be misled by the title. The article is a puff piece (“Would […]

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