Archive for the ‘Women's Health’ Category

Partnership or Marriage-baby Care

Saturday, June 13th, 2009
baby care
Robert Baird asked:


If you’re in a long term stable relationship, but are unmarried, you probably had good reason for choosing this kind of partnership. Now that you’re considering parenthood, is there a case for reconsidering your position? Have either or both of you anything to gain from marrying and, more importantly, has your prospective child? One of the reasons most commonly given by prospective parents for marrying be fore the baby is born is to ensure that the father is the legal parent of his child. The legal situation may vary from state to state, so formal marriage may not necessarily bc the only option for you, but clearly neither of you would want to encounter problems in gaining access to your child in the event that your relationship breaks down, leading to a split. However unlikely this may seem at present, no one can fore tell the future, and most couples would want to guarantee that their baby always has the equal benefit of both parents, even if at some time they may not live together anymore.

Changing Relationships

Some times new parents haven’t bargained for the fact that their relationship with family and friends will change. More importantly perhaps the dynamics of their own relationship will also change. No time is better spent be fore you even start trying for a baby than in exploring together what these differences might be.

Grandparents

You both know the personalities of the grandparents, and you may see difficulties ahead because their views may not be the same as yours. You’ll find later that agreement with grand parents about how you’re going to set limits for your child is invaluable. It’s also a good idea to agree that you’ll both gently but family resist any attempt by them to dictate methods of parenting to you. You can, however, ask them to help you to implement yours. But it’s also wise to listen to their views or you may be passing up good advice based on real experience.

Your friends

Once you have children, you may not be available to your friends as much as you were be fore, so they’ll appreciate it if you retain your identity as a friend rather than a parent while you’re with them. Bear in mind also that you’ll meet other people with babies with whom you’ll forge friendships, based on the shared experience of new parenthood.

The impact at work

Try also to rehearse in advance what difference thc advent of the baby may have at work. You may never have been a clock watcher be fore now, but it’s difficult not to count the minutes when you’re aching to get back to your baby and this is just as true for fathers as it is for mothers. However, your colleagues, no matter how sympathetic, have thc right to assume that you’ll hard as you did be fore. If you can see possible pitfalls, be up front and negotiate; you won’t always be a new parent, and lost trust is difficult to reestablish.

Questioning Your Reasons

Even if you think you both really want a baby, it’s still sensible to think about all the issues. The following questions don’t have right or wrong answers, but provide what i hope will be a useful starting point for you.

Does the idea of having a baby seem to be the instinctive next step for you both?

Have you always taken it for granted that you would have children?

Do you just want a child, or do you want a child specifically with your partner?

Does one of you want this baby more than the other?

If so, what effect has this had on your relationship?

Do you want to have a baby because you think it will strengthen your relationship with your partner?

What images do you see when thinking about life with your baby? Do they include sleep less nights and dirty diapers?

What will you miss most about being a couple rather than a trio?

Do you have any strong personal ambitions that could be compromised by having a baby?

Do you want a baby to make up for areas in you life that you find unsatis factory?

Is any part of your motivation to please family members, such as grand parents?

Are you and your partner clear about the commitment each of you will make to the baby?



Countdown to Birth-baby Care

Saturday, June 13th, 2009
baby care
Robert Baird asked:


As your due date approaches, the days may seem to drag by and you probably feel uncomfortably large. As the expectant father, you’ll be waiting for the telephone to ring with the call you’ve been waiting for.

Getting Ready

Although pregnancy is said to last 40 weeks, this is only a convenient method of calculation it’s quite normal for a baby to be born any time between 38 and 42 weeks. If your baby hasn’t been born by the official due date, don’t worry. most doctors aren’t in a hurry to induce a baby if the mother is healthy and there are no obvious problems, such as raised blood pressure. Stay active and arrange some outings and visits. It’s much better for both of you and the baby than hanging around the house feeling apprehensive.

Packing Your Hospital Bag

It’s a good idea to have everything ready for your baby’s arrival and your bag packed for the hospital three to four weeks before the due date, so that you are prepared for any eventuality. You will need to pack comfortable clothing, several pairs of underwear, toiletries, and other items, such as sanitary pads, diapers, and clothes for your baby, but ask your doctor or midwife if you’re not sure. You might want to bring along extra pillows or a couple comfort aids as well.

Getting Near Labor

In the few days before labor begins in earnest, you may notice some signs that indicate you haven’t got much longer to wait.

Feeling premenstrual

You may experience similar feelings to those before your period, such as a low, nagging backache.

Braxton hicks

You may become more aware of the painless tightening’s of the uterine wall. These are Braxton Hicks contractions, which can begin at around six months, and occur on and off during the last few weeks.

Mild diarrhea

You may have looser bowel movements as your system is affected by the increasing uterine activity.

Abdominal lightening

There may be an easing of discomfort under your ribs a feeling of lightening as your baby’s head engages in your pelvis. This may happen a week or two before the birth with a first baby, but just as often it doesn’t happen until labor.

Burst of energy

Many women experience a sudden burst of energy even if they have been very tired and sluggish for several weeks previously. You may find you want to rush around making sure everything is ready for your baby’s home coming, this is known as the nesting instinct.

Irritability

Understandably, you may become short tempered and impatient, with a definite sense that it’s time pregnancy was over.

The Stages Of Labor

Labor has three distinct stages. The first stage is when the uterine contractions pull the cervix open second stage from full dilation to when the baby is born, and third stage, until the placenta is delivered.

The first stage

During the first stage of labor, contractions begin and are established, gradually becoming stronger and lasting longer; this stage can last up to 12 hours, or even longer with a first baby. The first stage has three phases, the latent phase is the longest, lasting around eight hours. This is when the cervix thins. Then there is the active phase, when the cervix is opened up wide, and finally the transitional phase, when the cervix reaches full dilatation, before pushing your baby out. You’re most likely to need pain relief during the active phase, and you’re likely to feel a burst of energy toward the end to take you through the second stage.

The second stage

During the second stage of labor, your baby leaves the uterus and is pushed through the birth canal in to the outside world. This stage can take anything from a few minutes to two hours with a first baby, and can be exhausting.

The third stage

Thc delivery of thc placenta is the third and final stage of labor; it is almost painless, although you may feel some cramping like a severe period pain. Normally the third stage lasts 10-20 minutes. The placenta weighs about 1 lb (0.5kg) and is 8-10 inches (20-25 cm) in diameter.



Why be a Parent-baby Care

Monday, June 1st, 2009
baby care
Robert Baird asked:


Mother

It’s worth questioning your own ideas about parenthood, and whether what you think of as a mother’s role isn’t just as applicable to fathers.

Attitudes to fathering

Traditionally, fathers came home from work expecting the home to be clean, the children ready for bed, and a meal on the table. Today, it’s hard to believe that many modern mothers would stand for this.

Some women still expect their partners to handle all the family finances, some times to their disadvantage. It’s a good idea if couples can find a fair way to share their financial burdens.

It’s often assumed that men do all the heavy work. However, while a man must do this when his partner is pregnant and the baby is young, women are bigger and stronger than they used to be, and these tasks can be shared.

Women still tend to take on the chores while their partners play with the baby, even when both parents work. It’s much better, though, if both of you play with your baby care, and share the house work equally.

Some women leave discipline to their partners, but this is both out dated and a cop out. Try to agree on attitudes to discipline and apply them consistently.

You may never do anything more important than bringing up a child. However satisfying your career, whatever sports or leisure goals you’ve achieved, you’ll find parenthood is a role that is rewarding in a way that is unlike anything else.

Following Your Instincts

The instinct to bear children is a strong one, and luckily the joy and fulfillment felt by most parents far out weigh some of the inconveniences and compromises that they may have to accept. Although this isn’t always so, making the decision to have a child usually comes from with in a close, loving relationship between two people who decide that they would like to express their mutual affection in having a baby. This is just as well ­ you’re unlikely to make the decision because you’re attracted by the idea of reduced free time, never being able to put your self first, sleeplessness, and forking out for designer infant clothes! lf you think carefully about the changes brought about by parenthood, you’ll realize that it’s your genes that are pushing you relentlessly toward recreating your selves in the form of children. Now a days, people don’t like to admit that they might be at the beck and call of basic urges and tend to dress them up as something more refined. That’s fine, so long as we remember that we can also push back and say no to parenthood. For some, that can be the best decision, because having a baby is a commitment like no other.

More Than Just Nature

A.side from biological reasons, people also want to have a baby for fulfillment and personal achievement. Human beings arc social animals, and the way they think and act always has a social clement. This is shown most clearly in human parenthood in thc case of adoption, where (usually) two people voluntarily make a commitment to assume all the rights and duties of natural parents, while being genetically unrelated to the child. Adoption also illustrates the depth of the emotional need that people feel to nurture, educate and above all, love a child. What you give to your children in time, love, understanding, and teaching will constantly be repaid as you watch them grow and develop over the years. Every child is genetically a blend of his parents, but he is also a unique personality in his own right, and knowing that you have been the primary influences and educators in allowing that personality to take shape and mature is deeply enriching as well as being a major achievement.

Social And Economic Pressures

In a society where everyone goes to school, everyone expects to go to school. Similarly, when every one except a small minority has children, people expect to have children. It’s as though a person has to have a reason for remaining childless, rather than the opposite. In the past, when families tended to live close together, in the same street or village if not actually in the same house, there were quite important economic reasons for having children. As soon as they were old enough to work, children made a vital contribution to the family’s economic welfare, and parenthood was also a guarantee of being cared for in old age.

Changing Demands

In the much more fragmented society in which we live today, children aren’t expected to contribute to the family income (at least not until they have finished their education), and the state has taken over some of the basic responsibilities for the elderly, or people make their own provision for old age. As a result, the economic demands of the family are now directed downward, from parents to children, instead of the other way around. Bringing up children today can be a costly business, and not just financially. For the first time in history, large numbers of women can achieve a whole range of satisfactions out side parenthood and the home; and with safe methods of contraception, they can also choose when and whether they want to have children. This doesn’t mean that large numbers of women are opting out of motherhood, though some are; but what they are doing is fitting having and bringing up children in to lives where work and a career are also seen as theirs by right.

A Question Of Upbringing

Having begun to consider parenthood seriously, the first thing to realize before you go further is that having a baby is just the overture to bringing up a child. It isn’t too difficult to imagine having a baby the excitement, the celebrations, the delighted grandparents, the supportive friends and family. But it’s almost impossible to visualize bringing up a child if you haven’t done it. The demands in time, energy, and emotion are almost limitless, unless of course the first thing you’re going to teach your toddler is how to use the remote control for the TV and VCR. This isn’t an option for most people because, even before you become parents, you’ll have some idea of the kind of people you hope your children will grow up to be, and of the upbringing that will make this idea a reality.

A Firm Foundation

Upbringing begins from the moment of birth. For a baby care or young child, everything is a learning experience, so how you care for your baby is influential from day one. It’s worth looking at the background of some one you know who is independent but has a large capacity to love and interrelate with others, who is effective and confident, who recognizes that there is such a thing as the general good, and wants to contribute to it. You’ll probably find that person found the world an accepting, loving, encouraging, reasonable, and respectful place from birth. His parents made him feel that way, and the foundation for everything he has become was provided by them in his first year of life.

Father

It’s a good idea to be clear about your own attitude to parenting to make sure it doesn’t reinforce traditional stereo types about mothers and fathers. What you may think of as a mother’s role can be just as applicable to fathers.

Attitudes to mothering

While it’s still true that it’s mostly women who stay at home, many are now returning to work within months of the birth. Also, more and more men are becoming stay at home dads.

Recent surveys show that women, even full time working mothers, still do most of the chores in the home. Ask your self if this is fair there’s no reason why cooking and cleaning can’t be shared.

Tasks such as dealing with care givers and teachers and taking the kids to school used to be seen as a mother’s responsibility. But more fathers are fitting daily activities like taking their child to the doctor into their working day.

It used to be thought that mothers put children to bed, but most fathers enjoy the bed time routine, especially if they’ve been away from their children all day.

The idea prevalent not so long ago that it was somehow demeaning for a man to push a stroller is now laughable. Men are pleased to be seen doing this and are also more than happy to take their children out with out their partners.