pregnancy health

What is a Doula?

A Doula giving a massage.Doula is a Greek word for “woman’s servant.” A birth doula is a supportive companion professionally trained to provide physical, informational and emotional support during labor and birth.  Many people do not know that birth doulas exist to support couples in labor and in fact are often confused with having a midwife.  A doula provides continuous support, beginning during early or Active Labor, through birth, and for approximately 2 hours following the birth. The doula offers help and advice on comfort measures such as breathing, relaxation, movement, positioning, and massage.  
She also assists families with gathering information about the course of labor and their options. Her most critical role is providing continuous emotional reassurance and comfort.

Doulas attend home births and hospital births; medicated births and un-medicated births, with women whose care is being overseen by doctors or midwives. Doulas may be the only support person for the mother, or may be part of a labor support team including mom’s partner, friend(s), and/or family members.

Another misconception about doulas is that you must have a natural (without interventions/pain medications) birth.  Instead, think of her as a guide or sounding-board so that no matter what course your birth takes you can feel informed and confident about your decisions as you navigate through birth in the best possible way.  Doulas are non-judgmental and are only there for your support.  Think of her as girlfriend’s P.I.E. – she will provide physical, informational, and emotional support.  She does not replace your partner and is indeed an asset to your Birth Team.

Doulas specialize in non-medical skills, and do not perform clinical tasks, or diagnose medical conditions. They do not make decisions for their clients. Their goal is to provide the support and information needed to help the birthing mother have a safe and satisfying birth as the mother defines it.  Locate a doula by asking your mommy friends for referrals.  Reliable referrals can also come form your prenatal yoga classes or OB/GYN’s office.  You can also find a doula on a few websites, which certify doulas such as www.dona.org and www.cappa.net.

Proven Benefits of Doula Supported Childbirth

Decreased Medical Intervention in Labor*:  Reduces need for Cesarean-Section by 50%
Reduces length of labor by 25%
Reduces use of artificial oxytocin by 40%
Reduces pain medication use by 30%
Reduces the need for forceps/vacuum extraction by 40%
Reduces epidural requests by 60%

6 weeks after birth, mothers who had doulas were:  Less anxious and depressed
Had more confidence with baby
More satisfied w/ partner (71% vs 30%)
More likely to be breastfeeding (52% vs. 29%)

*These statistics appear in “A Doula Makes the Difference” by Nugent in Mothering Magazine, March-April 1998. For more about the research, see http://www.dona.org/publications/position_paper_birth.php
**Study cited in “The Doula” by Klaus in Childbirth Instructor Magazine, Spring 1995.

About the Author:

Patricia GrubePatricia Grube is a certified Pre/Post-Natal Yoga instructor who teaches classes at Yoga Works in Los Angeles.  Patricia has a thriving birth doula practice and has guided hundreds of couples through their childbirth experience (www.serenitybirth.com).  Additionally, she is a published author and recently co-authored a new book called, “Posh Push: Modern Girls Reveal Secrets to a More Natural Birth” now available on Amazon http://www.amazon.com/dp/B009LQS32G.

You can visit Patricia’s website at www.serenitybirth.com

Are These Things Safe While Pregnant? part 2

People liked the article on “Are These Things Safe While Pregnant?“.

So here are some additions of things you interact with on a daily basis that could hurt the health of your baby during pregnancy.

Dyeing Someone Else’s Hair

If you’re thinking about a home dye job, if your doctor o.k.’s it, follow the directions on the box and be absolutely sure to wear gloves!  If you feel it’s not good enough, try going eco-friendly with your dyes.  Like dyes that are vegetables and mineral based pigments.

Here’s a few suggestions; Aveda, Herbatint, Palette by Nature, Fudge Paintbox, Manic Panic, Crazy Color, New Seasons, Henna too but see previous notes on it here.

Hair Removal

Plucking is painful, but not harmful to the unborn baby.  If you are a Nair user, you may want to rethink this for the length of your pregnancy.  The active ingredient in hair removal product is usually thioglycolic acid, which reacts chemically with your hair.

The doctor is out when it comes to an answer to whether or not chemicals in hair removal creams (like barium sulfide and calcium thioglycolate) are too dangerous for your fetus, so you may just feel safer (or happier) asking your partner to break out the razor and join you in the tub!

However, if your pregnancy has you experiencing a rather slow sex drive, like me, and don’t want to lead the poor guy on, you can also wax (ouch) or elect for electrolysis.  I’ll be opting for a more au-natural experience, sigh.  For as long as I can’t see below my belly anyways.

Perfumes

Personally I can’t stand them, there’s something about perfumes that makes a person smell like burnt feathers.  Ish.

Read the label on the bottle, the word ‘fragrance’ is often the cover word for phthalates.  Phthalates are connected to breast cancer in women and birth defects in babies.  I can see wearing a little perfume when it’s just you, but considering the sensitivity of a fetus… just leave the perfume out!

Or, if you’re out of your first trimester, you can go for essential oil.  Here’s a short list of the ‘safe’ oils.

•    Roman chamomile
•    Eucalyptus
•    Geranium
•    Ginger
•    Grapefruit
•    Lavender
•    Lemon
•    Lemongrass
•    Lime
•    Mandarin
•    Patchouli
•    Rose Otto
•    Rosewood
•    Sandalwood
•    Sweet orange
•    Tea tree (Personal Favorite!)
•    Ylang Ylang

However, here’s a short list of oils that you should probably avoid during pregnancy altogether.

•    Arnica (homeopathic is fine)
•    Basil
•    Birch (sweet)
•    Bitter almond
•    Camphor (brown or yellow)
•    Cedarwood/thuja
•    Cinnamon
•    Clary sage
•    Clove (bud, leaf or stem)
•    Coriander
•    Fennel
•    Horseradish
•    Juniper Berry
•    Mugwort
•    Mustard
•    Nutmeg
•    Parsley (large doses)
•    Pine (Dwarf)
•    Rosemary
•    Rue
•    Sassafras
•    Savory (Summer)
•    Tansy
•    Thyme red (large doses)
•    Wintergreen
•    Wormwood

Acne Treatment

My skin hasn’t undergone any dramatic changes since I’ve been pregnant, but some women feel like they’re having a second adolescence.  And, as most of us remember, we slathered on the crèmes like our lives depended on it.  Our social lives anyway.

Stay away from leave on lotions, gels and crèmes as well as peels that have salicylic acid or retinoids.  Though, if you see Glycolic acid, it’s an AHA and a-okay.  Ask your dermatologist.

Sunscreen.

Safe!  Yayy!  Though it’s probably still a good idea to visit the beach between 10 in the morning and 4 in the afternoon, wear a broad-brimmed hat, sunglasses and long sleeves (if possible).  Depending on your sunscreen and how much toweling off or sweating off, reapply every couple of hours.

Makeup!

Makeup is mostly safe. Though I’ll be checking my foundation for retinoids or salicylic acids.  Otherwise it’s fine!

Are These Things Safe While Pregnant?

Let’s just start with this, nobody nowhere has proved one way or another either the safety or the danger of anything.  So let’s take the below with a grain of salt and as always consult a professional, like… your doctor!

Tattoos

Tattoos involve needles, and if you’ve ever had a tattoo or known someone who has, then you’ll know that blood is involved.  Not a lot is known about the side effects of the ink dyes on your fetus’s growth except that the risk is greater just for having exposed your blood to outside influences.

Rarely, some inks are known to cause allergies leading to dangerous reactions.  It is also thought that if you should ever undergo laser treatments to remove an unwanted tattoo, some ‘azo’ dyes may become carcinogenic in the bloodstream.

Henna

I let my mother doodle on my arm with this tube of brown goo that looked a lot like melted chocolate.  I don’t know why I assumed that it was fine, and it mostly is, but I should have done a little research.

Use only natural henna, if your henna is black it is a synthetic chemical, para- phenylenediamine (PPD) and isn’t safe for anyone let alone pregnant people.

Spray Tan

We know that overdoing the real thing can be harmful, but now we also know that the primary ingredients in a spray on tan may be just fine.  They interact with the outermost layer of skin, the one that’s going to flake off anyway, and isn’t absorbed into the subcutaneous layer.

Bath Products – Go Cheap!

Apparently the expensive bath products have the most harmful chemicals. Chemicals that can cause allergies and even cancer.  The cheapest products are comprised of safer ingredients.

Nails

Nobody knows the damage that could be done by the toxicity of having your nails done at a salon.  There is no known safe amount of dibutyl phthalate, formaldehyde and toluene (a.k.a. the toxic trio).  But given that the word ‘formaldehyde’ is pretty much a big no-no, we should all just go ahead and avoid having our nails done while pregnant, unless of course our doctor advises us that it’s ok.

What is best, if you can’t stay out of the salon, is to request pregnancy safe products like Zoya, Acquarella Water Color, Dr.’s Remedy, Go Natural, Honeybee Gardens, No-Miss Nail Polish, Nubaar Nail Lacquer, Peacekeeper Cosmetics, Polished Mama, Refreshingly Free, Safe Nail Polish, Toxicfree Boutique.

And here is a little list of the above polishes who produce Non-Toxic Nail Polish Removers: Acquarella, Go Natural, Honeybee Gardens, No-Miss Nail Polish, Nubaar Nail Lacquer, Peacekeeper, Polished Mama, Safe Nail Polish, Toxicfree Boutique.

Hair Dye

Studies always seem to suggest drastic links between hair dyes and birth defects, like the childhood cancer neuroblastoma.

On a side note, some chemicals banned in Europe are still to be found in American dyes.

Though it seems that deformities may, in fact, occur mostly to people who are working full time in the profession.  So an hour or so in the chair (after the 1st trimester is over) may not be as drastically bad for you as once thought.  Discuss the safest options with your colorist as well as your doctor.

Here is a list of articles you might want to check out!

Artificial Sweeteners While Pregnant

Sweets for pregnant woman.I love sweets.  I just do.  I’m sadly addicted to all things sweet.  Notice that I didn’t say ‘sugary.’  Although, I hold a special place in my heart for sugar.  A secret, shameful, place.  Sigh.

Every so often I’ll try to supplement my sugar with something that’s supposed to be considered less ‘bad’ for my body, like Stevia.  Stevia (a.k.a. sweet leaf, sweetleaf or sugarleaf) is native to tropical regions and is a part of the sunflower family.  The reason some hawk Stevia is that it is not caloric and is supposed to be anywhere between 30-300 times sweeter than sugar.  Sweeter than sugar?  This I have to try. right?

So I bought a bag of Stevia to keep atop my refrigerator as a sort of replacement for sugar.  But it was not to be.  There is a difference between the sweetness of Stevia and the sweetness of sugar.  And it turns out I cannot go cold Stevia.  I must be content to cut my sugar with Stevia so I cannot taste the Stevia taste and will not miss the Sugar taste.

So the short and the long of this is that I don’t like artificial sweeteners.  As a rule, I don’t put them in my kitchen because there seems to be no one sweetener that can be deemed conclusively ‘safe’ for me, especially as a pregnant woman.  But often the choice to avoid artificial sweeteners is taken away from me, like when I go out to eat.  So I think I’d better know which of them not to overdo.

The FDA has approved only five artificial sweeteners:

Acesulfame potassium

Sweet One, Sunett.  A calorie-free artificial sweetener.  Accidentally discovered in 1967, 200x sweeter than sugar, as sweet as aspartame, not quite as sweet as sucralose.  Acesulfame K has been shown to have an impact on hypoglycemia in rats.  But the rats didn’t show signs of cancer yet.

Listen up pregnant women!  Acesulfame K may affect prenatal development through the amniotic fluid and breast milk.  I’m unsure why this is bad except it’s said to affect the mouse’s baby’s perception of ‘sweet.’  Does that worry you?

Aspartame

NutraSweet of Equal.  It has been blamed for causing any number of ailments from fatigue to tumors, even though the FDA can find no proof that it is dangerous for consumption.  However, if you have a genetic condition called phenylkenoturia (PKU) look out.  PKU is a disorder of amino acid metabolism and those with PKU need to keep the levels of phenylalanine in the blood low to prevent mental retardation and neurological, behavioral and dermatological problems.  Phenylalanine is one of the two amino acids in aspartame.  Look.  Out.

DTagatose

Sugaree.  Found naturally in cacao, fruit and dairy products and is not quite as sweet as sugar but has less than half the calories.  The FDA calls it safe for consumption and is also a tooth friendly ingredient.

Saccharin

Sweet ‘N Low.  Created out of necessity in 1879, supplemented sugar shortages in both world wars.  Apparently it caused bladder cancer in rats, but the public insisted it be kept on the shelves. In the 1970s there were no other sugar substitutes, so it stayed.  Albeit with a warning label.  However, people are not rats, and male rats are predisposed to bladder cancer, so the warning was taken off the box.

Sucralose

Splenda, Nevella, SucraPlus.  A non-caloric sweetener discovered 1976.  About 600x sweeter than sugar, twice as sweet as saccharin and 3x as sweet as aspartame.  The FDA approves sucralose as safe for consumption.

A Duke University study found that doses of Splenda containing sucralose reduces the amount of ‘good’ bacteria in the intestines of rats by half, increases the pH level in the intestines, increases body weight and damages DNA in mice.  Though apparently this has not been proven in humans.

Conclusion

So if you can trust the FDA, you can feel mostly safe ingesting these.  Though my general rule of thumb is moderation in everything, including moderation.

People, like me, often use as much of the substitute for sugar as the sugar itself, which is, in essence, an overdose of artificial sweetener. High doses increase the chances of the negative effects mentioned above.

So if we just remembered to moderate it, we’d be better off!