The modern woman is task-oriented. She lives in a world demanding of her competence, attention, and efficiency. We use technology, tap into our communities, plumb the depths of our reserves to navigate an often hyper-masculinized world while retaining our most vital feminine powers. The power that fundamentally defines our exemption from this contemporary lifestyle trajectory is baby making.
This primal empowerment forms the bedrock of a woman’s most untouchable gifts.
We have lost sight of this fact; however, and have allowed our inner compass to be co-opted. It’s certainly no wonder, that after 9 months of hypermedicalized pregnancy “management” (often following months to years of assisted reproductive technologies), birth is considered another task on the to-do list to complete.
As a type-A taskmaster, myself, I understand the lure of a predictable and painless depositing of your newborn after the long and fear-punctuated journey of pregnancy.
I’m here to tell you; however, what your obstetrician won’t.
Labor is a physiologic process that recruits neurochemical, endocrine, and immune systems into a dance that we barely have the tools to conceptualize.
When we meddle with this, when we attempt to standardize it, we put women and their babies at grave risk – physically, psychologically, and even spiritually. We rob women of an opportunity for psychospiritual transcendence.
As a science-minded medical doctor, I don’t wield this phrase with ease!
The process of conception, gestation, and birth cannot, however, be reduced to daily activities and routine life occurrences. There is something built into our consciousness that makes room for its own expansion around these life transitions. The process of bodily separation – woman from her newborn – involves a passage through a space of trance-like awareness.
I can only describe it as the sensation of floating and grounding, simultaneously. It is an experience that demands we move out of the space of our mind and into a space of sensation without judgment. It is being present, truly present, to behold a glimpse of what we are capable of as mammals and most importantly, as a human female.
In this way, a natural birth is an opportunity for redefinition and reconnection to one’s most core self. It is the way women were intended to pass through the gates of motherhood, to the next chapter of their actualization.
If you buy the potential significance of these considerations, you may want to know what represents your greatest obstacle and impediment in achieving this life milestone. You may be surprised to learn that it is epidural anesthesia. This discussion is meant to shine a light on elective epidurals – that, “Why not? Who wants to feel crazy intense pain?” choice that 2/3rds of women (and up to 90% in some hospitals) opt for every day. In my opinion, the epidural intervention is the most reprehensible of all – because of its largely dismissed risk profile, and because of its auspicious position in a cascade of interventions, unnecessary, ill-conceived, and rife with unintended consequences including death.
If we can empower women to question the validity of this procedure, then they can retain the right to preserve the integrity of their birth experience.
What’s the big deal with Epidurals?
A 60% rise in C-sections since 1996 is prompting the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists to fidget self-consciously in their white coats. A study revealing the prolongation of the second stage of labor thanks to epidurals has been influential in identifying the iatrogenesis – doctor-caused harm – at the root of the cesarean problem.
It appears that, thanks to an antiquated but still sanctioned construct – Friedman’s curve – the hospital clock starts ticking loudly upon arrival, and the alarm goes off after 3 hours of second stage labor with an epidural. At this non-evidence-based juncture, interventions including IV fluids, continuous monitoring, food and drink restriction, and immobilization conspire to invite pitocin, forceps, episiotomy, and surgery into the delivery room.
Obstetrics is vulnerable to practicing consensus medicine – habitual practice that is not predicated on sounds science. As I discuss here, metanalysis has demonstrated that only 30% of current obstetrical recommendations are based on quality data. What’s the rest based on? Fear-mongering and personal opinion? Let’s look at what the evidence suggests about the risks of epidurals, considering that up to 41% of women never properly consented for this intervention.
Epidurals are offered with a plethora of accoutrements including catheters for involuntary urination, blood pressure monitoring and IV fluids for changes to vascular physiology, and continuous fetal monitoring because of risk to the baby of decreased oxygen flow.12
The changes to natural labor progression are compounded by risk of fever in the mother that leads to further separation of mom and baby after birth, secondary to testing and assessment for infection. This separation represents a stress to the shared adaptation to early postpartum life and may predispose to psychiatric pathology in both mom and baby through early epigenetic influences on gene expression.345
This separation may also interfere with breastfeeding establishment. In this way, epidurals may be directly and indirectly responsible for breastfeeding struggles67. Breastfeeding appears to prevent the onset of postpartum depression if it is established within 3 months, in addition to being a continual source of immunologically essential information trafficked from mom to baby.
Shooting Up You and Your Baby
Epidurals are a delivery method for narcotic pain-killers that pass through the placenta to the baby and have largely unpredictable effects on the birthing woman. Evidence supports risks to the baby including reduced tone, poor feeding, jaundice, withdrawal, and sensorimotor impairment.8
Physiologic risks to the mother include acute and persistent problems such as numbness, tingling, dizziness, respiratory paralysis, cardiac arrest, nerve injury, abscess, and death.910A user-friendly description of these considerations was explored by Pathways to Family Wellness, here.
Hurrying Up
When epidurals lengthen the second stage of labor, Pitocin, or synthetic mimic of the brain hormone, oxytocin, is delivered to augment the process. Because Pitocin does not cross the blood-brain barrier, it does not stimulate endorphin release. It also interferes with feedback loops suppressing natural oxytocin production while hyperstimulating the uterus without appropriate relaxation between contractions. The significance of this is just being revealed and may even reach to risk factors for autism.
Cutting Up
The increased risk of c-section1112 in the wake of epidural anesthesia is easily explained by relaxation of pelvic muscles that detach a woman from the instinctive guiding forces of an uninhibited labor, by the baby’s increased distress secondary to narcotic exposure and malposition, by the recruitment of Pitocin which causes uterine and therefore fetal distress, and fetal monitoring which, while superficially reassuring results in increased interventions (2-3x c-section rate) without improved outcomes.
Your doctor may fail to mention that a surgical birth brings with it these risk considerations: protracted recovery, infection (including necrotizing fasciitis), organ damage, adhesions, hemorrhage, embolism, hysterectomy, wound dehiscence, early infant separation, higher risk of respiratory problems for baby, and an exponentially increased risk of placenta accreta, a potentially lethal complication of surgical birth, contributing to a 3.6 fold increase in maternal death after cesarean relative to vaginal birth.
Of primary interest to clinicians who appreciate the role of the gut microbiome in child and adult health, abdicating a vaginal transfer of beneficial bacteria may set the stage for chronic disease including a 20% increased risk of obesity.
Opting out of epidural anesthesia: Choosing to feel
What are the best ways to help your body, mind, and spirit align for this tumultuous but life empowering journey?
Movement – Staying active during pregnancy is optimal mind-body medicine. Yoga, home-based routines, and swimming in unchlorinated water are excellent choices, at least 3 times weekly.
Chiropractic – With advanced perinatal training, holistic chiropractors are critical experts in proper alignment and nervous system support to facilitate a physiologic birth.
Acupuncture – Applied before and even during labor, acupuncture can gently and effectively facilitate a healthy labor and delivery. According to a Cochrane Review, acupuncture and hypnosis meet evidence-based efficacy criteria for pain management in labor.
Controlled Breathing/Meditation – Perhaps the most important tool for a new mother, learning to engage the relaxation response in pregnancy will help you to know what it feels like to be present to the labor experience, to go inward, quiet your mind, and release fear. Hypnobabies and hypnobirthing are well-regarded methodologies. If you are extremely anxious, breathing small amount of nitrous oxide mixed with oxygen can help.
Diet – The physical experience of labor and delivery is best supported by stocking the shelves up front for a healthy hormonal response with minimization of inflammation and maximization of nutrient-density. Eat sustainable, organic meat, fish, eggs, veggies including root vegetables and squash, fruit, nuts, and seeds. Leverage the complexity of food-based information to promote optimal gene expression in that growing baby, and support a healthy delivery and postpartum experience.
Doula – Preparation for labor, and support for mother and spouse have been traditionally left in the hands of a woman’s most doting partner, a doula. No woman should birth in a hospital without this advocate. Evidence supports a doula’s ability to help you achieve an intervention-free birth.
While my most heart-filling emails every day are from my homebirthing patients, I aim to sit in a place of true advocacy for the women that I treat and advise. I believe in informed consent, and I observe that this is not occurring in hospitals today. Explore resources that will help to expose you to the known risks and popularized benefits, so that you are making your own decision with your eyes wide open.
As most women who have experienced natural birth would attest – just when you think you can’t do it and your mind demands surrender – you meet your baby, and the world stands still in a moment of unparalleled beauty and wonder.
Sources:
1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15957994
2 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12011872
3 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24552992
4 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12011872
6 http://www.nutricionhospitalaria.com/pdf/6395.pdf
7 http://www.internationalbreastfeedingjournal.com/content/1/1/24
8 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12011872
9 http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1016/S0091-2182%2897%2900052-9/abstract
10 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17447690
12 http://summaries.cochrane.org/CD000331/epidurals-for-pain-relief-in-labour
Patrice
I think this article is extremely harsh and insensitive towards the expectant moms who are physically unable to have a safe vaginal birth. After having a myomectomy at the age of 26, I would be at risk for uterine rupture which would be fatal for both me and baby. I would love to see a more balanced approach to this topic as this article does not provide it.
Pat in TX
Oversensitive much? Of course she was not referring to someone who cannot safely deliver vaginally! And she was not referring to baby-saving c-sections either (except for the high number of babies who “need” a c-section due to medical interventions in the first place)! She was referring to the majority of women. Those who go to a hospital, don’t get the support they need, and cave under pressure. Try not to experience criticism from those who are not looking to criticize you, and in fact are not speaking to your situation at all:-)
Kate Handy
I think the one overreacting may be you. This article is an extremely biased and full of hypocrisy. This article is full of fear mongering with terms like “cutting up” and “shooting up” all with the intention to derive negative imagery and connotation making the people who elect these procedures seem like irresponsible individuals. Shame on her.
Pat in TX
I guess we can all see your opinion from your “I loved my anesthesiologist” comment above. We all make different choices, and Dr Brogan has a right to inform women of the consequences of their choices whether they agree with the mainstream physicians or even your opinion. Any woman who is facing those choices should do more research – long before she is in labor – and not take the opinion of one woman, be it yours or mine or even Dr. Brogan. If you don’t agree with the lifestyle promoted by this website, why hang out here and complain? I am sure there are plenty of blogs promoting your views as well. The people Sarah allows to post here, as well as Sarah herself, are a light in the darkness to many women.
Megan
Lots of people with different viewpoints read these articles who have many different, and quite possibly still valid, opinions. Not everyone who values this site are agreed on everything. Personally it drives me nuts when people quote the Bible at me on this forum which is about health but that is just not a belief that I share with them, doesn’t mean they don’t belong here because we don’t share it.
Marlene
Well said
Josee Gagnon via Facebook
Nina Mazloum Sylvie Brujic Aisha Hajjar
Robert Jurado via Facebook
Allison Bell Belt, I have no reason to doubt that the Psychiatrist who was featured in this article is highly qualified to speak about the complications she sees. They may well and truly be related to epidural analgesia, which is typically what is performed–not epidural “anesthesia” as mentioned in the article. I can’t say that I am confident in a complete lack of bias (in the biostatiscal/epidemiologic sense of the word) in assertion that epidural analgesia for labor is necessarily bad. This article smacks of fear-mongering regarding epidural analgesia for labor. I’m sure there is plenty of empirical experience of uncomplicated labor epidurals. I am sure that many parturients (thousands? millions?) have epidurals without issues, and I bet this Psychiatrist sees very few of those. Naturally, that would be the case, because there would be no reason for a Psychiatry consult in those millions of uncomplicated cases. So, if all one sees is the cases with complications, I would expect that one might think that complications are more common than they actually are. All that being said, epidurals are not benign procedures. There are complications. There are errors–as in all of medicine and surgical care. Sometimes, yes, the consequences are catastrophic. These procedures should not be taken lightly. A cavalier attitude about epidural analgesia for labor is not advisable. I do agree that they may be done too often in this country–for many reasons, including what happens to be common medical practice (or common patient expectation) in a particular place and time. As an Anesthesiologist I would advise patients to take with a grain of salt, and a little bit of healthy skepticism, anything a non-Anesthesiologist has to say about matters pertaining to Anesthesiology. Patients need to be truly informed to make these decisions about their care. They need to see both sides of the issue.
Kate Handy
Awesome response! I loved my anesthesiologist!
Kelly Burns Lieber via Facebook
The strange thing to me is women who liken getting an epi to novocaine at the dentist’s and request one immediately as feeling discomfort isn’t sn option. really?
Rhvonda Lee Launsby via Facebook
That’s why I had my babies at home did not want to be drugged
Daniel Lenochka Khashchuk via Facebook
Loving my homebirths! Dont have to worry about epidurals 🙂
Angela Ahlstedt via Facebook
However, for some of us, a c-section was not our choice. My daughter was breech and I took every avenue to turn her but my doctor and I were unable. We found out during the c-section that it was because her cord was wrapped around her neck. I don’t think it’s fair to have such harsh words because some cases are unable to be prevented.
anne
The cord was around my son’s neck too. He was baby #2. I ventured on to spinningbabies.com An Amazing site !!!! No luck with turning and had a c-section. I had a successful V-bac all natural with a staff of nurses and Doctor all ready for it. Thanks be to God it went as well as it did. It seems that hospitals are coming around a bit with pursuing and encouraging natural birth. Child number four; God willing, will be with a midwife.
Teodora Nutas via Facebook
I am blessed with a great doctor!!! She rocks!!!
Fiona Yousef via Facebook
Orly Partiyeli Tabibi
Julie
Like Julie Homer, I’m wondering how much this article is an exaggeration also. My doctor and the hospital (which has the 2nd highest number of deliveries in country) would not give epidurals until at least 8 cm dilation.
Sara r.
Why on earth would anyone need an epidural if they have already made it to 8cm?! The worst is nearly over.