I can’t tell you how many women I’ve talked to over the years who fully intended to have a natural, medication free birth only to end up with an epidural or worse, a C-section, when their labor was late getting started.
This happens because obstetricians typically get really antsy when pregnancies go past their due date. Women prefer to induce labor naturally, but practitioners sometimes offer only drug based solutions. Since up to 10% of all pregnancies are late, this is a very common challenge women can potentially face.
Even when a pregnant woman is only a few days late, the nagging about getting labor induced usually begins along with all the fear based reasons why she should agree to pitocin right away.
“Your baby could be stillborn!”
“The placenta could fail and your baby be brain damaged!”
“The baby could get too big and you would have to have a C-section (OBs say this without ever telling the patient that accepting pitocin is itself a big risk factor for C-section!)”
Fear is a very effective strategy to get a patient to do what they want, and knowingly or not, many doctors use this to their advantage.
The problem is, once a woman accepts one intervention, in this case, pitocin, she has perhaps unwittingly boarded the freight train to a completely medicated, interventionist birth.
Do OBs know this when they are pushing for pitocin?
Of course they do.
It is well known that pitocin induced labor contractions are much more painful than natural contractions and very few women are able to withstand the pain without medication such as an epidural.
Pitocin = Epidural = C-Section
This is a common progression of events once a woman makes the first mistake and accepts just a little pitocin “to nudge things along”.
It is imperative for women seeking a natural birth to avoid induction at all costs as pitocin is a dangerous drug which has the very real chance of putting your baby in distress greatly increasing the risk of a C-section. Making the decision whether or not to induce is in no way insignificant.
This from the International Chiropractic Pediatric Association (ICPA):
Pitocin can cause a tumultuous, difficult labor and tetanic contractions, rupture of the uterus and dehiscence of a uterine scar, lacerations of the cervix, retained placenta, or postpartum hemorrhage. Postpartum perineal and pelvic floor pain is increased as a result of augmented uterine contractions. Fetal complications might include fetal asphyxia and neonatal hypoxia, physical injury, and neonatal jaundice. The use of Pitocin also might be a factor in cerebral palsy, due to oxygen deprivation, and autism in the child.
Avoiding Pitocin with Acupuncture
My first pregnancy went past the 42 week mark so I know firsthand the stress that an overdue pregnancy can cause.
I was very much concerned that I would have to be induced and I was well aware of the dangers of pitocin.
Even though I was receiving prenatal care from midwives at a birthcenter who in no way pressured me to induce, they did tell me that the law in my state would require me to be seen by an OB and possibly admitted to the hospital for induction, labor and delivery if I went much past the 42 week mark.
Using the typical, natural methods to get labor started such as herbs, evening primrose oil, lots of walking etc was not working quickly enough and using castor oil as a last ditch effort was not very appealing to me.
Fortunately, my family doctor at the time was an MD as well as a doctor of Chinese medicine and she suggested I use acupuncture to induce.
Acupuncture to induce labor? What a great idea!
This is apparently a pretty common thing in China.
I immediately knew that this was absolutely the right way to go, so I made an appointment with the acupuncturist my doctor recommended who made house calls to come over that evening.
If I recall correctly, the acupuncturist used only 4 needles. Â I don’t remember exactly where he put the needles but of course it didn’t hurt at all and I was completely relaxed during the entire procedure.
He told me that the treatment would stimulate oxytocin to be produced, which is the natural hormone that initiates labor.
He also told me that labor should begin within 48 hours.
Shortly after the treatment I noticed that the spot at the top of the bridge of my nose between my eyebrows was quite tender if I pressed it. Â This is the spot also known as the third eye where Indian women frequently wear an identifying mark.
I found it very curious that this spot was tender as it had never been tender ever before. I pressed it lightly with my fingers and noticed that when I did so, I had a painless Braxton-Hicks contraction.
Figuring that this spot must be an important acupressure point of some kind that would faciliate labor, I continued to lightly press this tender spot periodically over the next 24 hours and continued to notice contractions occurring shortly after.
The next afternoon I went in to be checked by my midwife to see how things were progressing if at all.
She discovered that I was a full 4cm dilated!
She told me that labor would be starting shortly and to go home and make sure everything was ready to go.
Sure enough, that night labor started and my first child was born 9 hours later with no medication or intervention required. Â What’s really interesting is that the third eye acupressure spot was no longer tender immediately after my son was born.
What’s even more interesting is that with my subsequent 2 pregnancies, that third eye spot always got tender right before and during labor and delivery even though my second and third children were born pretty much on their due dates and I never needed to use acupuncture again.
Despite the effectiveness of using acupuncture to induce labor, it seems that this method is not typically considered or even well known at least in the United States.
Why not?
My hope is that more women will come to know about the use of acupuncture as a safe, natural, and effective method to induce labor and forgo dangerous intervention with pitocin.
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Source: Â The Truth About Pitocin
Evette
Oh I love this post, so helpful!
ashley.roz
By the way. You looked FABULOUS at 42 weeks. I cannot wait to be pregnant again with REAL food. It’s easy to see how well nourished you are in that photo. So many women in those last weeks look so bedraggled and depleted. It makes you wonder if it’s just conventional wisdom that we have to feel so bad at the end.
ashley.roz
I SO wish I had tried this last year for my son. It might have completely changed my outcome. The nurse midwife recommended it but I balked at the price. I learned my lesson!
Julia Overstreet Sathler via Facebook
i wish i had known this back then…thanks for the info.
Sally Jo Pyle via Facebook
I wish I’d done this. I do know that accupuncture helped me to become pregnant!
Shaniqua
I’m so glad you wrote this article! One year to the day too late for me, but hopefully right on time for another mother to be. If I gave more thought as to what to do if I never went into labor naturally before 42 weeks, I would have been better prepared. At the time I searched but could only find doom and gloom on the internet. No good advice. My son was due Dec 15, 2010 and while I did wait until 42 weeks, I went in for induction on Dec 29th because my midwife would not support my decision for a home birth after that. Accupuncturist was hard to secure on Christmas weekend. I could only get one session in and it wasn’t enough. My son wasn’t born until Dec 31, and the Cervadil that they gave me to dialate ( I was 0) tipped my as yet undiagnosed toxemia into full blown toxemia, unnatural labor, and eventually cesarian, though if you can believe it I refused epidural for the whole 28 hours -even when they gave me pitocin. What a ride! I wouldn’t recommend it exactly but thank God I refused. Motrin would have given me a seizure for sure if I took it for pain with my lowered platelets that they didn’t know about yet. I got a spinal for the cesarian. Was worth it when I saw my sons eyes nice and bright, 9lb9oz, able to focus, no breathing issues! Induction is bad! Nutrition is so important! Just in case another mom is reading this:
Morning Sickness and preeclampsia http://www.drbrewerpregnancydiet.com/id101.html
Dangers of attempting to reduce calories in pregnancy for any reason (baby “too” large): http://www.drbrewerpregnancydiet.com/id68.html
Dangers of Iron supplementation for “Anemia” in lieu of good nutrition (and large babies):
http://www.drbrewerpregnancydiet.com/id57.html
“Gestational Diabetes”: http://www.drbrewerpregnancydiet.com/id33.html
paige
i’m not surprised to see so many people mentioning that the acupuncture/acupressure points were in their ankles. i had a chiropractor appointment the day before my labor (my daughter kept wanting to be breech – my midwife would feel her head at the top of my stomach, then my chiropractor would adjust me and she’d flip, but then after a while she’d flip back – this happened two or three times) and in addition to my regular adjustment, he did some special adjustment to my ankles and the very next morning i woke up in early labor, and had my daughter by 3:30 pm. i really think the ankle-thing had something to do with it!
Ancient Elements (@AncientElements)
Using Acupuncture to Induce Labor:
http://t.co/pTJJl4b6
Aimee
When my oldest was ten days late, I had hit my breaking point of stress. My husband had to leave overseas in a few days and I REALLY wanted him there with me. (I wasn’t keen on castor oil either!) My midwife suggested I try acupuncture. I went in and received one round, however, he was also an MD and worried since I hadn’t had an ultrasound in a few months. (in hindsight, I didn’t need one) He wanted to make sure there wasn’t a medical reason he was SO late. When it was ALL fine, he was just comfortable, I went back the next day. He proclaimed, “Now, I give you acupuncture like a STRONG, CHINESE WOMAN! Big Baby in there needs to come out.” (He was an old Chinese gentleman). That was at noon, Saturday. By 6 that evening I was in labor. After a long labor, my “BIG BABY” was born at 11 lbs 4.5 oz and 23.5 inches long. Recovery was quite tough as I am quite petite, so with my second I began going to a Chiropractor at week 35 to make necessary adjustments for a big baby, and acupuncture at week 39 to help my body prepare. While its true, it WILL NOT make a baby come who isn’t ready, it did fully prepare my body. With the help of evening primrose from week 35, some herbs, chiropractics and acupuncture I had the easiest labor. My second son was born the day after his due date at 9lbs, 7 oz and 21 inches long. I cannot highly enough recommend both chiropractics and acupuncture enough, and also birthing at home is something I always tell women to look into, even though they look at me like I am nuts. I am the legend in our small neighborhood. My friends tell any woman who “falls” pregnant to come talk to me. Ha ha. I am a natural birth advocate all the way!