In- Home Postpartum Support for Mom, Baby & Family
Congratulations on the birth of your baby! While this is an exciting time for you and your family, a cesarean is major surgery and you may be feeling sore and tired. New mothers like you need and deserve extra support during this special time of birth and healing. Women who have experienced either a planned or an unplanned cesarean respond to the surgery in very different ways. Physically, some women heal very quickly while others report that recovery took weeks or months. Women’s feelings about their cesareans range from happiness to depression. Each woman heals and grows into her new role of mother at her own pace and it is important not to put time limits on this process.
Impact of Having a C-Section
Having to give birth by cesarean can imply a loss; the birth one has dreamed about has not occurred as one thought it would. (Likewise, this can occur even with a vaginal birth if it has been a traumatic one). Even if the cesarean has provided a safe arrival for the baby, the mother may feel sadness for not having had a natural birth. This sadness does not signify that she doesn’t love her child like other mothers! In fact her sadness may be increased by her post operative weakness. A cesarean is major abdominal surgery —-and mothers just recently anesthetized are expected to engage in the care of their newborns. If, on top of all that the mother has lost blood during the surgery or has not rested well afterwards, the exhaustion can contribute to further sadness and may even cause depression.
Face your future pregnancies knowing that the events don’t have to repeat themselves. Is it estimated that 80% of the women who have had a cesarean can still experience a vaginal birth. In the United States, there are women who have had VBAC after two or more cesareans. The research shows that the birth centers where natural birth is most respected have the lowest incident of cesarean without incrementing risks to either mother or baby. Becoming informed is the best way to avoid an unnecessary cesarean!
If a repeat cesarean does become inevitable, you can make requests that will help your physical and emotional recuperation. Ask that the father be present and that he hold the baby, explain the importance of the mother receiving feedback throughout the birth and immediate postpartum period, and emphasize the need for an atmosphere of silence during the surgery in order to maintain the respect and sanctity that should surround all birth.
Copyright 2009 South County Doulas . All rights reserved.