Familjebarnmorskan

Familjebarnmorskan För alla som vill förbereda sig inför förlossning. Kommer hem till er och anpassar undervisning efter era behov.

27/02/2025
Är du förbered för din förlossning?
25/04/2023

Är du förbered för din förlossning?

Det är mest naturligt att föda i vertikal position.
29/06/2020

Det är mest naturligt att föda i vertikal position.

Researchers believe that giving birth in an upright position can benefit the mother and baby for several physiologic reasons. Physiologic refers to a healthy body’s normal function.
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
In an upright position, gravity can help bring the baby down and out. Also, when someone is upright to give birth, there is less risk of compressing the mother’s aorta, which means there is a better oxygen supply to the baby.
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
Upright positioning also helps the uterus contract more strongly and efficiently and helps the baby get in a better position to pass through the pelvis. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies have shown that compared to the back-lying position, the dimensions of the pelvic outlet become wider in the squatting and kneeling or hands-and-knees positions (Gupta et al. 2017).
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
Finally, research has shown that upright birthing positions may increase maternal satisfaction and lead to more positive birth experiences (Thies-Lagergren 2013) - Evidence Based Birth
- Reposted from Geelong Born
📷:

28/05/2019
17/04/2019

How’s this shot of a mumma using gravity and allow her body to open? The rhombus of Michaelis (sometimes called the quadrilateral of Michaelis) is a kite-shaped area that includes the three lower lumber vertebrae, the sacrum and that long ligament which reaches down from the base of the scull to the sacrum.

This wedge-shaped area of bone moves backwards during the second stage of labour and as it moves back it pushes the wings of the ilea out, increasing the diameters of the pelvis. We know it’s happening when the woman’s hands reach upwards (to find something to hold onto, her head goes back and her back arches.) It’s what Sheila Kitzinger was talking about when she recorded Jamaican midwives saying the baby will not be born ‘till the woman opens her back’. I’m sure that is what they mean by the ‘opening of the back’.



"The reason that the woman’s arms go up is to find something to hold onto as her pelvis is going to become destabilised. This happens as part of physiological second stage; it’s an integral part of an active normal birth. If you’re going to have a normal birth you need to allow the rhombus of Michaelis to move backwards to give the baby the maximum amount of space to turn his shoulders in. Although the rhombus appears high in the pelvis and the lower lumbar spine when it moves backwards, it has the effect of opening the outlet as well.

When women are leaning forward, upright, or on their hands and knees, you will see a lump appear on their back, at and below waist level. It’s much higher up than you might think; you don’t look for it near her buttocks, you look for it near her waist."

Text by .com



Image shared from Blissful Herbs - nurturing body & soul
Original photo from

26/02/2019

Mira 🕵️ las diferentes características que tiene tú flujo vaginal durante el ciclo sexual femenino👇

Adress

Härnösand
87142HÄRNÖSAND

Webbplats

Aviseringar

Var den första att veta och låt oss skicka ett mail när Familjebarnmorskan postar nyheter och kampanjer. Din e-postadress kommer inte att användas för något annat ändamål, och du kan när som helst avbryta prenumerationen.

Dela

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn
Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share via Email
Share on WhatsApp Share on Instagram Share on Telegram