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Dr. Sarah Buckley's Declaration,
Don't Clamp the Cord.
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Dr. Sarah Buckley, (see her Statutory Declaration below), trained in obstetrics,
residing in Australia, shares her concerns
of risks of accepting drugs during labor, and that there is no medical need to clamp the infant's lifeline,
or cut the cord, ever,
without a proven need how it is a medical benefit to the child. Dr. Sarah Buckley is putting women
in control, where and with
whom to birth their babies. This is quite a contrast to a review I did on the
Myles Texbook for Midwives
, 11th edition 1989.
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Dr. Sarah Buckley has provided the owner of this website with videos (no clamping
or cutting the cord from the placenta)
that may be used to educate the Judge or Jury in any forth coming litigation.
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The need of the Courts to Judge this alleged medical malpractice is now deemed
necessary to protect all babies from the
clamping process, done only for cosmetic reasons, in most instances, and where done must be a perceived
need for a
benefit to the child, by facts of science. Those facts are often missing and failed to be
documented on the child's own
medical reports.
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No clamping or cutting of the cord is safe to use in hospitals and home births,
and is hoped it will become the preferred
method of informed mothers. There is implied duty for all medical persons to so advise the expecting
mother, no need, ever
to clamp the cord, except for (1) the cord broke (2) placenta previa.
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If there is a legitimate concern or fear of drugs taken during labor, that is
stated by facts of science to require hasty
clamping, there is duty to inform the mother which drugs endanger the child's blood supply, to be so
toxic 20 to 50 percent of
the blood must be denied the child, risking then blood expanders and oxygen from another source.
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Dr. Buckley supports drugging of the fetus may require hasty clamping. If that is true, then the birthing woman is not
forewarned of consequences, nor of safer alternatives to labor management.
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See Oxytocin warning by
Martindale Pharmacopoeia
. See Oxytocin, and other drug concerns by
CPS
, Candian,
Compendium of Pharmaceuticals and Specialties.
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All reasons for denying a child of natural oxygenated blood ought to be
investigated before an unbiased judge or review
board, of some kind for Constitutional violations and endangering to any child hastily clamped before
all pulsation had
naturally ceased.
Please read what Dr. Sarah Buckley has to state in her Declaration sent to me
and signed to be true:
copyright permission to use obtained from:
dyoung@pris.ca
and Dr. Buckley
Declaration of Dr. Sarah Buckley
:
The following statement is true, to the best of my knowledge, experience, training and beliefs as
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a medical practitioner trained in General Practice (family MD) and GP-obstetrics
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a writer and researcher on pregnancy, birth and parenting, including papers on ‘third stage management’
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a mother of four children, all born naturally at home
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three of these being ‘lotus births’, where the cord remained uncut.
I believe that the current obstetric practice of early cord clamping and cutting is misguided and
causing harm to
mothers and newborn babies, and this practice should be stopped, as a routine, and should only be used
where
the benefits outweigh the risks and with informed choice from parents.
In summary, I believe that this practice is causing, or significantly contributing to, the following
harmful outcomes, which are
further explained and referenced as below in my article Leaving Well Alone- A Natural Approach to
Third Stage. (Buckley
2000)
(NB ‘third stage’, also known as ‘placental stage’, is the time between delivery of the baby and delivery
of the placenta)
Harm to the baby
-
denial of the full ‘placental transfusion’ to the newborn baby
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disallowing the baby to regulate their own level of placental transfusion
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sub-optimal blood volumes in most newborn babies subjected to this treatment
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for some babies, deprivation of up to half of total blood volume (54 to 160 ml out of 300 to 350 ml)
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deprivation of oxygen contained in the placental blood
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loss of ‘life-line’ if breathing is delayed, increasing risk of damage from lack of oxygen
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inadequate tissue and organ perfusion in the time after birth
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possible long-term organ damage, eg subtle brain injury
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increased likelihood of anaemia
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deprivation of stem cells contained in the placental/cord blood
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increased need for resuscitation
increased risk of respiratory problems, especially in vulnerable babies
Harm to the Mother
:
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interference in maternal third stage physiology
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interference with third stage hormonal systems (oxytocin, endorphins), linked to bonding and to natural
means of preventing
haemorrhage
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Increased difficulty in delivering a bulky placenta
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Increased risk of haemorrhage
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Increased risk of retained placenta
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Increased risk of baby’s blood entering mothers circulation
Increased risk of subsequent RH incompatibility
Late severance
:
-
All other mammals sever the cord only after the placenta is delivered, and, to my knowledge, all traditional
cultures follow this
practice also.
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This late severance is safe and, ensures that the baby gets an optimal (but not a standard) placental
transfusion and that the
mother is protected from retained placenta, post partum haemorrhage, and leakage of the baby’s blood
into her circulation,
as above. Furthermore the conditions after birth, which are physiologically unique, are optimal for
the formation of the life-long and strong attachment, or bond, between mother and baby, as mediated
by hormones in both mother and baby.
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This is also the time when instinctive mothering behaviours are ‘switched on’ in the brains of all mammalian
species,
including humans, and I believe that interference at this time contributes to western cultural difficulties
in accessing our
motherly intuitions and instincts with our babies.
Lotus Birth
:
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I also have experience, as above, with, a practice called ‘lotus birth’, where the cord is not
cut at all, but baby and
placenta remain attached until natural separation of the cord, at 3 to 9 days after birth. This practice
allows the baby to get
the full ‘placental transfusion’ that nature intends.
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See below for my article explaining this practice, and the physiological/ philosophical/ spiritual
reasons behind it.(Lotus
Birth- a Ritual for our Times- Buckley 2002).
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As well, I have provided a video of my newborn son Jacob, soon after birth and 3 days later with his
cord and placenta still
attached, and photos of my other children.
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As a mother, I have found this to be a very safe and satisfying practice.
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As a medical practitioner, I have found no risks or possible risks to the baby, with the proviso that
this practice- or any long
delay in clamping- may not be compatible with use of drugs and procedures. (In particular, caution must
be exercised with
the use of syntocinon/pitocin, which over-rides the baby’s ability to self-regulate the placental transfusion,
and can cause
over-perfusion.)
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As a writer on birth issues, I have heard from many other parents who have practised lotus birth, and
found it to be beneficial
to their baby, both short and long-term, and to their relationship with their baby.
Attachment 1
Leaving well alone: a natural approach to the third stage of labour
Copyright Sarah Buckley 6/00
The medical approach to pregnancy and birth has become so ingrained in our culture, that we have forgotten
the way of birth of
our ancestors: a way that has ensured our survival as a species for millennia. In the rush to supposedly
protect mothers and
babies from misfortune and death, modern western obstetrics has neglected to pay its dues to the Goddess,
to Mother Nature,
whose complex and elegant systems of birth are interfered with on every level by this new approach,
even as we admit our
inability to understand or control these elemental forces.
Medical interference in pregnancy, labour and birth is well documented, and the negative sequellae are
well researched.
However, medical management of the third stage of labour- the time between the baby’s birth, and the
emergence of the
placenta-, to my mind, more insidious. At the time when Mother Nature prescribes awe and ecstasy, we
have injections,
examinations, and clamping and pulling on the cord. Instead of body heat and skin to skin contact, we
have separation and
wrapping. Where time should stand still for those eternal moments of first contact, as mother and baby
fall deeply in love, we
have haste to deliver the placenta and clean up for the next ‘case’.
This ‘management ‘ of the third stage, which has been taken even further in the last ten years, with
the popularity of “active
management of the third stage” (see below), has its own risks for mother and baby. While much of the
activity is designed to
reduce the risk of maternal bleeding, or postpartum haemorrhage (PPH), which is most certainly a serious
event, it seems that,
as with the active management of labour, the medical approach to labour and birth actually leads to
many of the problems that
active management is designed to address.
Active management also creates specific and potentially life-threatening problems for mother and baby.
In particular, use of
active management leads to a newborn baby being deprived of up to half of his or her expected blood
volume. This extra blood,
which is intended to perfuse the newly functioning lungs and other vital organs, is discarded along
with the placenta when active
management is used, with possible sequellae such as breathing difficulties and anaemia, especially in
vulnerable babies.
Drugs used in active management have documented risks for the mother, including death, and we
do not know the long-term
effects of these drugs, which are given at a critical stage of brain development, for the baby.
Hormones in the third stage
:
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As a mammalian species- that is, we have mammary glands that produce milk for our young- we share almost
all features of
labour and birth with our fellow mammals. We have in common the complex orchestration of labour hormones,
produced
deep within our “mammalian”, or middle brain, to aid us and ultimately ensure the survival of our offspring.
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We are helped in birth by three major mammalian hormone systems, all of which play important roles in
the third stage as
well. The hormone oxytocin causes the uterine contractions that signal labour, as well as helping us
to enact our instinctive
mothering behaviours. Endorphins, the body’s natural opiates, produce an altered state of consciousness
and aid us in
transmuting pain: and the fight or flight hormones adrenaline and noradrenaline (epinephrine and norepinephrine-
also
known as catecholamines or CAs ) give us the burst of energy that we need to push our babies out in
second stage.
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During the third stage of labour, strong uterine contractions continue at regular intervals, under the
continuing influence of
oxytocin. The uterine muscle fibres shorten, or retract, with each contraction, leading to a gradual
decrease in the size of the
uterus, which helps to “shear” the placenta away from its attachment site. Third stage is complete when
the placenta is
delivered.
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For the new mother, the third stage is a time of reaping the rewards of her labour. Mother Nature provides
peak levels of
oxytocin, the hormone of love, and endorphins, hormones of pleasure for both mother and baby. Skin to
skin contact and the
baby’s first attempts to breast feed further augment maternal oxytocin levels, strengthening the uterine
contractions that will
help the placenta to separate, and the uterus to contract down. In this way, oxytocin acts to prevent
haemorrhage, as well as
to establish, in concert with the other hormones, the close bond that will ensure a mother’s care and
protection, and thus her
baby’s survival.
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At this time, the high adrenaline levels of second stage, which have kept mother and baby wide-eyed
and alert at first
contact, will be falling, and a very warm atmosphere is necessary to counteract the cold, shivering
feelings that a woman has
as her adrenaline levels drop. If the environment is not well heated, and/or the mother is worried or
distracted, continuing
high levels of adrenaline will counteract oxytocin’s beneficial effects on her uterus, therefore, according
to Odent (1992),
increasing the risk of haemorrhage.
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For the baby as well, the reduction in fight or flight hormones, which have also peaked at birth, is
critical. If, because of
extended separation, these hormones are not soothed by contact with the mother, the baby can go into
psychological shock
which, according to author Joseph Chilton Pearce, will prevent the activation of specific brain functions
that is nature’s
blueprint for this time. Pearce believes that the separation of mother and baby after birth is “the
most devastating event of
life, which leaves us emotionally and psychologically crippled” (Pearce 1992)
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One might wonder whether the modern epidemic of “stress” - the term was invented by researchers in the
early 20th century-
and stress-related illness in our culture is a further outcome of current third-stage practices. It
is scientifically plausible that
our entire Hypothalamic-Pituatary-Adrenal (HPA) axis, which mediates long-term stress responses and
immune function, as
well as short-term fight-or-flight reaction, is permanently mis-set by the continuing high stress hormone
levels that ensue
when newborn babies are routinely separated from their mothers.
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Michel Odent, in his review of research on the “primal period” (the time between conception and
the first birthday), concludes
that interference or dysfunction at this time affects the development of our “capacity to love”, which
is particularly vulnerable
around the time of birth, being connected hormonally to the oxytocin system. (Odent, 1998) Research
by Jacobsen (1990,
1997)) and Raine (1994), among others, suggests that contemporary tragedies such as suicide, drug addiction
and violent
criminality may be linked to problems in the perinatal period such as exposure to drugs, birth complications
and separation
or rejection from the mother.
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A crucial role for birth attendants in these times is to ensure that a woman’s mammalian instincts are
protected and valued
during pregnancy, birth and afterwards. Ensuring unhurried and uninterrupted contact between mother
and baby after birth,
adjusting the temperature to accommodate a shivering mother, and to allow skin-to-skin contact and breastfeeding,
and not
removing the baby for any reason- these are practices that are sensible, intuitive and safe, and help
to synchronise our
hormonal systems with our genetic blueprint, giving maximum success and pleasure for both partners,
in the critical function
of child-rearing.
The baby, the cord, and active management
:
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Adaptation to life outside the womb is the major physiological task for the baby in third stage. In
utero, the wondrous
placenta fulfills the functions of lungs, kidney, gut and liver for our babies. Blood flow to these
organs is minimal until the baby
takes a first breath, at which time huge changes begin in the organisation of the circulatory system.
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Within the baby’s body, blood becomes, over several minutes, diverted away from the umbilical cord and
placenta and, as
the lungs fill with air, blood is sucked into the pulmonary (lung) circulation. Mother Nature ensures
a reservoir of blood in the
cord and placenta, that provides the additional blood necessary for these newly-perfused pulmonary and
organ systems.
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The transfer of this reservoir of blood from the placenta to the baby happens in a step-wise progression,
with blood entering
the baby with each third-stage contraction, and some blood returning to the placenta between contractions.
Crying slows the
intake of blood, which is also controlled by constriction of the vessels within the cord (Gunther 1957)
- both of which imply
that the baby may be able to regulate the transfusion according to individual need.
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Gravity will affect the transfer of blood, with optimal transfer occurring when the baby remains
at or below the level of the
uterus until the cessation of cord pulsation signals that the transfer is complete. This process of
“physiological clamping”
typically takes 3 minutes, but may be longer, or can be complete in only one minute. (Linderkamp 1982)
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This elegant and time-tested system, which ensures that an optimum, but not a standard, amount of blood
is transferred, is
rendered inoperable by the current practice of early clamping of the cord- usually within 30 seconds
of birth.
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Early clamping has been widely adopted in Western obstetrics as part of the package known as active
management of the
third stage. This comprises the use of an oxytocic agent- a drug that, like oxytocin, causes the uterus
to contract strongly-
given usually by injection into the mothers thigh as the baby is born, as well as early cord clamping,
and ‘controlled cord
traction’- that is, pulling on the cord to deliver the placenta as quickly as possible.
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Haste becomes necessary, because the oxytocic injection will, within a few minutes, cause very strong
uterine contractions
that can trap an undelivered placenta, making an operation and ‘manual removal’ necessary. Furthermore,
if the cord is not
clamped before the oxytocic effect commences, the baby is at risk of having too much blood suddenly
pumped from the
placenta by the over-zealous contractions.
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While the aim of active management is to reduce the risk of haemorrhage for the mother, “its widespread
acceptance was
not preceded by studies evaluating the effects of depriving neonates [newborn babies] of a significant
volume of blood”
(Piscane 1996)
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It is estimated that early clamping deprives the baby of 54 to 160 ml of blood, (Usher 1963) which represents
up to half of a
baby’s total blood volume at birth. “Clamping the cord before the infant’s first breath results in blood
being sacrificed from
other organs to establish pulmonary perfusion.[blood supply to the lungs].Fatality may result if the
child is already
hypovolemic [low in blood volume].” (Morley 1997)
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Where the baby is lifted above the uterus before clamping- for example during caesarean surgery- blood
will drain back to
the placenta by gravity, making these babies especially liable to receive less than their expected blood
volume. The
consequence of this may be an increased risk of respiratory (breathing) distress- several studies have
shown this condition,
which is common in caesarean-born babies, to be eliminated when a full placental transfusion was allowed.
(Peltonen 1981,
Landau 1953).
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The baby whose cord is clamped early also loses the iron contained within that blood- early clamping
has been linked with
an extra risk of anaemia in infancy. (Grajeda 1997,Michaelson 1995).
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These sequellae of early clamping were recognised as far back as 1801, when Erasmus Darwin
wrote
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“Another thing very injurious to the child is the tying and cutting of the navel string too soon; which
should always be left till the
child has not only repeatedly breathed but till all pulsation in the cord ceases. As otherwise the child
is much weaker than it
ought to be, a part of the blood being left in the placenta which ought to have been in the child”
(E. Darwin, Zoonomia, Vol III,
p 302, London, 1801).
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In one study, premature babies experiencing delayed cord clamping-, the delay was only 30 seconds- showed
a reduced
need for transfusion, less severe breathing problems, better oxygen levels, and indications of probable
improved long-term
outcomes, compared to those whose cords were clamped immediately. (Kinmond 1993).
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Some studies have shown an increased risk of polycythemia (more red blood cells in the blood) and jaundice
when the cord
is clamped later. Polycythemia may be beneficial, in that more red cells means more oxygen being delivered
to the tissues.
The risk that polycythemia will cause the blood to become too thick (hyperviscosity syndrome), which
is often used as an
argument against delayed cord clamping, seems to be negligible in healthy babies. (Morley 1998)
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Jaundice is almost certain when a baby gets his or her full quota of blood, and is caused by the breakdown
of the normal
excess of blood to produce bilirubin, the pigment that causes the yellow appearance of a jaundiced baby.
There is, however,
no evidence of adverse effects from this. (Morley 1998). One author has proposed that jaundice, which
is present in almost
all human infants to some extent, and which is often prolonged by breastfeeding, may actually be beneficial
because of the
anti-oxidant properties of bilirubin. (Gartner 1998)
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Early cord clamping carries the further disadvantage of depriving the baby of the oxygen-rich placental
blood that mother
nature provides to tide the baby over until breathing is well established. In situations of extreme
distress- for example, if the
baby takes several minutes to breathe-this reservoir of oxygenated blood can be life saving, but, ironically,
standard practice
is to cut the cord immediately if resuscitation is needed.
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The placental circulation acts, when the cord is intact, as a conduit for any drug given to the mother,
whether during
pregnancy, labour or third stage. Garrison (1999) reports that Narcan, which is sometimes needed by
the baby to counteract
the sedating effect of pain-relieving drugs such as pethidine (demorol), given to the mother in labour,
can be effectively
administered via the mother’s veins in third stage, waking up the newborn baby in a matter of seconds.
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The recent discovery of the amazing properties of cord blood, in particular the stem cells contained
within it, heightens, for
me, the need to ensure that a newborn baby gets its full quota. These cells are unique to this stage
of development, and will
migrate to the baby’s bone morrow soon after birth, transforming themselves into various types of blood-making
cells.
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Cord blood harvesting, which is currently being promoted to fill Cord Blood Banks for future treatment
of children with
leukaemia, involves immediate clamping, and up to 100 ml of this extraordinary blood can be taken from
the baby to whom it
belongs. Perhaps this is justifiable where active management is practiced, and the blood would be otherwise
discarded,
but, unfortunately, cord blood donation is incompatible with a physiological (natural) third stage.
Active management and the mother
:
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Active management (oxytocic, early clamping and controlled cord traction) represents a further development
in third stage
interference that began in the mid-seventeenth century, when male attendants began confining women to
bed, and cord
clamping was introduced to spare the bed linen.
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Pulling on the cord was first recommended by Mauriceau in 1673, who feared that the uterus might close
before the placenta
was spontaneously delivered (Inch 1984). In fact, the recumbent (lying) postures, increasingly adopted
under doctor’s care
meant that spontaneous delivery of the placenta was less likely: the upright postures that women and
midwives have
traditionally used encourage the placenta to fall out with the help of gravity.
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The first oxytocic to be used medically was egot, derived from a fungal infection of rye. Ergot was
known to to be used by
17th and 18th century European midwives. Its use was limited, however, by its
toxicity. It was refined and revived as
ergometrine in the 1930’s, and by the late 1940’s, some doctors were using it as a preventatively, as
well as therapeutically,
for post partum haemorrhage. (Inch 1984) Potential side effects from ergot derivatives include a rise
in blood pressure,
nausea, vomiting, headache, palpitations, cerebral haemorrhage, cardiac arrest, convulsion and even
death.
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Synthetic oxytocin, which mimics the effects of natural oxytocin on the uterus, was first marketed in
the 1950’s, and has
largely replaced ergometrine, although a combination drug, called syntometrine, is still used, especially
for severe
haemorrhage. Syntocinon causes an increase in the strength of contractions, whereas ergometrine causes
a large, ‘tonic’
contraction, which also increases the chance of trapping the placenta. Ergometrine also interferes with
the process of
placental separation, increasing the chance of partial separation. (Sorbe 1978)
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Recently active management has been proclaimed “the routine management of choice for women expecting
a single baby
by vaginal delivery in a maternity hospital” (Prendville 1999), mostly because of the results of the
recent Hinchingbrooke trial,
comparing active versus “expectant” (physiological) management.
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In this trial (Rogers 1998), which involved only women at low risk of bleeding, active management was
associated with a
post partum hemorrhage (blood loss greater than 500ml) rate of 6.8%, compared with 16.5% for expectant
(non-active)
management. Rates of severe PPH (loss > 1000ml) were low in both groups- 1.7% active and 2.6% expectant.
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The authors note further that, from these figures ten women would need to receive active management
to prevent one PPH.
They add “Some women … may rate a small personal risk of PPH of little importance compared with
intervention in an
otherwise straightforward labour, whereas others may wish to take all measures to reduce the risk of
PPH.”
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Reading this paper, one must wonder how it is that almost 1 in 6 women bled after “physiological” management,
and
whether one or more components of western obstetric practices might not be actually increasing the rate
of haemorrhage.
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Botha (1968) attended over 26 000 Bantu women over 10 years, and reports that “a retained placenta was
seldom
seen…blood transfusion for postpartum haemorrhage was never necessary.” Bantu women deliver both baby
and placenta
while squatting, and the cord is not attended to until the placenta delivers itself by gravity.
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There is some evidence that the practice of clamping the cord, which is not practiced by indigenous
cultures, contributes to
both PPH and retained placenta by trapping extra blood (around 100ml, as described above) within the
placenta. This
increases placental bulk, which the uterus cannot contract efficiently against, and which is more difficult
to expel. (Walsh
1968)
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Other western practices that may contribute to PPH include the use of oxytocin for induction and augmentation
(speeding up
labour) (Brinsden 1978, McKenzie 1979), episiotomy or perineal trauma, forceps delivery, caesarean and
previous
caesarean (because of placental problems- see Hemminki 1996).
-
Gilbert (1987) notes that PPH rates in her UK hospital more than doubled from 5% in 1969-70 to 11% in
1983-5, and
concludes “The changes in labour ward practice over the last 20 years have resulted in the re-emergence
of PPH as a
significant problem.” In particular, she links an increased risk of bleeding with induction using oxytocin,
forceps delivery, long
first and second stages (but not prolonged pushing) and the use of epidurals, which increase the chance
of forceps and of a
long second stage.
-
As noted, western practices do not facilitate the production of a mother’s own oxytocin, neither is
attention paid to reducing
adrenaline levels in the minutes after birth, both of which are physiologically likely to improve uterine
contractions and
therefore reduce haemorrhage.
-
Clamping the cord, especially at an early stage, may also cause the extra blood trapped within the placenta
to be forced
back through the placenta into the mother's blood supply with the third stage contractions. (Doolittle
1966, Lapido 1971) This
“feto-maternal transfusion” increases the chance of future blood group incompatibility problems,
which occur when the
current baby’s blood enters the mother’s blood stream, causing an immune reaction which can be reactivated
and destroy
the baby’s blood cells in a subsequent pregnancy, causing anaemia or even death.
-
The use of oxytocin, which strengthens contractions, either during labour, or in third stage,
has also been linked to an
increased risk of feto-maternal hemorrhage and blood group incompatibility problems. (Beer
1969, Weinstein 1971)
-
The World Health Organisation, in its 1996 publication Care in Normal Birth:
a practical guide, argue that “In a healthy
population (as is the case in most developed countries), postpartum blood loss up to 1000 ml may be
considered as
physiological and does not necessitate treatment other than oxytocics…”. In relation to routine oxytocics
and controlled cord
traction, WHO cautions that “Recommendation of such a policy would imply that the benefits of such management
would
offset and even exceed the risks, including potentially rare but serious risks that might become
manifest in the future.”.
Choosing a natural third stage
:
-
Choosing to forego preventative oxytocics, to clamp late (if at all), and to deliver the placenta
by our own effort all require
forethought, commitment, and that we choose birth attendants that are comfortable and experienced
with these choices.
-
-
A natural third stage is more than this, however-we must ensure respect for the emotional and hormonal
processes of both
mother and baby, remembering how unique this time is. Michel Odent stresses the importance of not interrupting,
even with
words, and believes that ideally the new mother feels unobserved and uninhibited in the first encounter
with her baby. (Odent
1992) This level of non-interference is uncommon, even in home and birth centre settings.
-
Lotus birth, the subject of this book, gives us a further chance to “slow the fire drill” after birth,
as midwife Gloria Lemay puts
it, and allows our babies the full metaphysical, as well as physical, benefit of prolonged contact with
the placenta. Lotus birth,
like a good midwife, also secludes mother and baby in the early hours and days, ensuring rest and keeping
visitors to a
minimum.
-
Third stage represents a first meeting, creating a powerful imprint upon the relationship between mother
and baby. When
both are undrugged and quiet, fully present and alert, new potentials are invoked, and we discover more
about ourselves,
and the sacred origins of our capacity to love.
References
-
Beer A. Fetal erythrocytes in maternal circulation of 155 Rh-negative women. Obstet Gynecol
1969;34,2:143-150
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Botha M. Management of the umbilical cord during labour. S.A. J Obstet Gynecol 1968;August:30-33
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Brinsden P, Clark A. Post partum haemorrhage after induced and spontaneous labour BMJ
1978 ;ii: 855-856
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Darwin E. Zoonomia Vol III 3rd ed. London 1801:302
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Doolittle J, Moritz C. Obstet Gynecol 1966; 27:529
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Garrison R. 1999 Personal communication
-
Gartner L. Breastfeeding, breastmilk and the jaundiced baby. Paper presented at The Passage
to Motherhood Conference
CAPERS 1998, Brisbane.
-
Gilbert L, Porter W, Brown V. Postpartum haemorrhage- a continuing problem. Br J Obstet Gynaecol 1987
;94:67-71
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Grajeda R, Perez-Escamilla R, Dewey K. Delayed clamping of the umbilical cord improves hematologic
status of
Guatemalan infants at 2 mo of age. Am J Clin Nutr 1997;65:425-431
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Gunther M. The transfer of blood between baby and placenta in the minutes after birth. Lancet 1957;i:1277-1280
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Hemminki E, Merilainen J. Long term effects of Cesarean section: ectopic pregnancies and placental
problems. Am J
Obstet Gynecol 1996;174:1569-1574
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Inch S. Birth Rights: what every parent should know about childbirth in hospital. New
York, Random House 1984
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Jacobsen B.Perinatal origin of adult self-destructive behavior. Acta Psychiatr Scand 1987;76:364-371
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Jacobsen B. Opiate addiction in adult offspring through possible imprinting after obstetric treatment. BMJ
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Attachment 2
Lotus Birth- A Ritual for our times
Copyright Dr Sarah J. Buckley
A previous version of this article was published in the book Lotus Birth, Shivam Rachana, Greenwood
Press, 2000.
Lotus birth is the practice of leaving the umbilical cord uncut, so that the baby remains attached to
his/her placenta until the cord
naturally separates at the umbilicus- exactly as a cut cord does- at 3 to 10 days after birth. This
prolonged contact can be seen as
a time of transition, allowing the baby to slowly and gently let go of his/her attachment to the mother's
body.
Although we have no written records of cultures which leave the cord uncut, many traditional peoples
hold the placenta in high
esteem. For example, Maori people from New Zealand bury the placenta ritually on the ancestral marae,
and the Hmong, a hill
tribe from South East Asia, believe that the placenta must be retrieved after death to ensure physical
integrity in the next life: a
Hmong baby's placenta is buried inside the house of its birth.
Lotus Birth is a new ritual for us, having only been described in chimpanzees before 1974, when Clair
Lotus Day- pregnant and
living in California- began to question the routine cutting of the cord. Her searching led her to an
obstetrician who was
sympathetic to her wishes, and her son Trimurti was born in hospital and taken home with his cord uncut.
Lotus Birth was named
by, and seeded through Clair to Jeannine Parvati Baker in the US and Shivam Rachana in Australia, who
have both been strong
advocates for this gentle practice.
Since 1974, many babies have been born this way, including babies born at home and in hospital, on land
and in water, and even
by caesarean section. Lotus birth is a beautiful and logical extension of natural childbirth, and invites
us to reclaim the so-called
third stage of birth, and to honour the placenta, our baby’s first source of nourishment.
I am a New Zealand GP (family MD in America), and have 4 children born at home in my adopted country,
Australia. I have
experienced Lotus birth with my second and subsequent children, after being drawn to it during my second
pregnancy through
contact with Shivam Rachana at the Centre for Human Transformation in Yarra Glen, near Melbourne. Lotus
birth made sense to
me at the time, as I remembered my time training in GP obstetrics, and the strange and uncomfortable
feeling of cutting through
the gristly, fleshy cord that connects baby to placenta and mother. The feeling for me was like cutting
through a boneless toe, and
it felt good to avoid this cutting with my coming baby.
Through the CHT I spoke with women who had chosen this for their babies, and experienced a beautiful
post-natal time. Some
women also described their Lotus-Birth child's self-possession and completeness. Others described it
as a challenge, practically
and emotionally. Nicholas, my partner, was concerned that it might interfere with the magic of those
early days, but was happy to
go along with my wishes.
Zoe, our second child, was born at home on the 10th of September 1993. Her placenta was, unusually,
an oval shape, which was
perfect for the red velvet placenta bag that I had sewn. Soon after the birth, we wrapped her placenta
in a cloth nappy, then in the
placenta bag, and bundled it up with her in a shawl that enveloped both of them. Every 24 hours, we
attended to the placenta by
patting it dry, coating it liberally with salt, and dropping a little lavender oil onto it. Emma, who
was 2, was keen to be involved in
the care of her sister's placenta.
As the days passed, Zoe's cord dried from the umbilical end, and became thin and brittle. It developed
a convenient 90 degree
kink where it threaded through her clothes, and so did not rub or irritate her. The placenta, too, dried
and shrivelled due to our salt
treatment, and developed a slightly meaty smell, which interested our cat!
Zoe’s cord separated on the 6th day, without any fuss; other babies have cried inconsolably or held
their cord tightly before
separation. We planted her placenta under a mandarin tree on her first birthday, which our dear friend
and neighbour Annie later
dug up and put in a pot when we moved interstate. She told us later that the mandarins from the tree
were the sweetest she had
ever tasted.
Our third child, Jacob Patrick, was born on the 25th September 1995, at home into water. Jacob and I
stayed in the water for
some time after the birth, so we floated his placenta in a plastic ice-cream carton (with the lid on,
and a corner cut out for the
cord) while I nursed him. This time, we put his placenta in a sieve to drain for the first day. I neither
dressed nor carried Jacob at
this time, but stayed in a still space with him, while Nicholas cared for Emma, 4, and Zoe, 2. His cord
separated in just under 4
days, and I felt that he drank deeply of the stillness of that time.
His short "breaking forth" time was perfect because my parents arrived from New Zealand the
following day to help with our
household. He later chose a Jacaranda tree under which to bury his placenta at our new home in Queensland.
-
My fourth baby, Maia Rose, was born in Brisbane, where Lotus birth is still very new, on 26
July 2000. We had a beautiful birth at home, and my intuition told me that her breaking forth time would
be short. I decided not to
treat her placenta at all, but kept it in a sieve over a bowl in the day time, and in the placenta bag
at night. The cord separated in
just under 3 days and, although it was a cool time of year, it did get become friable and rather smelly.
(Salt treatment would have
prevented this). Maia’s placenta is still in our freezer, awaiting the right time for burial,
and I broke off a piece of her dried cord to
give to her when she is older.
My older children have blessed me with stories of their lives before birth, and have been unanimously
in favour of not cutting the
cord- especially Emma, who remembered the unpleasant feeling of having her cord cut, which she describes
as being “painful in
my heart”. Zoe, at five years of age, described being attached to a ‘love-heart thing’ in my womb and
told me “When I was born,
the cord went off the love-heart thing and onto there (the placenta) and then I came out.” Perhaps she
experienced her placenta in
utero as the source of nourishment and love.
Lotus birth has been, for us, an exquisite ritual which has enhanced the magic of the early post natal
days. I notice an integrity and
self-possession with my lotus-born children, and I believe that lovingness, cohesion, attunement to
nature, trust, and respect for
the natural order have all been imprinted on our family by our honouring of the placenta, the Tree of
Life, through Lotus Birth.
__________________________________________________________________
contact:
Donna Young, Mother and Grandmother
Home:
www.lotusbirth.com
References of research:
www.lotusbirth.com/doc/FEB2003Lotusbirth-110.htm
A medical web site to visit:
www.cordclamping.com
Note:
PETITION
www.thepetitionsite.com/takeaction/102580814
Please ask this site to have a Medical Alert Petition Site:
petitions@earth.case2.com
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