Wednesday, January 14, 2015

A Textbook Overview

Textbook Overview for
Myles Textbook for Midwives Eleventh Edition
By Megan Scott



The diagrams and illustrations in this book are amazing. It is very helpful to be able to picture what you reading about, and Myles does and excellent job of providing helpful diagrams along side the detailed explanations. The down to earth descriptions in this book are very refreshing. With so many medical text books you can get so lost in technical jargon that you miss the whole point of what you are reading. With Myles you get an explanation that actually makes sense, and can be practically applied.


This textbook is very useful to both beginner students and advanced students. For beginners this book offers a very comprehensive introduction into midwifery care, and for more advanced students it is useful for reviewing something quickly. While still being instructive, and not “dumbing down” the information, Myles is written in plain, easy to comprehend, English.

Topics covered in this edition of Myles include: how to conduct prenatals, malpresentations (and how to deal with them), nutritional guides for the pregnant woman, what a normal pregnancy looks like, abnormalities of pregnancy and labor, and much more. A particularly interesting section of this text book explains the laws that regulate midwifery in Great Britain.


The chapter on malpresentations is very informative, and detailed. It is broken down into separate sections for each presentation, and then outlines the full mechanism of labor for that position. In addition it explains the common reasons for the malpresentation, the most likely outcome, and has diagrams many showing how the presentation looks and feels from different angles. For example, occipitoposterior positions may be associated with an abnormally shaped pelvis. Out comes of an OP position are not all the same. Sometimes the baby will rotate before birth and be born in an anterior presentation. Other malpresentations covered in this chapter include, face, brow, and all of the varying breech presentations.


The first publication of Myles textbook for Midwives was published in 1953, and was written by Margaret Myles. The next nine printings were also solely written by Mrs. Myles. The eleventh edition is the first multiauthor version. Ruth Bennett and Linda Brown were the joint editors, and co-ordinated a team of midwives, and a physiotherapist to make this edition possible.


The eleventh edition of Myles Midwifery has a very comprehensive index, but is lacking a glossary. The attention to detail, and the organization, of this book is very helpful for studying. It is very easy to look up a specific topic, and if it is covered, you wont have any trouble finding its location.



In conclusion, Myles Textbook for Midwives is a very thorough volume of information, and should be included in every midwifery students education.  

My First Book Critique

Book Critique For
Ina May's Guide to Childbirth”


Overall I would recommend this book to all pregnant women. As far as methods of practice go I don't have many disagreements. Some of her ideology, including evolutionary theories and weird spiritualism, do not sit well with me, and I would preface any recommendation with that disclaimer.


Basic Foundations
I agree with the underlying principle that birth is natural, and that we as humans are designed to give birth without a problem. The psalmist refers to being made by God, “...thou hast covered me in my mother's womb. 14 I will praise thee; for I am fearfully and wonderfully made:..”, and Mrs. Gaskin writes that “ Your body is not a lemon. You are not a machine. The creator is not a careless mechanic.”. Women need to know that their bodies are not only capable of delivering children, but were created to deliver children. Too often in today's society women are scared of birth because doctors treat pregnancy and childbirth as a nine month long disease to be cured by interventions. Mrs. Gaskin points out that too many women today fear the pain of childbirth because they don't view it in the correct perspective. In our society today pain is bad, and we do everything in our power to alleviate, and mask, pain to the point that we forget that labor pain has a use. If you have a bad headache you take a pain reliever, if you are having a baby you need drugs to kill the pain. Women don't realize that if they worked with their bodies, rather than fought them, birth would be easier.


Something that I found very interesting was a study done to compare a group of Dutch women's expectations of labor with those of a group of U.S. women. Both groups were informed of the potential negative effects of the pain-relieving medication, and nearly two-thirds of the Dutch group labored and delivered without narcotics, as compared to only one-sixth of the U.S. group. Interestingly in both groups, the proportion of women expecting pain and those getting medication, were nearly identical. I like that she mentions that too often in the United States natural birth is viewed as an extreme sport, rather than the normal way to have a baby. Right now, in the words of Mrs. Gaskin's mother-in-law, we are “too well bred to breed well”.We need to make women more aware of the fact that pain medication is not harmless, as we are led to believe by most doctors, and that if you approach labor with the expectation of working with the pain, rather than fighting the pain, your labor will go more smoothly.


We need women to realize that when avoidance of pain becomes the major emphasis of childbirth care, the paradoxical effect is that more women experience a great amount of pain after the birth. Frequent use of epidural anesthesia drives up the rate of c-sections, episiotomies, and forceps use. If you labor without pain medication you will have pain during the labor and birth, but it will be over as soon as the baby is born. If you have pain medication during labor your chances of needing an intervention to help deliver the baby go up, and when you have interventions you will most likely need even stronger pain medication after the birth to relieve the discomfort and pain caused by the c-section, episiotomy, or forceps.




The next thing Mrs. Gaskin has figured out is something a lot of people would laugh at, but that I agree with, is the connection of mind and body. Now I don't believe in some of the mysticism mind/body stuff that she does, but there is a connection there. If there wasn't why would placebo pills work? I have personally seen one case of this, and have heard of another. In the case I saw, the midwife checked the dilation and found her to be eight cm dilated. The mother then decided she was done, and informed the midwife that she was ready to push. The midwife told her to wait until she was fully dilated to push, but checked again any way, only to find that the mother WAS fully dilated. She had dilated from eight cm to ten cm in less than two minutes, simply by putting her mind to it. In the second case, a friend of mine's sister was induced early in the morning, and, as is usual with inductions, by about six o'clock that night was only at about seven cm. She was then informed that if she didn't have the baby by six thirty she was going to be taken back for a c-section. Her baby was born at six twenty-seven. Our minds are powerful, and we need to remember that when it comes to birth they can help, or hinder, the process.


Sphincter Law
Mrs. Gaskin and her partner midwives operate according to a basic set of principles that they have termed sphincter law. Most U.S. women and virtually all obstetricians believe in a set of assumptions that OB's call the Law of the three P's. The three P's are Passenger (the baby) the Passage (the pelvis and vagina) and the Powers (the strength of the uterine contractions), under the law of the three P's if there is a problem with one of the P's it can hinder a successful vaginal birth. “The major philosophical difference between Sphincter Law and the Law of the Three P's is that the latter blames woman for what medicine calls “dysfunctional labors”.” According to the Three P's if a woman doesn't birth the baby in the time allotted it is her fault: She grew too big a baby, she has too weak a uterus, or her vagina and pelvis are too small. According to Sphincter Law if a woman doesn't have a normal birth in a “reasonable” it is because of a lack of privacy, fear, or stimulation of the wrong part of the woman's brain.


Basics of sphincter law: Sphincters do not obey commands, Sphincters function best in an atmosphere of familiarity and privacy, Laughter helps sphincters open, Sphincters may slam shut if their owner is startled or frightened.


Ina May is correct in her assessment that stimulating the wrong part of the brain will slow labor, however she refers to a “new” brain and an “old” brain but I believe that we have had a whole brain since God first created us. We do have different parts of our brain that control different functions, but the parts are all the same age. It is true that stimulating the neocortex (responsible for abstract thought) can hinder labor, and that the brain stem controls the hormones that help labor, the brain stem is not “primitive” brain. I also disagree with her statement that we have evolved to the point that we forgot the Sphincter law. I think that we have continually tried to “play god” and control a created process to the point that we have forgotten that it is natural. Also she states at one point that “you need to let your monkey do it” assuming that we have evolved from, and are related to apes. I disagree with this statement completely. She also encourages women to imagine themselves as a strong mammal during labor to help them remember that they are capable of giving birth. I don't think it is right for a human that is created in the image of God to imagine that they are an animal, though realizing that God causes animals to give birth without a problem most of the times is helpful, I would recommend memorizing Isaiah 66:9 ”Shall I bring to the birth, and not cause to bring forth? saith the Lord: shall I cause to bring forth, and shut the womb? saith thy God.” We can let our bodies work the why God designed them to work without imaging that we are just animals.





The Influence of TV
I agree with Mrs. Gaskin that TV is giving woman the wrong impressions about birth because drama sells, but I don't think that the answer to that problem is to explicitly show natural birth on public TV. I also agree with her opinion that TV producers are hypocritical to say that natural un-medicated birth is too graphic, but that they will show many other things that are actually more graphic. I would propose that birth videos were more accessible to expectant mothers, that the TV shows cut back on the emergency births, and intersperse some normal births. Also I think that who ever the mothers care provider is should make sure that she doesn't have and irrational fears based off of TV, and encourage her to educate herself on normal birth so that she doesn't go into labor with all of the fake scenarios in her head. I think that would help alleviate some of the fear that surrounds birth, and wouldn't make a spectacle of something that is usually a very private experience.


Miscellaneous
I would recommend a balanced omnivorous diet to all pregnant women instead of vegetarian,
though if a client was a vegetarian I would just monitor to make sure that they were getting all of the needed vitamins, minerals, and fats, and recommend supplements when required.

Ina May says that puns and witticisms will not work when a mother is in labor and recommends telling off colour jokes to encourage mothers to laugh, which helps open the sphincters, but I think you can come up with something just as funny that isn't crude to help a mother laugh during labor.

Conclusion

I would strongly recommend this book expectant mothers and anyone else interested in natural childbirth. The birth stories in the first section of the book are very helpful, and Ina May does a wonderful job describing why the way they practice works so well in the second half of the book. When recommending this book I would just clarify with the person that I do not agree with all of Mrs. Gaskin's “theology”. Over all this book is a great resource, and a valuable addition to any midwife's library.