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Loading... Birth Day: A Pediatrician Explores the Science, the History, and the…by Mark Sloan
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. From the moment I first started reading this book, I couldn't put it down. It is by far the most insightful, informative and interesting book I have ever read on pregnancy and child birth. It goes far beyond anything ever written on the subject and is so much fun to read. Dr. Sloan has a wonderful sense of humor and I found myself laughing out loud at the hysterical situations and experiences he has had through the years. I especially enjoyed reading the scientific history of childbirth and how the process evolved through the centuries. The only disapointment I had with this book is that it hadn't been written sooner! My children have all grown and I couldn't help wonder if I would have been a more confident and calmer parent had I read this years ago. I highly recommend this to anyone who is thinking of having a family, is pregnant or is looking for a great gift for a parent-to-be. ( )This is a marvelous, well-written book, with lots of fascinating history (some not easily found elsewhere). The discussion of nitrous oxide as a method of pain relief during labor will send many women to their hospitals demanding that we reinstate this valuable option now available in most other industrialized countries. Mostly, it is invaluable to see a thoughtful pediatrician reflect upon what how our current, excessively medicalized approach to birth affects our lives. Marvelous stuff. I have to admit, however, that if it had not been placed in my hands, I would not have known about it and therefore not have sought it out. Perhaps there is some marketing omission here. Back to the book - it was enthralling. It is great storytelling, great social history and really good information. The first chapter got my interest immediately and, although something pulled me away from it for a while, when I got back to it, I found it hard to put down. The book reads easily and has stuff of such interest that it should be considered by English teachers as "required reading for subsequent discussion purposes". There is much to discuss: the information itself, the writing style of Dr. Sloan and the argument presentation. There is much more about our babies that will be of real interest to a "general interest" reader and not just a medical history buff. I sure hope we get to see more from the good doctor - perhaps a first week or a first month or a first year. Something like that. He would know best where to go next. I hope that he does and that I get to find out about it somehow. I'll buy it - or them. Birth Day is a unique and fascinating look at the history and physiology of pregnancy, childbirth, and infancy. Dr. Sloan approaches the topic from a wide variety of perspectives -- he explains evolutionary, anthropological, and social factors that have shaped the modern birth experience. Sloan keeps a remarkably even hand about hot-button topics such as pain relief in labor, labor support, and circumcision. This book provides more useful information about pregnancy and labor than any other pregnancy book I have found so far. I highly recommend this book to expectant mothers, new parents, grandparents (great for explaining how the experience of birth has changed over the last century), and anyone else interested in history, biology, or medicine. no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 09 Feb 2010 08:53:48 -0500)
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