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Loading... The Thinking Woman's Guide to a Better Birth (edition 1999)by Henci Goer, Rhonda Wheeler
Work InformationThe Thinking Woman's Guide to a Better Birth by Henci Goer
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Though by now overdue for an update, this books has a lot of benefit for women who are looking for a more intellectual approach to the subject of childbirth. The book is well-organized, with chapter-by-chapter summaries of what specific steps moms-to-be might take in certain situations and of the medical literature on each subject. no reviews | add a review
As an intelligent woman, you are probably used to learning as much as you can before making major decisions. But when it comes to one of the most important decisions of your life--how you will give birth--it is hard to gather accurate, unbiased information. Surprisingly, much of the research does not support common medical opinion and practice. Birth activist Henci Goer gives clear, concise information based on the latest medical studies. The Thinking Woman's Guide to a Better Birth helps you compare and contrast your various options and shows you how to avoid unnecessary procedures, drugs, restrictions, and tests. The book covers: Cesareans Breech babies Inducing labor Electronic Fetal Monitoring Rupturing Membranes Coping with slow labor Pain medication Epistiotomy Vaginal birth after a Ceasarean Doulas Deciding on a doctor or midwife Choosing where to have your baby and much more . . . No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)618.4Technology Medicine and health Gynecology and Pediatrics BirthingLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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That question is quite answerable after reading this book. Or even just glancing through allllllllll her notes and citations in the back. She's done her homework.**
I also liked her opinion of physicians. Believe it or not, most of the medical books I've read over the past year have been quite negatively prejudiced towards medical professionals (who are human and subject to the same failings that other people are). The problem, she seems to say several times, isn't completely their fault, it's the educational, legal, and hospital money-making system.
So why did I rate it so low?
While the information was good, the tone was harsh. This woman does not soften the facts... and these can get descriptively gruesome. While I believe in letting people know what has been studied (and what has not been studied), I felt a twinge of sympathy for a certain subset of women, who might be reading this book, who have no choice. Consider a woman who is pregnant with twins. Has no option but to go to a hospital. Due to positioning, has no option but to have a c-section. After reading this book, she will probably be an anxious mess, convinced that she is set up for horrendous complications and setting her twins up for a life of bad health. So I thought the tone could have been softened.
Second, she repeats her information quite regularly. I think that could have been remedied. But maybe the reader was just supposed to read the chapters by themselves and not the book as a whole? Who knows what the author intended.
*In 10 years I predict it will be different.
**or has presented it about mostly everything. There is an interesting aside in her section about choosing an OB-GYN, about asking how often they will take ultrasounds of the baby. Unfortunately, she never expounds on that point, why it would matter, etc. Also check this one out before you decide whether she's right or wrong. ( )