Labor & Delivery - Page 53
Page 53 of 146 FirstFirst ... 3 43 51 52 53 54 55 63 103 ... LastLast
Results 781 to 795 of 2185
  1. #781

    Join Date
    Jan 1, 1970
    Posts
    0
    Mentioned
    Post(s)
    Tagged
    Thread(s)

    Default Re: Labor & Delivery

    ecie.. gut lack yah jeng...

    seken...serem amat pengalaman melahirkan elo.

    bebiraka kasus ipar elo sm kaya adik gw. Adik gw di amik jg sempat smp deman tinggi (smp uda mengigil bdnnya) gara2 disuruh ngeden terus. Yang ada dia kecapean dan krg tidur smp akhirnya deman tinggi 39.5. Pas keluar baby nya ga sempat nangis (misua sm nyo gw smp ketakutan)...Tks Lord stlh 3 jam anaknya gapapa...Smp bidan-nya blg sorry sorry ke suami nya adik gw (dia ternyata ketiduran booo), kelewatan kan.

    Pdhl misua nya adik gw jg kerja di rumha sakit, tapi ga bs apa2...

    gw pas diceritain ampe merinding....ihhh...msh untung deh kita di indo.

    missbonbon klu kt nyo gw biar ga masuk angin. mknya dl pas baru lahiran gw keramas nya jam 9 pagi dan lgs dikeringin,hehe..
    Last edited by rsimon; Dec 13, 2008 at 03:58 PM.

  2. #782

    Join Date
    Jan 1, 1970
    Posts
    0
    Mentioned
    Post(s)
    Tagged
    Thread(s)

    Default Re: Labor & Delivery

    bea kurang tau jg sih ipar gw itu punya asuransi privat ato engga.. tp kynya ada asuransi sih.. cm gw kurang ngerti jg Hidden Content

    ecie gw waktu dulu jg ky lo gitu.. kalo gw kata dokternya mulut rahimnya masih kaku, jd mesti dibantu dibuka manual sama dia.. wuih.. mayan jg yak rasanya.. tapi bis itu bukaan gw pean2 nambah.. mulesnya jg. btw gutlak yaahhh..

  3. #783
    Permanent Resident Ecie's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 29, 2008
    Location
    jkt-bgr pp teruuussss......
    Posts
    868
    Mentioned
    4 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Default Re: Labor & Delivery

    missbon yg gw baca di ayahbunda sih krn berhubungan dgn pendarahan yg keluar pada saat nifas itu.... cuma detilnya gw lupa... yg gw inget ya itu aja kl keramas mesti langsung dikeringin n mandi ga boleh lebih dari jam 5 sore Hidden Content
    I love being married... It's so great to find that one special person you want to annoy for the rest of your life....

  4. #784
    Mommies Daily Crew Superstar in Training kirana21's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 21, 2008
    Location
    Jakarta, Surabaya
    Posts
    7,622
    Mentioned
    450 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Default Re: Labor & Delivery

    Hidden Content Originally Posted by bea9601 Hidden Content
    mo bagi info sajah, kemaren ini koran2, tipi2 pada heboh di belanda sini. gara2nya angka kematian bayi di belanda ranking 4 paling banyak di negara eropa. 1 di antara 100 bayi meninggal sebelum berumur 2 minggu Hidden Content cuman kalah ama prancis dan lituania kalo ga salah.
    bea, klo soal ASI gimana?
    setau gue kematian newborn bisa ditekan klo ASI apalagi IMD/ELO digalakkan..

  5. #785

    Join Date
    Jan 1, 1970
    Posts
    0
    Mentioned
    Post(s)
    Tagged
    Thread(s)

    Default Re: Labor & Delivery

    nah tuh bener kata si bea, waktu gw kontraksi pertama itu jm 10 mlm, cuman gw pikir ah palingan kontraksi semu karna due date nya masih 1 minggu lagi. Beneran, kontraksi ilang. Pas jam 11 mlm mule lagi kali ini agak2 sakitlah so gw kasiy tau laki gw untuk tilpon si bidan, pas ditelpon si bidan bilang udah masuk di bath tub aja pake aer anget biar relax karena perhitungan dia jg pasti cuman kontraksi semu. Oke saran gw lakuin. Lumayan adem jg siy berendam. Abis itu gw pegi bobo. Jam 12 mlm, makin sakit keq nahan pup gedang bgt,, gw bilang tilpon si bidan keqnya gw dah mo lahiran nih.
    Di tilpon, suami gw udah dikasih instruksi untuk nyiapin semua keperluan persalinan. Nah pas bu bidan dtg, langsung dicek gw udah pembukaan brapa ternyata masiy bukaan 4 klo ga salah. and so on and so on.... (baca post gw pertama untuk kelanjutan cerita).
    Baby lahir dgn sehat, panjang 52cm, berat 4.2 kg! see, ini yg bikin susah gw kasiy kluar dia.

    Oh ya pas abis operasi itu, haus bgt bok keq seharian jalan di padang pasir tanpa minum.
    Pas gw minta minum di suster eh malah cuman diseprot doang mulut gw, kata nya siy masih belom boleh sama dokter.

    Nah segitu pengalaman gw ibu2,, Hidden Content

  6. #786
    Superstar in Training
    Join Date
    Aug 28, 2007
    Location
    Delft, NL
    Posts
    5,522
    Mentioned
    422 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Default Re: Labor & Delivery

    Hidden Content Originally Posted by kirana21 Hidden Content
    bea, klo soal ASI gimana?
    setau gue kematian newborn bisa ditekan klo ASI apalagi IMD/ELO digalakkan..
    ASI sih di sini rata2 ngasih ASI setau gw. susu formula pan mahal dan orang sini terkenal dengan pelitnya, jadi pastilah ngasih ASI selama ASInya keluar pada kasus temen2 gw. belum lagi perusahaan susu bayi dilarang ngiklanin susu bayi untuk bayi2 di bawah umur 6 bulan. jadi ga ada tuh iklan2 susu bayi kayak di indonesia "ASI memang yang terbaik bladibladibla", lha wong dihukum kalo berani ngiklanin. even di website mereka pun ga ada info tentang susu bayi baru lahir Hidden Content

  7. #787
    Emerald TiTa's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 3, 2008
    Location
    in the middle of no where
    Posts
    962
    Mentioned
    2 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Default Re: Labor & Delivery

    bea, di indo juga ngga ada kok iklan susu formula untuk bayi dibawah 1 thn, cuma mereka promosinya terselubung gt, by phone, pas gw tanya dapet nomer gw dr mana, ktnya dari rs tempat gw melahirkan.....gila ngga sih, masa' data pasien diumbar2 gitu.....sebel bgt gw...

  8. #788

    Join Date
    Jan 1, 1970
    Posts
    0
    Mentioned
    Post(s)
    Tagged
    Thread(s)

    Default Re: Labor & Delivery

    bea gilingan bangat tuh klo sama susu buat anak aja pelit. ASI emang selalu dinomorsatukan karena kandungan gizinya. Ngapain beli susu formula klo ASI masiy ngocor. Tul ga? Trus ga semua susu formula mahal koq, ada juga yg murah around 5 euro for 400 gr. Nah enaknya di sini, org tua ga perlu bergantung trus sm susu formula selepas ASI, fresh melk aja udah bisa diminum sama anak2 sejak umur 9 bln yg penting cocok.

    Lagian anak2 pan dpt kinderbijslag buat beli2 keperluan mereka. Gw malah liyat org2 Belanda sama anak sendiri itu loyal bgt loh.

    Gw aneh aja, klo org Belanda di bilang pelit.. buat gw mereka ga pelit, melainkan tau untuk apa duit itu dikeluarin, perlu ga beli barang itu? Kebiasaan dan didikanlah yg membuat mereka seperti itu. Setidaknya ini yg mertua gw pernah jelasin

  9. #789
    Permanent Resident irasistible's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 13, 2007
    Location
    Jekardah
    Posts
    549
    Mentioned
    3 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Default Re: Labor & Delivery

    Berhubung pada ngomongin ttg home birth, ini gue copy paste artikel ttg tren home birth di US dari International Herald Tribune, yg dikirim sama temen gue yg kerja di WHO ya ibu2. HTH Hidden Content

    International Herald Tribune

    Baby, you're home
    By Julie Scelfo
    Thursday, November 13, 2008

    SQUATTING in an inflatable pool in the open kitchen of her apartment in Astoria , New York , a very pregnant Alecia White Scharback, nude except for a bathing suit top, groaned in pain. It was 7:30 a.m. on Nov. 1, and Scharback, 29, an actress, had been in labor for more than 36 hours. The contractions had been only mildly painful at first, but had grown increasingly fierce as a second night gave way to morning.

    At the height of one contraction, Scharback closed her eyes, bent forward and rocked her hips back and forth. "It hurts, it hurts, it hurts," she moaned. Using a stainless steel refrigerator to steady herself, she vomited. Joshua Scharback, her husband, rushed to her side and gently stroked her head.

    Scharback was giving birth at home because she did not want any medical interventions in the process unless she needed them, she said. But after another four hours, she was beginning to doubt whether she could make it and was pleading with her midwife, Miriam Schwarzschild, for relief. "Oh, Miriam," she whimpered, "I can't." Schwarzschild reassured her client: "You can. And whenever you're ready, you can start to push."

    Home births have been around as long as humans, but since the 1950s, the overwhelming majority of American women have chosen to give birth in hospitals, which the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists identifies as one of the safest places for the unpredictable and sometimes dangerous process of childbirth. (The group has officially opposed home births since 1975, and this year the American Medical Association adopted a similar position.)

    Recently, though, midwives and childbirth educators say, a growing number of women have been opting instead for the more intimate and familiar surroundings of home — even in New York City , where homes are typically cramped warrens of a few hundred square feet and neighbors often live close enough to hear every sneeze and footstep.

    Births in New York's hospitals, where pediatricians are able to check babies immediately for potentially dangerous conditions, it should be noted, still vastly outnumber those in its homes — in 2006 home births accounted for only one-half of 1 percent of the city's 125,506 reported births.

    But local midwives say they have been swamped with calls and requests in recent months, in some cases increasing their workload from two, three or four deliveries a month to as many as 10. ( New York health department statistics for this year will not be available until 2010.) Several certified nurse midwives who have home-birth-only practices said they had gotten so many more requests in recent months that they have begun referring pregnant women to midwives in Rockland County , Long Island and New Jersey .

    Erica Lyon, the founder of Realbirth, a five-year-old childbirth education center with three locations in the city, said 20 percent of the 160 couples who take her classes each month are planning home births, twice as many as six months ago. YourWaterBirth.com, one of the biggest online purveyors of birthing pools — deep inflatable tubs with a specially designed built-in seat and handles — said its sales have doubled since last year, with more than 20 percent of its customers in New York City; Waterbirth.org, another outlet, said it has sold more than twice as many pools this year as last, 25 percent of them to New Yorkers and Long Islanders.

    Home birth professionals in New York City have been struck, several said, by the fact that the increase is coming not so much from the dyed-in-the-wool back-to-nature types as from professionals like lawyers and bankers. "People who wouldn't naturally self-select for home birth are coming in and getting very open-minded," said Cara Muhlhahn, a certified nurse midwife who has had a home-birth practice for 17 years and is now fully booked six months in advance.

    One reason for the change, it seems, is "The Business of Being Born," a documentary produced by the actress and former talk show host Ricki Lake , which ran in only a few theaters during its theatrical release in January but has become an underground hit among expectant parents since coming out on DVD. (Rentrak, a company that monitors DVD rentals, said that instead of dropping off, as typically happens with new releases, the film is being rented at consistent rates.)

    With scenes of several home births (including one in which Lake delivers her second child in the bathtub of her former West Village apartment), the film argues that women's bodies are perfectly well equipped to give birth at home and that the occasion need not be a medical event.

    Many women are wary of hospital births, both because of a patient's limited control over the process and because of the growing frequency of Caesarean sections (use of the procedure increased by 50 percent nationwide from 1996 to 2006, to nearly one in three births, according to the National Center for Health Statistics).

    "The Business of Being Born" seems to offer an alternative, and "is putting home births on the map in a way that makes women feel like it's a really legitimate option," said Élan McAllister, founder of Choices in Childbirth, a four-year-old nonprofit educational group that publishes "The New York Guide to a Healthy Birth." "In your home you're able to move around and be in the tub or in the shower. You're able to eat and behave in a natural, more normal way. If you believe birth is not a medical emergency, it is the ideal place because it's the place you can really let go and follow what your body wants you to do."
    (continued on the next posting krn artikelnya kepanjangan)
    Don't compromise yourself. You are all you've got.
    [Janis Joplin]
    www.irrasistible.wordpress.com

  10. #790
    Permanent Resident irasistible's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 13, 2007
    Location
    Jekardah
    Posts
    549
    Mentioned
    3 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Default Re: Labor & Delivery

    (sambungannyah)

    Scharback, for example, tried many different positions over the course of her labor: leaning on the windowsill of her newly decorated nursery, sitting on a birth stool, crouching on the bed, sitting on the toilet and, eventually, leaning back against her husband inside the warm birthing pool. Finally, having endured 40 hours of regular contractions with no painkillers — like most women who have home births, she refused them — she let out a guttural scream and pushed her new son, Noah, into the world.

    Home birth also appeals to the desire of many new mothers to stay put, and in continual contact with their babies, after the grueling ordeal. Michelle Zassenhaus, 33, a Web designer and photographer who gave birth for the first time in March, said her apartment in Park Slope, New York, was an ideal environment for calm postpartum recovery with her husband, Silvio Galea, and their new daughter, Lucienne.

    Shortly after the birth, "the doula and midwife got us all cleaned up, cleaned up the apartment, looked in our fridge, figured out what kind of food they could prepare for us, showed us some breastfeeding techniques, put us in bed, gave us some food, and left," Zassenhaus said. "Those first couple of days when you're usually suffering through postpartum, we were in this very quiet, intimate state of bliss."

    NEW YORK apartments would seem to present significant challenges to home birth. For starters, there are obvious concerns about the apartment itself: the prospect of an inevitably messy process in a tight space invites delicate questions, like, What happens to the rug?

    Then, too, there is the matter of space: for a woman with children, for example, it's hard to imagine where in the apartment to put them if you want them out of range of the big event. And because women giving birth at home sometimes want to surround themselves with a doula and a cadre of other supportive women — mother, sister, best friends — along with a husband or partner, a one-bedroom apartment, much of it given over to a giant inflatable tub, can quickly come to seem oppressively small.

    But for some, the biggest concern is the neighbors: natural childbirth is not usually a silent affair, and sound baffling is notoriously lousy in many of the city's buildings.

    Zassenhaus, in Park Slope, waited until three weeks before her March 28 due date to tell residents of her town house about her plans, fearful that the ground floor resident, the owner, would try to persuade her to abandon them. "At first they were shocked and fearful," Zassenhaus said. "But very quickly they embraced it, and they were all kind of excited to be part of the process.

    "I kept them apprised, and when it was coming near to the date, I put a note on their doors that said, 'Any day now, if you have a sleepless night because of my screaming, I apologize.' "

    In the event, Zassenhaus made barely a yelp until the final moments of her three hours of labor. "For 15 minutes I grunted really, really loud," she said. "My neighbors downstairs lit candles all over their apartment and prayed for us."

    Elizabeth Golluscio, a marketing consultant, and her husband, Elio Narciso, a founder of the wireless media company Zero9 USA, also debated whether to tell neighbors in their Upper East Side building about their plans, not wanting to "get them freaked out," Golluscio said. "We only bought this place in May, so we were just getting to know them. The impression is, if people are having home births, they must be hippie freaks or religious fundamentalists."

    Golluscio was thrilled, she said, when the woman in the adjacent apartment moved out for renovations, but then she worried that the construction workers might overhear her making strange noises. On Nov. 3, when she found herself giving birth in her bathtub after five days of on-again-off-again contractions, and emitting "animalistic" moans, she was still worried. "He was born at 8:16," she said of her son, Claudio, "so I was hoping the workers weren't there yet."

    When the couple, both 35, first considered a home birth, in February, Golluscio also wondered about some of their favorite belongings, especially an expensive wood Mobileffe bed frame. "It's probably the most expensive furniture we have in the house," Golluscio said. "I was like, 'I hope this thing isn't going to get hurt.' "

    Narciso, who watched his wife give birth to their first child, Matteo, at St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center last year, was even more anxious, she added. "He was like: 'What about the mess? What do we do with it?' "

    Their midwife explained that they should gather old towels and sheets in advance, as well as a kit of disposable medical supplies, including the kind of pads used for house-training puppies. She also recommended buying or renting a birth pool, which can have a disposable liner and is drained into the toilet. "She was very, very 'It's not a big deal, it's like one garbage bag,' " Golluscio said. "That's what it was. We put everything in the garbage."

    And then there is the perennial issue of space. Before the onset of her labor, Scharback, who in recent years has worked as a doula, worried about whether there would be enough seating in her 800-square-foot apartment for all the people who would be there: a midwife, a doula, her mother, her sister and her husband, along with a reporter and a photographer. "We thought maybe we should get some floor cushions," she said.

    For several hours on the morning she delivered, the guests took turns sitting on the couch, the floor and a glider set up in the new nursery. The bed became less of an option when the doula and midwife stripped it of its green-and-white designer sheets and, using a shower curtain as a liner, remade it with old pink ones. Several minutes later Scharback climbed on, enduring a contraction on all fours with her face buried in a pillow.

    A shower curtain liner also came in handy when Kirsten Rickert, 32, a stay-at-home mother, decided before dawn on Oct. 29 that she wanted to go through labor standing up in her living room overlooking Prospect Park . Standing on top of a shower curtain layered with a sheet, she planted her arms on her white couch and bent forward.

    Some people, concerned that a home birth might be traumatic for children to witness, send them to stay with a friend or relative for the duration. Rickert and her husband, Cameron Skene, on the other hand, saw it as an educational opportunity for their 2 ½-year-old daughter, Maya. "There's nothing mysterious about birth unless you want there to be," Rickert said. "For us it just introduced Maya to life, and how life comes about."

    Maya awoke around 4 a.m. and joined her parents in the living room. "She was munching away on her apple and talking about 2-year-old stuff when I was having contractions," Rickert said.

    When it was time for Rickert to push, Maya watched intently. Although she didn't like the blood and water that followed the baby, her mother reported, she wasn't surprised: for months Rickert had prepared the toddler with an explanation of what would happen.

    Just after her new daughter, Elle, emerged, at 5:23 a.m., Rickert sat on the couch (the midwife having put down an absorbent pad), and Maya came over to admire her new sister's thick black hair. "She kissed the baby and gave her lots of love, and everything was fine," Rickert said. "Then she goes, 'Can I watch "Dora" now?' "
    Don't compromise yourself. You are all you've got.
    [Janis Joplin]
    www.irrasistible.wordpress.com

  11. #791
    Permanent Resident irasistible's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 13, 2007
    Location
    Jekardah
    Posts
    549
    Mentioned
    3 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Default Re: Labor & Delivery

    (sambungannyah lagi)

    DESPITE all the preparations, of course, home births do not always go as planned. Most home-birth specialists have a relationship with a hospital or a doctor and talk in advance with their clients about the possibility of a hospital transfer. The best study of North American home births available cites an average transfer rate of about 12 percent. "If someone is preeclampsic, they're not going to give birth at home," said Muhlhahn, the longtime nurse midwife, referring to a disorder that is among the leading causes of death and illness in mothers and babies. "It's very rare something so dire would happen that we would have to call an ambulance. We don't wait until it's a real emergency."

    Ivonne Dersch, 28, a marketing executive at American Express, had to abandon her home birth in TriBeCa after a routine check of the baby's heart rate showed it was decelerating. The attending midwife decided Dersch, who had been in labor for 28 hours, should be transferred to St. Vincent 's Hospital, a 10-minute cab ride away.

    "We took the elevator and my husband hailed a cab," Dersch said. "It was like out of a movie."

    Although he tried not to show it, her husband, William, 31, a stockbroker, became fearful — "terrified actually," he said. "For the midwife to say you have to transfer to the hospital, it's all those emotions running through you."

    Dersch worried that she would be given a Caesarean upon arrival, but after examining her, the doctor told her to push. Fifteen excruciating minutes later, she delivered a son.

    Other hospital transfers have less favorable outcomes. Several months ago, Dr. Erin Tracy, an obstetrician and a public health expert at Massachusetts General Hospital , received a phone call from a colleague at another hospital, distraught about a patient who had almost died after a home birth.

    In the colleague's opinion, the patient, who had a severe postpartum hemorrhage, was transferred far too late for her own safety. "She was in dire straits, she needed multiple blood transfusions, and she wound up needing a hysterectomy, which could have been averted if she had been given the appropriate medications," Tracy said.

    "Many low-risk pregnancies become high risk with no warning and can become urgent within minutes," said Tracy, who, as a representative of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, successfully petitioned the American Medical Association this year to join the College in condemning home births.

    "In a home, even with a quality provider, you don't have access to surgeries or blood transfusions or lifesaving medications you would have in a hospital," she added. "The literature does say the majority of normal deliveries can be done at home. But I think, and others think, the stakes are too high."

    Golluscio's delivery, too, deviated unnervingly from the plan, though not in a way that turned out to be life-threatening.

    At the moment her baby was born last week, her husband was outside on the street passing Matteo off to his baby sitter, and her midwife, Schwarzschild, was stuck in traffic. Only her doula, who was not trained to deliver babies, was with her, and Golluscio herself ended up scooping her new son from the bathtub water.

    But she considered the event a success. "I feel physically awesome right now," Golluscio said three days after the birth, adding that natural childbirth at a hospital might have left her feeling good, too, but that she attributed a big part of her well-being to "being home and in the water." She added, "Even with all the uncertainty of not having my midwife there, this was the best thing ever."

    Playing It Safe
    The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists has had an official policy against home births since 1975, and this year it asked the American Medical Association to adopt a similar statement. The AMA agreed, and in June also condemned home births.

    "The AMA supports a woman's right to make an informed decision regarding her delivery and to choose a licensed health care provider" and "stresses that the safest setting for delivering a baby is in the hospital or a birthing center within a hospital complex," Steven Stack, a board member, said in the statement. "Serious complications can arise with little or no warning even among women with low-risk pregnancies."

    In contrast, health authorities in Britain view home births as a safe option for women at low risk of complications. In April 2007 the United Kingdom Department of Health rolled out plans for a "national choice guarantee," to be put in place by the end of 2009, ensuring that all women can choose among giving birth at home, or at a hospital or another facility, and still have access to midwifery care.

    The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists and the Royal College of Midwives issued a joint statement in support, agreeing that for most women, home births "may confer considerable benefits for them and their families."
    Don't compromise yourself. You are all you've got.
    [Janis Joplin]
    www.irrasistible.wordpress.com

  12. #792
    Citizen happineesh's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 30, 2007
    Location
    Manchy
    Posts
    1,757
    Mentioned
    35 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Default Re: Labor & Delivery

    wah thanks ra for sharing the article! gw da beberapa kali nonton youtube, ibu2 yang lahiran di rumah ato di bathtub mereka sendiri dan ditemenin sama midwife aja. Hebat! ...ya untungnya sih ga da msalah apa2 juga ya.
    Life happens when ure busy making other plans

  13. #793
    Permanent Resident irasistible's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 13, 2007
    Location
    Jekardah
    Posts
    549
    Mentioned
    3 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Default Re: Labor & Delivery

    Sama2 jeung Icha Hidden Content

    Gue sih kayaknya cukup setuju sama home birth ya. Bener jg isi artikel itu. Kalo emg kehamilan kita normal2 aja, kayaknya lbh nyaman melahirkan di rumah krn enviroment-nya lbh akrob. Kalo di RS kan berasa lbh tegang gimanaaa gitu. Tapi, ya itu tadi, home birth mungkin hanya utk persalinan yg betul2 tanpa gangguan/resiko apapun. Kalo yg high risk mah, mending di RS aje.

    Btw ibu2, gue mau tanya ttg pijat perineum nih, mudah2an gak ngulang ya. Udah ada yg mempraktekkannya? Dan seberapa efektif sih itu teknik pijatan utk mengurangi resiko terjadinya robekan/guntingan pd vagina? Gue baca2, kudunya pijat perineum dilakukan pd kehamilan usia 34 week, with/without your partner's help. Di Mothercare bahkan gue pernah ditawari minyak khusus utk pijat perineum. Tapi, sampe mau 36 week gini, gue blm pijat2 nih. TFS yaa.. Hidden Content
    Don't compromise yourself. You are all you've got.
    [Janis Joplin]
    www.irrasistible.wordpress.com

  14. #794
    Permanent Resident gajahsesamestreet's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 19, 2008
    Location
    UK
    Posts
    747
    Mentioned
    4 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Default Re: Labor & Delivery

    gw dulu pijat perineum soalnya baca di ayahbunda katanya bikin daerah sana jd lebih relax n elastis jadinya melahirkan lebih mudah

    nah pas akhirnya gw mealhirkan alhamdulillah (menurut gw) prosesnya ga ribet2 amat (sakit sih teteup..hehe) emang sih gw ga pake digunting2 atau robek2 kmana2 gitu..kata dokter gw robek dikit n rapih jadi jahitannya dikit banget.

    kalo kata majalah ayahbunda, pijatnya ga usah pake minyak2 khusus jg gpp, pas mandi di pijat2 aja sendiri..gw pojat sendiri ga pake bantuan siapa2 abis malu gilak !

  15. #795
    Permanent Resident irasistible's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 13, 2007
    Location
    Jekardah
    Posts
    549
    Mentioned
    3 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Default Re: Labor & Delivery

    gajah, nah coba dong sharing ke ogut, pegimane sih teknik pijat perineum yg okeh. Gue bingung deh. Soalnya, menyeka daerah V dgn tissue aja skrg gue udah kesusahan. Lah, pegimane pijit2annya tuh? Hidden Content
    Don't compromise yourself. You are all you've got.
    [Janis Joplin]
    www.irrasistible.wordpress.com

Page 53 of 146 FirstFirst ... 3 43 51 52 53 54 55 63 103 ... LastLast

Similar Threads

  1. Vacuum/Forcep-Assisted Delivery
    By Hanzky in forum Labor & Birth
    Replies: 49
    Last Post: Mar 12, 2020, 10:38 PM
  2. Delivery order makanan
    By mizzdevi in forum The Food Court
    Replies: 647
    Last Post: May 12, 2018, 05:18 PM
  3. Who do you want to be there in the delivery room?
    By Hanzky in forum Labor & Birth
    Replies: 431
    Last Post: Feb 22, 2018, 05:35 PM