Posts Tagged ‘confident childbirth’

Hunting for the secrets of a happy marriage

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

“Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way” — Leo Tolstoy, “Anna Karenina”

Wed April 29, 2009

By A. Pawlowski

(CNN) No one can truly know what goes on inside a marriage except the two people involved, but researchers are getting increasingly good glimpses at what makes couples tick, how relationships are stressed and what factors can keep the spark alive.

The goal: To find out what keeps love alive and couples together.

Putting marriage under a microscope has resulted in new long-term studies that are showing better than ever how a birth or simple boredom can drain a union.

More surprisingly, old photographs might help predict your chances of getting a divorce, new research suggests.

All of the findings can help couples learn lessons about their relationships and their spouses, said Nadine Kaslow, a professor at Emory University School of Medicine who specializes in couples and families and also serves as chief psychologist at Grady Health System in Atlanta, Georgia.

To have children or not?

Movies often portray the birth of a child as a joyous event that solidifies a couple’s union, but the arrival of the first baby puts a sudden, important strain on a marriage, according to a study published recently in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.

Researchers followed more than 200 couples for eight years after their wedding — the longest study yet looking at the impact of a child on marriage.

About 90 percent of mothers and fathers saw at least some decreases in relationship satisfaction after they became parents, said Brian Doss, assistant psychology professor at Texas A&M University and one of the authors of the study.

Don’t Miss Finding love on a deadline Moms spill truth about motherhood Spouses who were the most romantic before the birth of their child found the transition to parenthood the most difficult.

“Couples who were really enjoying a lot of the quality time they were spending before birth had a lot more to lose,” Doss said.

“Whereas couples who just naturally over time had adopted more of a friendship relationship, kind of a co-partner relationship, perhaps didn’t miss or didn’t notice the loss of that connection as much.”

Staying childless wasn’t the secret to marital bliss, however. Couples in the study who didn’t have children still became less happy with their marriage, just much more gradually than those who had children.

Couples considering starting a family may find the results alarming, but psychologists say they serve as a reminder that a relationship needs to be nurtured.

“People tend to be less dedicated to their relationship and not prioritize being with each other,” Kaslow said. “This deterioration seems to be pretty sudden right after the birth, so that’s a particularly crucial time to be mindful of it.”

Simple steps can go a long way to keeping a relationship strong. Couples can start by setting aside some private time every day, even if it’s just 15 minutes, and scheduling a weekly date, Kaslow advised.

How to fight boredom

Most people think that problems and tension spell trouble in a marriage, but a new study has found boredom is also a powerful force in eroding marital bliss.

Couples who reported being in a rut seven years into their marriage were significantly less satisfied with their relationship when researchers checked back with them nine years later, according to a study to be published next month in Psychological Science.

“For boredom to have such long-term implications I think is very significant,” said co-author Terri Orbuch, a research professor at the University of Michigan and a professor of sociology at Oakland University.

But closeness over time can eliminate that effect, the study also found.

How can couples get close if they’re feeling bored? Sharing novel activities with each other — like taking a cooking class or learning to ski — is the key, said Orbuch, who has been following a group of married couples for 22 years and is writing a book about their marriage strategies.

Some boredom is inevitable in a marriage, but it is absolutely possible for a couple to reignite a relationship, Kaslow agreed.

Her parents have just started taking classes about opera together and have assembled a “bucket list” of all the places in the world they still haven’t been to that they would like to visit. “They want to do more exciting things even at their age to nurture the relationship. I think that’s what healthy long-term relationships do,” Kaslow said.

What do photos reveal?

Surprisingly, a possible clue about whether you stay married or get divorced may be contained in your photo album.

Researchers analyzed photos taken in childhood or young adulthood from hundreds of people and rated their expressions on a “smile intensity score.”

The less intensely the subjects smiled, the more likely they would be divorced later in life, while the biggest smilers had lower divorce rates, according to a study published online this month by the journal Motivation and Emotion.

Scientists don’t know what accounts for the link, but say a smile may indicate higher levels of positive emotions and signal other traits, said co-author Matt Hertenstein, associate professor of psychology at DePauw University and head of the school’s Touch and Emotion Lab.

“People who smile a lot may attract happier people and maybe happier marriage partners,” Hertenstein said.

“It may be that people who smile in response to a photographer are more obedient people and obedience may help in a marriage. I really don’t know the explanation.”

Before you run to check your spouse’s yearbook photo, keep in mind one picture can’t tell the whole story, Kaslow said.

“I think the issue really is both getting a sense of a whole set of pictures and also the level of positivity that [people] bring into life and relationships,” she said.

Pregnancy Health Grant

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

The money can be claimed fairly easily from your 25th week of pregnancy, after receiving health advice from a midwife, or other health professional.

If you are a mum-to-be, with a baby due on or after 6 April 2009, then you could be eligible for a new Pregnancy Health Grant of £190.

The one-off payment is intended to help pregnant mums stay fit and healthy in the run up to the birth, and help meet some of the costs involved. You might like to consider using the grant to participate in the Confident Childbirth Course that I run to help you prepare for the pregnancy, labour and birth of your baby. Click here to find out more.

You’ll be given a claim form to sign and send off, which you must do within 31 days. When your claim is approved, the money is paid directly into your bank or building society account.

For Further information please visit http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/hipg/payments.htm.

IVF and fertility problems? Just relax

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

Just one of the ways Cognitive Hypnotherapy can help for fertility. See www.anitamitchell.co.uk for further details.

From

February 21, 2009

Women struggling to have a baby are being told their problem may be all in the mind, with some happy results Rachel Carlyle Sophia Mackintosh is all too aware that she is a walking stereotype. After two miscarriages and a failed IVF attempt, she decided to give up trying for a baby and buy a dog instead. With Lulu happily installed in their newly renovated house in Islington, North London, Mackintosh and her husband, James, launched themselves wholeheartedly into the adoption process. Then, five years after that first traumatic miscarriage, she discovered that she was pregnant. Hers is a familiar story of the type gleefully recounted by those who believe that women today try too hard to get pregnant. Mackintosh agrees – she believes that during those five years her mind was sabotaging her chances. “I became obsessed. Every month I would pee on an awful lot of sticks and be disappointed each time that I was not pregnant,” she says. “But, deep down, there was relief that at least I would not spend the next 12 weeks panicking about having another miscarriage.” After beginning the adoption process, Mackintosh, a charity director, began seeing a fertility counsellor. “I began to see my body in a positive way again, and she taught me to be calmer about life and confident that I would have a baby one day. And because we were about to adopt, James and I weren’t trying quite so desperately to conceive.” After the fifth session, she was pregnant, and now, at the age of 40, she has two sons, aged 3 and 1 (plus Lulu the dog). Mackintosh’s story is one of 15 collected by Michaela Ryan for a book, Trying to Conceive (Vermilion, £10.99). Related Links IVF advance promises leap in success rates Our IVF journey Top ten ways to boost your fertility The idea that the mind has a large part to play in fertility is also advocated by the midwife Zita West, who last month launched a Manage Your Mind programme at her London clinic. Each hour-long session costs £110 and a course of one to six sessions is recommended. Techniques include guided relaxation, art therapy, hypnotherapy and cognitive behaviour therapy (turning negative thoughts into positive ones). West says: “I know it makes me sound woolly, which I most certainly am not, but I have been doing this for a long time and I’m convinced that the mind-body link is crucial.” She says that “unexplained infertility” accounts for up to 23per cent of infertility cases, and 80 per cent of these could be down to the mind. The cause could be a subconscious fear of having a baby or the stress that comes from worrying about being unable to conceive. “Negative messages from the past are very important; they stay with you.” Although evidence for “mindset infertility” is scant, there is a growing acceptance that stress can affect the part of the brain governing reproductive hormones. “Basically, when an animal is stressed, it sends signals to suppress reproduction,” says Dr Jacky Boivin, a Cardiff University psychologist who specialises in infertility. “This has been proved in rats, sheep, cows and bulls, but in humans it’s more difficult to prove.” The Boston obstetrician Dr Alice Domar, a pioneer of the mind-body connection, has carried out several studies. In one, she recruited 185 IVF patients; a third did her ten-week mind-body programme, a third joined a support group and the remaining third had no extra support. She found that 55per cent of the mind-body group , 54 per cent of the support group and 20 per cent of the control group conceived. Seeta Rashid was 28 when she and husband, Tahir, began trying for a baby. After a year nothing had happened and medical investigations proved inconclusive, so the couple joined the estimated 400,000 people in Britain with “unexplained infertility”. After three failed attempts at intrauterine insemination (IUI), where the sperm is injected into the uterus, Rashid joined Cradle, a local support group in Renfrewshire. “Infertility consumes you; it puts your life on hold. Every time you go out, all you see are pregnant women or women pushing prams. You think everyone in the world is pregnant except you,” she says. At Cradle she learnt relaxation, changed her diet, took up yoga and studied techniques to challenge negative thinking. Soon after, she began her fourth IUI, which succeeded, and the couple’s daughter, Hema, was born in September, 2005. While on maternity leave, Rashid and a fellow Cradle member, the geneticist Sam MacCuish, persuaded Domar to visit Scotland. The pair secured Lottery funding and were trained in Domar’s ten-session mind-body programme. They have run one pilot and one “proper” course, each for six IVF couples who had previous miscarriages and/or failed treatments. From the second programme, five of the women got pregnant, and the sixth decided not to go ahead with treatment – an 83 per cent success rate. While running the course, Rashid put the ideas into practice, and naturally conceived her son, Gibran, who celebrated his first birthday last weekend. “I can’t say for certain what made the difference, but the mind is a very powerful thing and we should never underestimate it.” Many doctors remain sceptical, however. “Just look at some of the stressful states that people have lived in – the Second World War, starvation in Africa – yet women still conceived easily,” says Richard Kennedy, a fertility specialist at University Hospital Coventry and secretary-general of the International Federation of Fertility Societies. He won’t dismiss a mind-body link completely, however. “You hear of couples who get to the point where their doctor says that there is nothing more that can be done, so they decide to get a dog or spend their money on a world cruise. They relax – then they get pregnant naturally. But to my knowledge there is no research on that link.”

British Infertility Counselling Association (www.bica.net)

Cradle (www.assistedconception.org/cradle)

Self-hypnosis For Childbirth

Monday, September 17th, 2007
 

If you are pregnant, I have no doubt that you will have already experienced, or will at some point in the near future, have some well meaning person tell you of all the childbirth horror stories they have ever heard. These people are trying to help, and want to prepare you for the experience they believe you will have when you give birth to your baby. However, all the pre-conceived notions of childbirth (if you’ll excuse the pun) that you have, should be put to one side, because pregnant ladies can help themselves prepare for the positive birth experience they want, by combining self-hypnosis, coaching and imagery.

I have two children of my own and am already running a successful general hypnotherapy practice in Langley, Berkshire. Earlier this year, I completed further training to allow me to specialise as a Confident Childbirth Practitioner, so that this invaluable and much needed service can be offered to women from the surrounding areas.

 

Numerous studies into the benefits of hypnotherapy for pregnancy have been undertaken. One such five-year medical study was carried out in Wales comparing the labour of two groups of pregnant ladies. The first group had pre-labour hypnotherapy sessions, whilst the second group was given only the usual pre-natal support. The study reported that the time for first stage of labour was generally reduced by an average of several hours for the hypnotherapy group when compared to that of the control group. It also said that the hypnotherapy group needed significantly less chemical pain relief. Other studies have noted that having pre-labour hypnosis tends to mean that ladies need less medical intervention (forceps/caesarean etc) and that their babies have a higher AGPAR score. This is all good news, at a time when midwives in the NHS are under more and more work load pressure due to staff shortages.

I find it really sad that mention the word ‘childbirth’ to most people and the first thing that enters their mind is ‘pain’. It doesn’t have to be this way – just because we seem to have expectation in this country that childbirth equals pain! That expectation is slowly begin challenged and I am passionate about helping as many women as possible to have the most positive birth experience they can. You can contact me by getting the details on my website www.anitamitchell.co.uk.