tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4181472671648618071.post7113051102177471852..comments2023-10-18T15:20:33.029+01:00Comments on cesarean debate (now caesareanbirth.org): Letter published in BMJ - Birthplace study flawscesarean debatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01711913972260724246noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4181472671648618071.post-61305475981872280492015-05-09T12:08:46.917+01:002015-05-09T12:08:46.917+01:00Dear,
If I was to comment in detail on all of you...Dear,<br /><br />If I was to comment in detail on all of your points an show that one could reasonably say the exact opposite sustained by research or at least show the same amount of flaws in studies you cite to proof your point, this comment would be a book in itself. So please let me say just a few things: If you would really sustain would you say: women getting what they want, you should as well support women who want an out of hospital birth. Secondly, what you all the birth outcomes is not the only important point, and if you would have had the chance to see and feel your self the satisfaction and profound bounding and happiness after a drugfree normal delivery and the amounts of women wishing they would not have had a caesaerean, you mind see things different. About the comparison to the Netherlands: it is flawed, first because t has been shown that the higher rates of adverse perinatal outcomes are not merely related to out of hospitalbirth (actually the rates are higher in France and the Balticum where highly medicalized hospital-births are the standard!), and countries countries with mainly midwifery led care but far better outcomes like New Zealand are excluded from your argument. And if you talk about long term costs: why not include the costs of higher rates of long term illness of c/s born kids: of digestion difficulties, diabetes, stress related and psychological problems, asthma, allergies and so on...<br />And why is it a problem women wishing on to one care... and choose out of hospital birth because the system, though aware of that wish, doesn't change a thing about it. ..<br />Well, I feel I am on the way for a book... <br />However, I am just sad, because you don't even know what you have been really doing to yourself, your kids an the world and I wish someone had helped you in a reflected manor before you gave birth so you could have overcome whatever made you so afraid of your innate female capacity.<br />Best wishes and good luck with being really reflective the next time!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com