Care Practice 4: There Should Be No Routine Interventions During Labor and Birth
Adapted from The Official Lamaze Guide: Giving Birth with Confidence.
Although research shows that routine and unnecessary interference in the natural process of labor and birth is not likely to be beneficial—and may indeed be harmful—most U.S. births today are intervention-intensive. A majority of women surveyed for Listening to Mothers experienced one or more of the following interventions during labor:
Continuous electronic fetal monitoring (EFM)(93 percent)
Restrictions on eating (87 percent)
IV fluids (86 percent)
Restrictions on drinking (66 percent)
Episiotomy (35 percent)
Epidural anesthesia (63 percent)
Artificially ruptured membranes (55 percent)
Artificial oxytocin augmentation (53 percent)
Cesarean surgery (24 percent)
- Download the Lamaze Care Practice Paper to learn why these interventions are usually unnecessary and sometimes harmful.
- Learn how to keep your birth as normal as possible if you need: