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Henci GoerFind out what other moms-to-be are asking.  Join in the discussion with Henci Goer, an expert in obstetric research. If you would like to contact Henci outside of the Ask Henci forum, send an email to Goersitemail@aol.com.

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Reply To Topic Topic: What do they mean by "orgasmic"?
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Posted By Henci Goer, BA on 10 Nov 2008 12:18 AM

Actually, obstetrics isn't based on scientific facts. Obstetrics as a specialty predated by decades the idea that medical practice should be based on research evidence, and when the research was done, it consistently has shown virtually all elements of typical obstetric management to be unsafe, ineffective, and usually both. Archie Cochrane, for whom the Cochrane Library of Systematic Reviews is named, awarded the specialty the Wooden Spoon for being the least scientific of all the medical disciplines.

As for the superior safety of hospital birth, from the 1920s, the time period when birth began moving into the hospital and under the supervision of obstetricians, right up to the present day, studies have shown and continue to show hospital birth to be the less safe option when similar groups of women are compared. It could not be otherwise so long as hospitals operate (pun intended) on principles of obstetric management rather than those of physiologic care. Obstetrics is founded on the belief that the routine or frequent use of tests, procedures, drugs, and restrictions will improve outcomes by averting the supposed dangers inherently common to childbirth. But obstetric interventions all have potential harms as well as benefits. If you subject women to them who either don't have a problem or who have a problem that could be solved by lesser means, then you expose women and their babies to the risks with no counterbalancing benefits. The vast majority of women fall into these two categories.

Money and other nonmedical factors such as convenience, fear of litigation, hanging on to prestige and power explain why obstetric practices and policies have not changed to conform with what the evidence finds to be safe, effective, satisfying care and why the obstetric profession as a whole continues to fight reform tooth and nail.

-- Henci

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