November/December 2004
Birthing, sweet
By MARC RINGEL, MD
Thank God for kidney stones! These tiny pieces of
gravel can cause in a man the only pain that a woman might admit
hurts as bad as childbirth. Without kidney stones, we men would
forever be cut off from attaining the level of suffering that women
do when they birth us, leaving uncontested women’s superiority
when it comes to suffering.
There is a lot more to the experience of childbirth
than pain, something the medical profession has come around to admitting
only recently. As a medical student in the early ‘70s, here’s
how I learned to do deliveries. When birth was imminent the laboring
woman was slid from her hospital bed onto a gurney and wheeled,
posthaste, down the hall to a delivery room, a space that was indistinguishable
from an operating room, with tile walls, stainless steel cabinets,
surgical lights, and a narrow and uncomfortable delivery table.
The mother-to-be was transferred from gurney to table
where she lay flat on her back with her legs strapped into stirrups,
knees in the air, wide apart. Sometimes her arms were tied down
too with leather restraints. Her bottom was doused and scrubbed
with copious quantities of soapy water, then painted with iodine.
The doctor and nurses were fully covered by surgical cap, gown,
and face mask and the patient was draped with sterile sheets up
to her chest. The mother might receive any of a number of pain relief
measures, including inhalation, local, and spinal anesthetic. Being
strapped into such an unnatural position made anesthesia all the
more necessary.
As the baby was crowning, we always cut an episiotomy,
an incision made with a big scissors, usually without anesthesia,
through the stretching and thinning vaginal tissues. This was supposed
to prevent uncontrolled tearing of the tissue and prevent urine
and bowel problems later in life. (Studies have since shown, as
with so many other elements of the old delivery protocol, that there
is no benefit to routine episiotomy.)
As soon as the baby was delivered, the cord was clamped
and cut and the child was carried to a table to be dried and checked
and, if necessary, resuscitated, then whisked off to the nursery.
If the mother was awake, she might be given a glimpse of her newborn
on its way out the door. Meanwhile, further south, her doctor labored
to sew up the episiotomy and worried over the placenta; if it didn’t
deliver spontaneously in 10 minutes or so, he (sic - most doctors
were men in those days) stuck his gloved hand all the way up into
the uterus to remove it manually, which they tell me is about as
painful as it sounds.
And that’s just the delivery. Labor was plenty
uncomfortable too, starting with a shave from bellybutton to knees
and an enema upon arrival at the obstetrical ward. The mother was
allowed nothing by mouth, not even a sip of water, even if the labor
lasted two days. She was tied to the bed by monitors that graphed
her uterine contractions, beeping or clicking with each of the baby’s
140 to 160 heartbeats a minute. If the monitor failed to pick up
the heartbeat, which happened frequently, there was a scary silence
for the mother to contemplate, alone in her bed (fathers were banished
to the waiting room). When the delivering physician dropped in to
see how the labor was progressing, he usually walked to the fetal
monitor machine and looked at the graphed output before he looked
at the patient.
Things are better now; far from perfect, but better.
Most women deliver in nicely appointed birthing rooms, unrestrained,
on comfortable beds, with little or no shave, staff comfortably
dressed in simple scrubs, music of choice, low lights, family present,
some nourishment during labor, no routine enema or episiotomy, rooming-in
with the baby, etc. And outcomes are better than ever.
Do you know why labor and delivery are more gentle
now? Not because the medical profession wanted these changes. Obstetrics
used to be practiced according to good medical principles, including
sterile technique, technological monitoring and doctors making all
the decisions. It took feminism to teach women that they had every
right to expect to not be alone, strapped down and flat on their
backs with legs in the air when they gave birth.
Let’s give doctors a break, though. The birthing
movement isn’t about good women pitted against evil doctors.
Physicians, while trying to practice the best obstetrics we can,
have long been afraid of being sued, which happens a lot, especially
in obstetrics.
Everybody, even physicians, makes a mistake now and then. When a
doctor doesn’t err, the patient may still believe he did if
the outcome is a less than perfect newborn. Every time a baby doesn’t
come out just right the doctor is at risk of having the parents,
armed with a lawyer, come at him for millions. The appearance of
a heart-wrenching “damaged” kid before a jury of sympathetic
laypeople has opened many a floodgate of damages, deserved or not.
How do doctors react? We practice with one eye on
creating a legally defensible medical record just in case, God forbid,
mother or child suffers a complication while under our care.
The trouble is, practicing to avoid being sued is
not necessarily practicing good medicine. Routine fetal monitoring
is an example of doing too much for the wrong reasons, a holdover
from the bad-old-days of doctor-centric obstetrics. To be sure,
if a pregnancy is deemed high risk, then strapping those instruments
around the mother’s belly could identify fetal distress early
and lead to medical or surgical interventions that might save the
baby’s life and brain tissue.
But in the case of low-risk pregnancies, fetal monitoring
changes only one outcome, the rate of invasive intervention. Low-risk
mothers and babies don’t do any better because they have been
monitored. They just get more forceps and suction deliveries and
Cesarean deliveries. The more you intervene, the higher the expense
and the bigger the risk of complications.
Why, then, do doctors still insist on doing baseline
fetal monitoring strips on low-risk mothers? Because they’re
afraid not to do it. They’re frightened that, without fetal
monitor evidence, some lawyer will ask them, under oath, “How
did you know then, Doctor, that the baby was not in distress at
this point in the labor?” (“Doctor” is pronounced
here as if the lawyer had a turd in his mouth. I know, because I’ve
been there.)
Fetal monitor interpretation is just that - interpretation,
a very inexact science. Studies show that monitor strips are as
likely to hurt a doctor’s malpractice defense as to help it.
So I ask again, why do doctors insist on running baseline strips
on low-risk women? Because we tend to put more faith in technology
than we do in anything else.
Study after study has shown that a good relationship
with the patient, real two-way communication, is the best protection
from being sued for malpractice. Unfortunately, doctors are not
trained to be communicators. We are trained to be scientists; to
trust, above all, in numbers and technology. (This is the reigning
vision of medical science, an unnecessarily narrow vision, but that’s
another discussion.) When doctors feel insecure we interpose more
machines and tests and procedures between ourselves and our patients.
The more we interpose, the worse we communicate, and the more likely
we’ll get sued.
An encounter with a “demanding” pregnant
woman is one of the most surefire triggers of doctor insecurity.
Here’s a diabolical vicious cycle: Patients expect more control
of the birthing process; doctors react defensively and surround
themselves with more technology; technology gets in the way of the
doctor-patient relationship; women, mad about being objectified
and technologized, sue their doctors; doctors who are sued feel
insecure so they adopt more technology; etc, etc. Halting this cycle
comes down to human relationships, not to science, not to technology.
So, women (and men), don’t stop negotiating
with your doctors about how you want your labor to go. Build a relationship
with her (sic - today many doctors who deliver babies are women).
There is no one right way to have a baby. “Natural”
is fine. So is pain control. Sound medical practice encompasses
a much wider territory than many doctors yet recognize.
I’d like to leave this piece where I started,
with a story about the pain of labor and delivery. In indigenous
tribes of Panama, a laboring woman would squat under a tree. Perched
above her, on a limb of the tree, was the father of the child-to-be,
with a rope tied around his scrotum. When the mother’s labor
pains would get bad, she’d tug on the rope so she could share
the discomfort with her husband.
I’ve never described this practice to an American
woman who didn’t think it was a good idea. Maybe passing a
kidney stone isn’t so bad after all.
Marc Ringel, MD, is a family practitioner and writer
based in Greeley, Colorado.