الثلاثاء، 29 أغسطس 2023

New mothers are good enough – we just need to say so | Jodi Wilson

We’re often labelled with derogatory language that prompts us to question our growing, birthing and mothering abilities

When you become a mother, everything about you changes, even your DNA. In a process called foetal microchimerism, “zombie cells” from the baby cross the placenta and circulate through the mother’s body, lodging in her organs and tissues like pregnancy souvenirs.

For decades after pregnancy you carry these cells proving that the maternal/infant ties that bind extend much deeper and for much longer than the umbilical cord has us believe.

Continue reading...

from Pregnancy | The Guardian https://ift.tt/43XsjNt

الأحد، 27 أغسطس 2023

Having bipolar made my pregnancy ‘high risk’. But all mothers deserve an elevated level of care | Eleanor de Jong

Pregnancy comes with mental health risk for all women. And so many of us downplay our own needs and wants once a baby is on the scene

Before my husband and I tried to get pregnant, before toying with names or choosing a room for the nursery, we sat down for confronting consultations with three psychiatrists. I had long been warned of the risks pregnancy posed to bipolar mothers, and had the devastating suggestion made that not having a baby on health grounds should be a serious option for me. My grief, when that was suggested, was immense.

Pregnancy is the single greatest biological event of a woman’s life. The combination of surging hormones, rapid physical changes, a labile emotional and psychological state and no or minimal medication creates a perfect storm for women with mood disorders to relapse and experience the worst episodes of their lives. Of all groups, bipolar mothers are most at risk for postpartum psychosis. My likelihood was put at 95%.

Continue reading...

from Pregnancy | The Guardian https://ift.tt/ZY73uQ9

الجمعة، 25 أغسطس 2023

Weekend podcast: Chicken Shop Date’s Amelia Dimoldenberg, the man hit by lightning, and navigating fertility as twins

The Weekend team are taking a break. So this week, we’re looking back at some of our favourite pieces of the year.

Elle Hunt reveals the incredible story of one man’s struggle to rebuild his life after being struck by lightning (1m35s); Amelia Dimoldenberg recounts her journey from the Chicken Shop to Vanity Fair’s Oscars party (16m32s); and Chloë Hamilton describes navigating the heartbreak of fertility – shoulder to shoulder with her twin sister (33m56s).

Continue reading...

from Pregnancy | The Guardian https://ift.tt/fPbSv1q

Woman who had child after womb transplant calls for wider availability

Peyton Meave, whose daughter is now four, welcomes UK first and hopes more women given option

One of the first women in the world to successfully deliver a baby after a womb transplant has called for the procedure to be made more widely available to help the large numbers of women affected by uterine factor infertility.

Speaking after the first womb transplant surgery in the UK was reported, Peyton Meave, 29, who lives in Oklahoma, said that having a child through participation in a US trial had been a “life-changing experience”. Having previously been told that pregnancy and childbirth would never be an option, Meave now has a four-year-old daughter, Emersyn.

Continue reading...

from Pregnancy | The Guardian https://ift.tt/sc50846

الأربعاء، 23 أغسطس 2023

Thursday briefing: What the UK’s first womb transplant means for the future of fertility

In today’s newsletter: does the UK’s first successful womb transplant mean that men could one day carry babies?

Sign up here for our daily newsletter, First Edition

Good morning. Yesterday afternoon, a private jet crashed in the Tver region near Moscow, killing all 10 passengers on board. Among them, according to Russian authorities, was Yevgeny Prigozhin, the Wagner paramilitary chief who launched an armed mutiny in June. For the latest on his dramatic yet somehow unsurprising death, visit our live blog.

For today, I’ll be looking at a very different story, the UK’s first ever womb transplant. It’s been hailed as a fertility landmark and the dawn of a new era, offering dozens of infertile women the chance to have babies every year. The recipient was a woman born without a womb; the donor was her elder sister, who already has two children.

Continue reading...

from Pregnancy | The Guardian https://ift.tt/PZrF5Wg

الثلاثاء، 22 أغسطس 2023

First womb transplant in UK hailed as ‘massive success’

Patient ‘incredibly happy’ after operation that could allow dozens of infertile women a year to have babies

Surgeons have performed the first womb transplant on a woman in the UK, opening up the possibility for dozens of infertile women to have babies every year. The woman’s sister was the living donor of the womb.

The 34-year-old was “incredibly happy” and “over the moon” with the success of the nine-hour operation, according to the medical team behind the pioneering procedure. She now plans to have two children using IVF.

Continue reading...

from Pregnancy | The Guardian https://ift.tt/S6ZGTWF

الاثنين، 21 أغسطس 2023

US approves first RSV vaccine for use during pregnancy to protect babies

CDC must now weigh in on vaccine to fight respiratory infection in vulnerable newborns

US regulators on Monday approved the first RSV vaccine for pregnant women so their babies will be born with protection against the scary respiratory infection.

RSV is notorious for filling hospitals with wheezing babies every fall and winter. The Food and Drug Administration cleared Pfizer’s maternal vaccination to guard against a severe case of RSV when babies are most vulnerable – from birth through six months of age.

Continue reading...

from Pregnancy | The Guardian https://ift.tt/qFirXI7

‘I was shocked’: Australian Catholic hospitals refuse to provide birth control and abortion

Publicly funded hospitals are using the cover of religion to opt out of providing reproductive care - and experts say it has created a ‘postcode lottery’ for access to services

When Sarah*, a Melbourne mother, was pregnant with her second child, her GP gave her a surprising warning: if she had any serious complications, concerns about the viability of the pregnancy or believed she might be miscarrying, she should go to the Royal women’s hospital rather than the Mercy hospital for women, where she was planning to deliver the baby.

The reason, the GP told her, was that the Mercy – a public hospital in Melbourne’s north-east – would not assist in terminating a pregnancy due to its Catholic affiliation.

Continue reading...

from Pregnancy | The Guardian https://ift.tt/gDifmOl

الجمعة، 18 أغسطس 2023

Faced with evil like Lucy Letby’s, we yearn for a rational explanation. Sometimes there is none | Polly Toynbee

It is right to hold an inquiry, but the hunt for ‘lessons to be learned’ and a system to blame can easily go too far

The agony of the death of a child is something most families these days will never suffer. Through illness, accident or even negligence, that loss, and the lifelong pain it causes, is every parent’s greatest fear, but to know someone murdered a defenceless infant must be beyond endurance. How could she?

We will never know what evil or insanity could have induced Lucy Letby to sweep away the lives of seven babies, and attempt the murder of another six. Everyone hearing the case of the worst serial killer of children in modern British history tries, and fails, to imagine the state of mind, the cause and how such a person grew up so apparently normal, her inner murderous impulses unobserved. Her responsibility for new lives inside the Countess of Chester hospital neonatal unit, which should be a sanctuary of the greatest safety, makes this feel like the deepest betrayal.

Polly Toynbee is a Guardian columnist

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

Continue reading...

from Pregnancy | The Guardian https://ift.tt/tsKHox6

الثلاثاء، 15 أغسطس 2023

Half of anxiety and depression cases in new mothers in UK missed, says report

Top midwives are calling for 350 additional midwives to help women struggling with mental health

Half of cases of anxiety and depression among new and expectant mothers in the UK are going undiagnosed, top midwives have warned, as they called for a boost in staff numbers to help spot more cases of mental ill health.

The Royal College of Midwives (RCM) said that 10% to 20% of women develop a mental illness during pregnancy or within the first year after having a baby, which can include anxiety and depression and severe mental health issues. But too many cases of perinatal cases of anxiety or depression are being missed, despite contact with professionals, it said in its report.

Continue reading...

from Pregnancy | The Guardian https://ift.tt/r7TADhU

Manchester’s minority ethnic women to tell ‘untold stories’ of childbirth

Oral history project will preserve experiences, traditions and cultural practices of black and Asian mothers

The experiences, cultural practices and traditions of black and Asian women during pregnancy and childbirth are to be preserved in an archive in Manchester as part of an oral history project.

Holding Her Space, a community organisation that supports new mothers and mothers-to-be from minority ethnic backgrounds, has launched the intergenerational project to create culturally competent resources and provide education using creative arts.

Continue reading...

from Pregnancy | The Guardian https://ift.tt/HsFmSXd

الاثنين، 14 أغسطس 2023

Women with poor mental health ‘have 50% higher risk of preterm birth’

Study of more than 2m pregnancies in England found link between severity of mental health difficulties and adverse outcomes at birth

Women who struggle with their mental health have an almost 50% higher risk of preterm births, according to the biggest study of its kind.

The research, published on Tuesday in the Lancet Psychiatry, examined data from more than 2m pregnancies in England and found about one in 10 women who had used mental health services had a preterm birth, compared with one in 15 who did not.

Continue reading...

from Pregnancy | The Guardian https://ift.tt/lJcNXSI

Having a baby does mess with your memory. I’m glad I recorded the truth – good and bad – in real time | Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett

Most of us quickly forget the reality of early parenthood, but writing it all down was one of the best things I’ve ever done

“How old was your baby when he started sleeping through?” asked a friend recently. She is in the trenches with her newborn, who will only sleep on her – an affliction that has the potential to push parents to the brink of madness, and for which they have yet to find a cure. I recalled that it was eight weeks, if you count sleeping through as five hours or more, but I didn’t have the heart to tell her. I only remember, I think, because I was well rested enough to make decent memories.

People, readers included, took great joy in telling me that it wouldn’t last, and they were right: it didn’t. Though because of it, I can scarcely remember the winter at all. The baby was constantly unwell and we had entered the sort of co-sleeping situation that saw neither of us get much rest. For his part, he was waking for milk every hour; and for my part, I couldn’t get a sentence from Your Baby Week By Week out of my head. The line was something like: “Imagine how bad you’d feel if your baby died because you co-slept with them.” I can’t remember it word for word now, but at the time it beat its way through the membrane of my troubled slumber to form a haunting refrain that meant any rest I was getting was of even poorer quality and thus, conversely, meant I was probably more likely to have an accident during my waking hours. (I should add here that I have great respect for the book’s author Prof Caroline Fertleman and her co-writer Simone Cave, and say that I met the former when she was briefly my son’s consultant and was genuinely starstruck. Some people turn to putty when they meet pop stars; for others, it’s paediatricians.)

Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett is a Guardian columnist

Continue reading...

from Pregnancy | The Guardian https://ift.tt/jFRW5ol

الجمعة، 11 أغسطس 2023

I’m doing the Edinburgh fringe at full-term pregnancy – and not just because I’d paid the deposit

Pregnancy is a privilege but is also weird, awkward and difficult. The cathartic nature of standup helps us consider the confusion of imminent parenthood

At the start of the year, when I booked to perform my comedy show at the fringe, I was laughing in my kitchen, asking my husband: “Am I crazy?” Now I’m here, eight-and-a-half months pregnant, I can definitively say: yes, I am crazy.”

Lots of women feel beautiful pregnant. I don’t. I feel like Danny DeVito’s Penguin from Batman Returns. Skinny legs with a big round belly. Just walking around is tough as I’m three stone (19kg) heavier than I’ve ever been. And Edinburgh is one flipping hilly city. When you’re in your third trimester, gravity is not your friend. You’re top heavy and front heavy, which means it’s too difficult to walk uphill and too dangerous to walk down.

Continue reading...

from Pregnancy | The Guardian https://ift.tt/76fzehH

الثلاثاء، 8 أغسطس 2023

Unrecognised and underestimated: the fight to get Australian women proper care after miscarriages

Exclusive: Doctors, midwives, researchers and support organisations have teamed up to change the paradigm on the ‘stigma’ of miscarriage

Lying on the ultrasound table, seven weeks into her first pregnancy, Jade Bilardi wasn’t concerned about the light bleeding. She was already thinking ahead to when she’d take maternity leave, imagining being a mother by Mother’s Day.

Then she heard the sonographer say, “Oh, it’s just a blighted ovum.”

Continue reading...

from Pregnancy | The Guardian https://ift.tt/gnmHbph

الاثنين، 7 أغسطس 2023

‘Difference is beautiful’: pregnant trans men go for a swim – in pictures

Seahorse Parents is a photography and film project in which four soon-to-be parents share their personal stories of what carrying future children as transgender men has been like

Continue reading...

from Pregnancy | The Guardian https://ift.tt/8QGaSJw

الخميس، 3 أغسطس 2023

Elite athletes show they can perform after pregnancy – but how soon should they test their limits?

Beyond physical changes, some experts suggest that pregnancy may help athletes develop mental resilience and coping strategies, contributing to improved performance

A commentator’s suggestion during Australia’s opening Women’s World Cup match that “motherhood” had “not blunted” midfielder Katrina Gorry’s “competitive instincts” drew widespread criticism.

Gorry, who later said she did not take the comment personally, is far from the first mother to come back to the highest levels of elite sport. Her post-pregnancy return is emblematic of a growing trend among female athletes, who overcome remarkable physical and psychological changes to continue their professional careers.

Continue reading...

from Pregnancy | The Guardian https://ift.tt/otuYiMJ

الثلاثاء، 1 أغسطس 2023

Tori Bowie’s death highlighted a devastating reality for Black women in the US

The Olympic sprint champion died during childbirth earlier this year. But she was far from an anomaly in a troubled US health system

The last time Tianna Madison saw Tori Bowie alive was at a meet in Gainesville, Florida. This was in April 2021 – back when the rival sprinters were on separate quests to regain the form that powered them to gold in the 4x100m at the 2016 Olympics. Bowie was one of track and field’s most striking personalities, a speed demon as well as a style icon, the elite runner whose go-to accessory was a colorful hair scarf. Madison always looked forward to sharing the spotlight with her. There were hugs, pleasantries and no hard feelings when Madison beat Bowie in the 100m – the pair finished second and ninth, respectively

“At a meet, I always want to circle back and catch up with people,” Madison says. “But it’s also work; you race, you’re sweaty, exhausted, hungry …”

Continue reading...

from Pregnancy | The Guardian https://ift.tt/g4l1SkI