1 / 28

How Do We Look?

How Do We Look?. A brief summary of HypnoBirthing outcome data. Online Surveys June 2009-October 22, 2010. 3700 Class Reports Filed 9155 mothers taught world wide 2752 Course and Practitioner Evaluations filed 1570 Parent Birth Reports filed 1716 Birth reports filed between 2005 and 2009

vandana
Download Presentation

How Do We Look?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. How Do We Look? A brief summary of HypnoBirthing outcome data

  2. Online Surveys June 2009-October 22, 2010 • 3700 Class Reports Filed • 9155 mothers taught world wide • 2752 Course and Practitioner Evaluations filed • 1570 Parent Birth Reports filed • 1716 Birth reports filed between 2005 and 2009 • Total birth reports 2005-2010 3286

  3. Reports Filed by Year and Country

  4. Fun facts: • 75% were first time mothers • 78% went to the same care provider throughout • 18% changed to a more supportive provider • 87% birthed where they planned • 2% were “baby’s choice” • 45% had labors under 8 hours in length • 22% had labors longer than 18 hours • 65% of those who planned VBAC were successful (equal to other studies)

  5. How did you feel about your ability to have a peaceful, gentle, more comfortable birth?

  6. If you were to have another baby, would you use HypnoBirthing?

  7. Will you recommend HypnoBirthing to others?

  8. Interventions in HypnoBirthing • Surgical Birth

  9. The following data refer only to vaginal birth: Medical Induction of Labor

  10. IV Fluids

  11. Continuous Fetal Monitoring

  12. Augmentation with oxytocin (Pitocin/Syntocin)

  13. Artificial Rupture of Membranes

  14. Episiotomy

  15. Perineal tears requiring stitches

  16. IM/IV analgesia

  17. Nitrous Oxide (Entonox, “gas and air”) Nitrous oxide takes 30-45 seconds for effect. It does cross the placenta.

  18. Epidural Anesthesia

  19. US Vaginal Birth Interventions

  20. Low Birth Weight and Large Babies (US) 5 lb. 9 oz. 8 lb. 14 oz.

  21. Gestational Age (US)

  22. Birth Place

  23. Care Provider

  24. Mother’s position for birthing Lying on the back or semi-reclining curled forward can reduce the pelvic outlet as much as 30%. Side lying and kneeling causes the fewest tears. Women using a birthing stool reported being more comfortable than those semi-reclining (info from various research articles)

  25. Comfort in labor and birthing

  26. Perceptions of how HypnoBirthing benefitted them (percentage who agreed or strongly agreed)

  27. Descriptive words mothers chose

More Related