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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page review of the article by authors Amy Romano and Judith Lothian. This paper concludes that this paper is an objective evaluation of why in most cases natural childbirth is superior to intensive intervention. No additional sources are listed.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPbirthnrml.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the Evidence" authors Amy Romano and Judith Lothian analyze the evidence on why normal birth is superior to the intervention-intensive procedures that have largely been the focus in gynecology in
recent years. Published online on January 22, 2008 in the "Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic, & Neonatal Nursing", this article is a vivid reminder that nature does indeed know best
in many cases. As the authors observe, "interfering with the normal physiological process of labor and birth in the absence of medical necessity increases the risk of complications for
mother and baby" (Romano and Lothian, 2008). The authors also emphasize the fact that nurses play an incredibly important role in providing the support and information that women need
to make the right choices regarding the birth of their child. Romano and Lothian (2008) do not hastily jump to their conclusion that
natural childbirth is best when medical circumstances do not dictate otherwise. Indeed, they examine evidence from six separate practices that promote natural births. The evidence gleaned from these
practices is compared to that generated in the intervention-intensive camp of child birth. Technology has, after all, become more the rule than the exception in child birth. As
compared to 1970 when cesareans constituted less than seven percent of births, that number had increased to over thirty percent by 2005 (Romano and Lothian, 2008). Not only has
the number of cesarean births increased tremendously, so too has the routine use of various other interventional techniques and care plans that in actuality interferes with the normal physiological birth
process (Romano and Lothian, 2008). Obviously, the medical system is to be credited with evolution of child birth procedures. That
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