Waterbirth finally comes to Denver

Denver Health just announced that they now offer a water birth option for expectant mothers.  It is the first hospital in the City of Denver that offers water birth.  The University of Colorado Hospital in Aurora and Mountain Midwifery in Englewood also offer water birth options.  Each location has their own policies as to who is a good candidate for water birth and it is an option all expectant mothers should investigate.  According to Waterbirth International:

• Water facilitates mobility and enables the mother to assume any position which is comfortable for labor and birth

• Speeds up labor

• Reduces blood pressure

• Gives mother more feelings of control

• Provides significant pain relief

• Promotes relaxation

• Conserves her energy

• Reduces the need for drugs and interventions

• Gives mother a private protected space

• Reduces perineal trauma and eliminates episiotomies

• Reduces cesarean section rates

• Is highly rated by mothers – typically stating they would consider giving birth in water again; some even stating they would never give birth any other way!

• Is highly rated by experienced providers

• Encourages an easier birth for mother and a gentler welcome for baby

Placing a pool of water in a birth room changes the atmosphere immediately. Voices get softer, the mother stays calmer and everyone becomes less stressed.

The effect of buoyancy that deep water immersion creates allows spontaneous movement of the mother. No one has to help the mother get into a new position. She moves as her body and the position of the baby dictate. Movement helps open the pelvis, allowing the baby to descend.

When a woman in labor relaxes in a warm deep bath, free from gravity’s pull on her body, with sensory stimulation reduced, her body is less likely to secrete stress-related hormones. This allows her body to produce the pain inhibitors-endorphins-that complement labor. Noradrenaline and catecholamines, the hormones that are released during stress, actually raise the blood pressure and can inhibit or slow labor. A laboring woman who is able to relax physically, is able to relax mentally as well. Many women, midwives, and doctors acknowledge the analgesic effect of water. Thousands of these mothers state they would never be able to consider laboring without water again.

Visit Waterbirth International at http://www.waterbirth.org/ for more information