- The Moon's Effect On Natural Childbirth
by David
Rose
Did you know that some maternity
units actually have more staff available during periods of full
moon?
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I've always been fascinated by
the moon's effect on nature, so when a friend's wife conveyed
to me what her midwife had told her during the birth of their
daughter, I decided to find out more about childbirth, full moon
and a possible link.
On speaking to various medical
staff involved in natural childbirth, the first thing I learned
was that expectant mothers often experience false signs of labor
during full moon.
Contractions known as "Braxton
Hicks" -- sometimes noticeable
to the mother and sometimes not -- become more pronounced and
many travel to the maternity unit in the belief that "it's
time". Disappointed -- or perhaps relieved -- they return
home,
the pains having subsided and with no dilation of the cervix.
While these expectant mothers
visiting the clinic with their mistaken signs of labor are part
of the reason why extra staff are needed, the major difference
is found in the number of women whose amniotic sac -- the water
-- breaks. |
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Just as some women experience
false labor pains, in cases where the water breaking marks the
start of childbirth, full moon is the time when it's most likely
to happen.
In order to discover for myself
whether this could be true, I asked several female friends how
their births had started. Those who responded with "the
water breaking" were then asked the date of the birth. On
checking this against a moon phase chart, I discovered that almost
all had given birth on, or very close to, a full moon.
The theory is that the moon's
gravitational pull effects the amniotic fluid in much the same
way as it effects the water in the sea, rivers and even the water
that's otherwise found in our bodies.
As a woman's body prepares for
natural childbirth, the amniotic sac becomes distended so the
point where it will easily burst if put under pressure. Under
normal circumstances, the pressure of labor contractions bursts
the sac. During a full moon, the pressure caused by the moon's
effect on the water inside the sac can cause the same things
to happen, but without the accompanying contractions.
When this happens, natural childbirth
doesn't always move forward and with no other signs of labor
present, the obstetrician may decide to induce the birth. During
my own study of this phenomenon I found that of 8 women whose
births started with the water breaking at full moon, 5 of them
had no accompanying contractions.
A coincidence? Perhaps. But surely
midwives wouldn't prepare themselves for an increase in natural
childbirth activity if there wasn't some truth in this?
One midwife told me that when
it comes to planning childbirth, full moons should always be
looked for around the time of the expected delivery. If there's
one within a few days either side, the chances are your baby
will be born on that day. |