Why Giving Birth Is Safer In Britain Than In The US
At 11:58 pm this past June 25, Helen Taylor gave birth to her first baby, a boy, at West Suffolk Hospital in the east of England. At 11:59 pm, with 15 seconds to spare before midnight, his sister was born. The obstetrician and her team were pleased; the cesarean section was going smoothly, fulfilling Helen’s wish that her twins share a birthday.
But 40 minutes later, Helen had lost over a third of her blood. Enraptured by new motherhood, she barely noticed when the obstetrician’s head appeared around the surgical drape. “We need to give you a drug to help stop the bleeding, is that OK?” Helen nodded. Ten minutes passed before the question came again. Then again. The fourth time, Helen realized something was seriously wrong.
During pregnancy, the uterine blood vessels that nourish the fetus are wide open. Once the baby is delivered and the placenta removed, these vessels should constrict and close. If they don’t, as with Helen, the mother can bleed profusely. She may reach a point where her body can no longer compensate for the blood loss. The extent of the flow can be unpredictable and sometimes catastrophic. The surgical team’s response must be meticulous. And fast...
- Tags:
- Addenbrooke’s Hospital in Cambridge
- American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists
- British Congress on Obstetrics and Gynecology
- Care Quality Commission
- Catherine Aiken
- cesarean section
- community midwife
- European Union (EU)
- France
- Helen Taylor
- Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation
- Jac Reeve
- Kate Womersley
- maternal deaths
- MBRRACE-UK (Mothers and Babies: Reducing Risk through Audits and Confidential Enquiries in the United Kingdom)
- midwifery
- National Health Service
- natural birth
- Netherlands
- physiological birth
- postpartum hemorrhage
- preeclampsia
- PROMPT (Practical Obstetric Multi-Professional Training)
- Report on Confidential Enquiries into Maternal Deaths in England and Wales
- Royal College of Midwives
- Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynecologistsand The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence
- Sally Collins
- standardization of care
- UK National Health Service (NHS)
- United Kingdom (UK)
- United States of America
- University of Cambridge in England
- University of Oxford
- US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
- vaginal births after cesarean (VBACs)
- West Suffolk Hospital
- William Callaghan
- Yale New Haven Hospital
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