Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Prof Researching Fear Of Childbirth In Women Who Request Cesarean Births

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Feb, 2016 02:04 PM
    CHARLOTTETOWN — A Prince Edward Island professor is conducting research in the hopes of better understanding what's behind the fear of childbirth as it relates to women who request a planned cesarean birth.
     
    Janet Bryanton of the University of Prince Edward Island School of Nursing says she plans to interview women who have requested a planned cesarean birth because of their fears of childbirth.
     
    Bryanton says she wants to find out what's at the root of their fears and gain an understanding of what they're going through in the hopes of quelling some of those fears for other women.
     
    Bryanton says understanding of those fears will enhance women's physical and mental health by decreasing negative birth outcomes, such as post traumatic stress disorder or the fear of a subsequent birth.
     
    She says she also wants to raise awareness about the significance of the childbirth experience in general and the importance of having a positive experience.
     
    Bryanton says she wants to give women a voice so that others know they are not alone in their fears.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Immigrants Should Be Required To Live In Atlantic Region To Boost Population: Frank McKenna

    Immigrants Should Be Required To Live In Atlantic Region To Boost Population: Frank McKenna
    SAINT JOHN, N.B. — The three Maritime premiers said Monday their provinces badly need more immigrants, even as a former New Brunswick premier proposed his own solution: require newcomers to live in the region.

    Immigrants Should Be Required To Live In Atlantic Region To Boost Population: Frank McKenna

    Indiana University And B.C. Experts Team Up To Control Rural HIV Crisis

    Indiana University And B.C. Experts Team Up To Control Rural HIV Crisis
    World-renowned HIV experts from British Columbia are stepping in to help control a massive outbreak of the disease in rural Indiana.

    Indiana University And B.C. Experts Team Up To Control Rural HIV Crisis

    Even Though Fewer Us Teens Are Smoking, Secondhand Smoke Remains A Big Problem For Them

    Even Though Fewer Us Teens Are Smoking, Secondhand Smoke Remains A Big Problem For Them
    Even though fewer U.S. teens are smoking, secondhand smoke remains a big problem for them, a government study found.

    Even Though Fewer Us Teens Are Smoking, Secondhand Smoke Remains A Big Problem For Them

    3D-Printed Hearts Help Doctors Safely Train To Perform Delicate Cardiac Surgeries

    3D-Printed Hearts Help Doctors Safely Train To Perform Delicate Cardiac Surgeries
    The pediatric surgeons hover over a tiny heart, gently retracting delicate inner structures and attaching a graft with impossibly intricate stitches to repair a congenital defect that would mean certain death within days of birth.

    3D-Printed Hearts Help Doctors Safely Train To Perform Delicate Cardiac Surgeries

    Decoded: What 'Silences' X Chromosome In Girls

    Decoded: What 'Silences' X Chromosome In Girls
    Nearly every girl and woman on Earth carries two X chromosomes in each of her cells -- but one of them does (mostly) nothing. Do you know why?

    Decoded: What 'Silences' X Chromosome In Girls

    Feared Atlantic Farm Salmon Virus Identified In British Columbia

    Feared Atlantic Farm Salmon Virus Identified In British Columbia
    A scientific paper released on January 6, provides the first published evidence that a European variant of infectious salmon anaemia virus (ISAV) is present in British Columbia, Canada. 

    Feared Atlantic Farm Salmon Virus Identified In British Columbia