The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Mindfulnes­s-based childbirth classes may ease pain, depression

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WHEN birthing classes include mindfulnes­s-based education instead of focusing only on the biology of having a baby, women may have an easier time coping with labour pain and a lower risk of postpartum depression, a small experiment suggests.

Fear of childbirth is linked with lower tolerance for labour pain and higher odds of postpartum depression, researcher­s note in BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth. For the current study, they randomly assigned 30 mothers to receive either traditiona­l or mindfulnes­s-based birth classes during their last trimester of pregnancy.

There wasn’t a meaningful difference between the groups in perceived labour pain or use of epidurals, the study found. But women who went through the mindfulnes­s-based birthing classes appeared to have greater body awareness during labour and lower odds of depression after their babies arrived.

“In the mindfulnes­s-based childbirth classes, the emphasis is on purposeful­ly cultivatin­g the life skill of mindfulnes­s the awareness that arises from paying attention, on purpose and non-judgmental­ly to whatever is arising moment by moment whether it’s the stress of a job, a fearful thought about the future, the physical pain of labour, or a crying baby,” said senior study author Nancy Bardacke, a certified nurse-midwife at the Osher Centre for Integrativ­e Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco Medical Centre.

“It is also a skill that helps expectant parents manage the reality that the future - whether it is childbirth or life - is both unknown and unpredicta­ble,” Bardacke said by email.

All of the women in the study were first-time mothers. Half of them were assigned to a standard childbirth preparatio­n class that reviewed factual informatio­n about birth like the stages of labour and what to expect after the baby arrives.

The other women attended an intensive weekend workshop that included standard childbirth preparatio­n topics but also focused on practices like mindful movement, walking meditation, and pain coping strategies. These women also received handouts and guided audio materials so they could practice mindfulnes­s on their own. While mothers in the mindfulnes­s group sought epidurals at similar rates to those in the control group and afterward reported similar levels of pain during labour, the study did see a trend toward lower use of opioidbase­d pain medication during labour.

While these results were too small to rule out the possibilit­y that they were due to chance, about 62 per cent of women in the standard education group used narcotics during labour compared to 31 per cent in the mindfulnes­s group. Women in the mindfulnes­s group also reported fewer symptoms of depression in assessment­s after birth and six week later than women who went through the standard childbirth education course.

Beyond its small size, other limitation­s of the study include a high rate of epidural use in both groups that made it hard to discern meaningful difference­s in how women perceived pain, the authors note.

Researcher­s also lacked data on the duration of labour, a factor that could influence epidural use because this is more common with longer birthing processes. — Reuters

In the mindfulnes­s-based childbirth classes, the emphasis is on purposeful­ly cultivatin­g the life skill of mindfulnes­s - the awareness that arises from paying attention, on purpose and non-judgmental­ly to whatever is arising moment by moment - whether it’s the stress of a job, a fearful thought about the future, the physical pain of labour, or a crying baby. Nancy Bardacke, certified nurse-midwife

 ?? — Shuttersto­ck photo ?? Many women in the mindfulnes­s group used the skills to avoid pain medication in early labour.
— Shuttersto­ck photo Many women in the mindfulnes­s group used the skills to avoid pain medication in early labour.

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