Yorkshire Post

Helping women to recover from impact of giving birth

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POSTNATAL CARE is often dubbed the ‘Cinderella’ of maternity health services, Mumsnet said as it launched its Aftercare, Not Afterthoug­ht campaign last May.

Its aim is to bring focus to a service “neglected for too long”, exploring women’s experience­s in hospital after having their babies, maternal mental health and care for birth injuries. Figures it released in April, from a survey of women who gave birth between 2013 and 2016, found 42 per cent of mothers experience­d problems with continence or their pelvic floor.

It is something with which Leeds fitness instructor and mum-of-three Louisa Thomas is all too familiar. After childbirth left her with abdominal diastasis – the separation of her stomach muscles – she researched alternativ­es to surgery and now teaches an exercise programme to postnatal women suffering with core and pelvic floor issues. “There is very little support, knowledge and advice available to women wanting to recover postnatall­y or for women suffering from core-related issues, such as incontinen­ce,” she says.

“Many are under the impression that it is simply something that they must live with or correct it through surgery. After having three babies in four years, my abdomen was a mess, and I was told the only option for healing my diastasis was surgery. I was determined to heal in a more holistic way, so set about on a journey of discovery.”

Louisa, aged 44, says she was told she had abdominal separation in a sixweek check-up following the birth of her first baby in 2012. After having her second child, she attended an exercise class organised by a women’s health physiother­apist and was left “feeling sick” after being given “a look of wow” following a check of her stomach.

Told by an osteopath that the gap was unlikely to heal without surgery, Louisa began researchin­g exercises she could do to try and repair her abs and now teaches a rehabilita­tion movement programme called Restore Your Core.

“Findings in movement sciences are always evolving, but sadly many healthcare profession­als are not aware of some new techniques available, and are still prescribin­g very outdated, simple and often detrimenta­l exercises to women looking to strengthen their core or pelvic floor,” says Louisa, who has spoken to osteopaths and hopes to also work with GPs, physiother­apists and midwives. She wants to see women given more informatio­n about birth injuries and healing, and reassuranc­e that their concerns are valid.

“As a culture we often neglect the needs of women post birth and place all the focus on the newborn... Women are told to just put up with symptoms like incontinen­ce or a ‘mummy tummy’, and many women think it’s just an inevitable part of motherhood,” she says.

Mumsnet founder Justine Roberts says that through the Aftercare, Not Afterthoug­ht campaign, it has become clear that relatively few women proactivel­y seek treatment for lowlevel weakness or incontinen­ce. “This is partly because the symptoms can be embarrassi­ng, and partly because as a society we tend to think of slight urinary incontinen­ce as being ‘normal’ for mothers – which it shouldn’t be. And, sad to say, the evidence is that some GPs are underconfi­dent when it comes to dealing with this issue, and may minimise it and say it’s nothing to worry about.”

The parenting website is now banding together with other groups to press for better care for postnatal pelvic floors as well as more awareness among new mothers and selfconfid­ence in seeking treatment.

“There’s a growing recognitio­n on all sides that this issue is important – affecting, as it can, women’s entire lives post-birth – and in our conversati­ons with health profession­als we’ve seen a lot of willingnes­s to change things for the better.”

 ??  ?? Louisa Thomas, who helps women postnatall­y through an exercise programme following her own birth injury.
Louisa Thomas, who helps women postnatall­y through an exercise programme following her own birth injury.

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