Re: [ozmidwifery] post- c/s nuitrition

2004-04-13 Thread Judy Chapman
In all my years as a midwife I have worked mostly in hospitals which favour early food and drink after CS and rare are the problems. I have found that those women who do have a problem with their gut tend not to want food/drink. I guess it is her body saying it is not ready yet? 
Cheers
JudyJen Semple <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


Look what I found on the Cochrane Consumer website http://www.informedhealthonline.org//item.aspx?review=003516
The medical tradition of withholding food and drink after surgery generally came into practice without proof of benefit, and there is a lot of variety in practice. Some practitioners and hospitals let women have food and fluid within a few hours of a caesarean section, while others do not allow anything for 24 hours or more. Yet, nutrition may be important for recovery and wound healing. A Cochrane review found that there is not enough evidence about the effects of different policies on food and drink after caesarean section. However, early food and drink has not been shown to have any disadvantage - and may even speed recovery. Most of the significant differences found in the trials favoured early food and drink. More research is needed to exclude the possibility of rare adverse effects of early access to food and fluids, and to see what impact these policies have on women's satisfaction, fatigue and breastfeeding. Above summary by Informed Health Online Published: Thursday, 5 February 2004


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RE: [ozmidwifery] post- c/s nuitrition

2004-04-12 Thread Wayne and Cas
Title: Message



When I 
had my second c-birth they tried to give me some food right after and I just 
threw it up. It was quite a few hours before I could digest anything other than 
a little 7-up. Interesting article though.
 
Cheers,
 
Cas.
 
Cas, Wayne, Liam and Daniel McCullough
cas@casmccullough.com
www.casmccullough.com
 

  
  -Original Message-From: 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Jen 
  SempleSent: Monday, 12 April 2004 6:38 PMTo: 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: [ozmidwifery] post- c/s 
  nuitrition
  
  Look what I found on the Cochrane Consumer website http://www.informedhealthonline.org//item.aspx?review=003516
  The medical tradition of withholding food and drink after surgery generally 
  came into practice without proof of benefit, and there is a lot of variety in 
  practice. Some practitioners and hospitals let women have food and fluid 
  within a few hours of a caesarean section, while others do not allow anything 
  for 24 hours or more. Yet, nutrition may be important for recovery and wound 
  healing. A Cochrane review found that there is not enough evidence about the 
  effects of different policies on food and drink after caesarean section. 
  However, early food and drink has not been shown to have any disadvantage - 
  and may even speed recovery. Most of the significant differences found in the 
  trials favoured early food and drink. More research is needed to exclude the 
  possibility of rare adverse effects of early access to food and fluids, and to 
  see what impact these policies have on women's satisfaction, fatigue and 
  breastfeeding. Above summary by Informed Health Online Published: Thursday, 5 
  February 2004
  
  
  Find local movie times and trailers on Yahoo! Movies.


[ozmidwifery] post- c/s nuitrition

2004-04-12 Thread Jen Semple

Look what I found on the Cochrane Consumer website http://www.informedhealthonline.org//item.aspx?review=003516
The medical tradition of withholding food and drink after surgery generally came into practice without proof of benefit, and there is a lot of variety in practice. Some practitioners and hospitals let women have food and fluid within a few hours of a caesarean section, while others do not allow anything for 24 hours or more. Yet, nutrition may be important for recovery and wound healing. A Cochrane review found that there is not enough evidence about the effects of different policies on food and drink after caesarean section. However, early food and drink has not been shown to have any disadvantage - and may even speed recovery. Most of the significant differences found in the trials favoured early food and drink. More research is needed to exclude the possibility of rare adverse effects of early access to food and fluids, and to see what impact these policies have on women's satisfaction, fatigue and breastfeeding. Above summary by Informed Health Online Published: Thursday, 5 February 2004
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