Concerning women's stoical endurance of pain during childbirth, she found that the expectation was not restricted to just the hospital situation. |
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Urinary incontinence, particularly stress incontinence, is not an uncommon occurrence in women as they get older or after childbirth. |
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Cloves are even useful as a stimulant to strengthen uterine muscle contractions during childbirth. |
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This technique allows for the possibility of improving breast aesthetics in women with involutional changes after childbirth or menopause. |
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Experiencing depression after childbirth isn't a character flaw or a weakness. |
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It is said that Hippocrates brewed leaves from the willow tree to ease the pain of childbirth. |
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An obstetrician is a medical doctor who specializes in the care of women during pregnancy, childbirth and recuperation from delivery. |
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It is believed by Samoans to be a means of helping men appreciate the prolonged labor pains involved with childbirth. |
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I'm a part-time Lamaze childbirth educator who thoroughly enjoyed and was empowered by Peggy's editorial. |
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Death during childbirth was commonplace and infant mortality devastatingly high. |
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Organize your local midwives, doulas, childbirth educators, and any other advocates of natural childbirth in your community into a birth network. |
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If a woman had a genuine fear of childbirth, the issue was explored and discussed in a balanced manner. |
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Victoria and Albert came to love each other with a strong physical passion, yet she hated pregnancy, childbirth, babies, and children. |
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In present Mandean tradition, it must be performed by women after menstruation and after childbirth. |
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And of course my personal theory on this is that women, who do childbirth after all, can handle a lot more pain. |
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In 1995, the hospital gave the woman surnamed Ren a transfusion, after she lost a large amount of blood during childbirth. |
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She was the goddess of hunting, wild animals, childbirth, nature, and the harvest. |
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Not only do they survive childbirth and carrying heavy loads, they know how to keep a tight grip on luck, love and happiness. |
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Also, the separately built bisi is where women go during monthly menses and during childbirth. |
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Topics will include menstruation, sexuality, pregnancy and childbirth in a cultural context. |
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Ask the doctor, midwife, nurse or local hospital or clinic about childbirth classes near you. |
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The ancient Greek herbalists thought that plants belonging to this genus facilitated childbirth, hence the common name, birthwort. |
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Her work's on epidurals, pain relief in childbirth and how very dicey it is getting the needle into the right place. |
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Most women give birth in their natal households, to which they return when childbirth is near. |
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When it comes to issues surrounding childbirth I tend to think of myself as well-nigh unshockable. |
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The body of her whose virginity remained unspotted in childbirth, was preserved in its incorruption and was taken to a better place. |
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Infants may be infected by their mothers during pregnancy, childbirth or, rarely, while breastfeeding. |
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After reading it, I plan to become more vocal, rather than letting myself be persuaded or sucked in by the medical model of childbirth! |
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The midwifery was her paying vocation, she made money or got items in trade for helping other women with childbirth. |
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She also had a number of progressive medical views and was a pioneer of early rising after childbirth, a practice that is now universal. |
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Which is a bit like discussing childbirth while skirting around the difficult business of mothers. |
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The physical consequences to the woman of pregnancy and childbirth are, of course, natural processes. |
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In extreme forms of couvade, the man may mimic the pain and process of childbirth and expect his wife to wait on him in the following days. |
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We talk about natural childbirth and child spacing, swaddling, using cradleboards and hammocks, and carrying your baby. |
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Family physicians and obstetricians need to be aware of this useful method of natural childbirth. |
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Injury after childbirth usually involves all the pelvic floor and pelvic organ supports, although sometimes only one organ may prolapse. |
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Massage during childbirth can shorten the length of labour and be effective as a form of pain relief. |
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Amidst lean bishops, solemn aristocrats and pale ladies who died in childbirth, Duke Robert lies vibrant and dishy through history. |
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The risk for women of dying in childbirth is 250 times higher in poor countries than in rich ones. |
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Even if a delivery of a baby was successful, the mother could still fall prey to illness due to the lack of hygiene during childbirth. |
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In the first 24 hours after childbirth, it rapidly drops back down to normal levels. |
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Our refusal to allow them to work can also prompt them to seek rights through childbirth, he said. |
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But childbirth is likely to have only beneficial effects on her physiology. |
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That way we can both experience every single moment of childbirth together! |
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He also delves into the dramas of pregnancy and childbirth in all their modern day complexity. |
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Women had shorter life expectancies than men since many died in childbirth. |
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Thousands of women are failing to return to the workforce after childbirth. |
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Some women strongly fear childbirth, sometimes because of how pregnancy and birth are managed. |
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This will look at the availability of natural or alternative childbirth facilities in the town. |
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I have always had a phobia about pregnancy and childbirth, the whole idea of it repulses me beyond belief. |
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Incontinence to urine and faeces commonly dates from pregnancy and childbirth. |
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Aging, childbirth and weight gain relax the muscles and the fascia encasing them, collapsing the rim of the aperture. |
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The female needs a male to fertilize her egg, even though it is she who carries offspring through pregnancy and childbirth. |
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Due to the demands from women in the childbirth movement, some changes were initiated. |
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Ms O'Connor claimed that emergency medical technicians had five days training at most in childbirth and that this was no substitute for midwifery assistance. |
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I found a book in French about the Lamaze method of childbirth. |
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She now knows how her body responds after pregnancy and childbirth. |
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Approaching childbirth from the angle of pain and surgery is innovative. |
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The invention of tools such as the forceps and the introduction of the medical man in the birthing place have been determinant steps in the history of childbirth. |
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There is a persistent story in Poland that she died in childbirth. |
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The call for women to start families earlier fell into the trap of ignoring the social and economic realities forcing many women to put off childbirth, they said. |
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On the flip side, if a woman died in childbirth or from consumption, the man remarried or hired someone. |
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Reality-TV series have, over time, gleefully charged to the extreme edge of how graphically they could show childbirth. |
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While childbirth was acknowledged as potentially dangerous to both mother and child, birthing was viewed as a natural process, and midwives intervened as little as possible. |
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He urged the use of chloroform to relieve the pain of childbirth and deplored the policy of refusing to admit unmarried women to lying-in hospitals. |
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The court postponed execution of the sentence, to give her time to recover from childbirth and to wean the new baby. |
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Gender roles exceed the biological circumstances of childbirth and they are, perhaps, much less likely to change. |
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His mother lost twins during childbirth and another baby was stillborn. |
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I''m reminded of a pregnant woman in the very early stages of childbirth. |
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When childbirth went wrong, the doctor's duty was to save the mother, and it was to improve maternal health that ante-natal care first grew in significance. |
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It is the major cause of death for mothers within a year of childbirth. |
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The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists estimates that 70 percent to 85 percent of women experience the baby blues after childbirth. |
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As a pioneer of twilight sleep in childbirth in New Zealand she even trialled the drug on herself when she subsequently had her four children, Peter, Ross, Graham and Alison. |
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Her mother had died in childbirth and her father had disappeared. |
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In conclusion, it is tempting to draw parallels to classic demographic transition theory to explain men's attitudes toward fertility, pregnancy, childbirth, and fathering. |
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The trust also supports a pharmacy, quarters for doctors, and a hygienic facility for childbirth. |
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Their risk of dying in childbirth is doubled and of having stillborn babies trebled, and other physical, sexual, and relationship problems are common. |
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Here we speak to a first-time mum, a mother of four and that other essential to baby-making, a father, about their experiences of life after childbirth. |
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Through the wind whistling and the sleet pounding on the cobblestones, the old priest made his way to the place where Caryl was lying exhausted after the hours of childbirth. |
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You'll need a strong stomach to read about her experience of childbirth on page 6, but it's powerful stuff and if the magazine's honorary girl can handle it, so can you. |
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Women during and after pregnancy can benefit from treatment, not only to help with any postural strains, but also to prepare for childbirth and assist post-partum recovery. |
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Worldwide, it can be argued that Caesareans are more attractive to doctors than natural childbirth because they reduce the threat of midwifery taking over. |
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In Puebla the plant is used by midwives as a corroborant after childbirth. |
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With its profusion of midwives and naturalistic post-natal care, it is one of the few representations we have in western art that touches on the actual process of childbirth. |
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Kegel exercises have long been recommended for women with urinary incontinence or women looking to strengthen their pelvic muscles following childbirth. |
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This Greek-temple-like tomb was erected in 1901 by Dr John Springthorpe, in memory of his wife Annie, who had died in childbirth four years earlier. |
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If the operation was done for a reason that will not have changed for the next delivery, a Caesarean section will be necessary for each childbirth. |
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But the Euchologion contains prayers to be said by the priest on this occasion as part of the whole ritual of the ceremony surrounding childbirth. |
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They envisioned warriors lost in battle, and women who died in childbirth, as honored spirits, circling the sun like hummingbirds. |
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These moves were designed to help us use our minds to overcome the physical pain of impending childbirth, and created a sense of accomplishment at the end of class. |
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Breathing and relaxation techniques are taught at antenatal classes and Psychoprophylaxis is a particular method of training for childbirth. |
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Stories were told of a brownie riding horseback to fetch the midwife at childbirth or helping his master to win at checkers. |
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The churching of women traditionally includes thanksgiving for the women's survival of childbirth. |
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Finally, Pompey's wife, Julia, who was Caesar's daughter, died in childbirth. |
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In 1503, Queen Elizabeth died in childbirth, so King Henry had the dispensation also permit him to marry Catherine himself. |
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Parliament passed an act making Philip regent in the event of Mary's death in childbirth. |
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When Parr died after childbirth on 5 September 1548, he renewed his attentions towards Elizabeth, intent on marrying her. |
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Study showed that severe hemolytic anemia after childbirth was due to isoimmunization caused by an irregular antibody. |
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Spells dealing with midwifery and childbirth focused on the spiritual wellbeing of the baby. |
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Tragedy struck when she died during childbirth in 1282, giving birth to a daughter Gwenllian ferch Llywelyn. |
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Many legal systems assume childbirth is always possible regardless of age or health. |
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While Caesar was in Britain his daughter Julia, Pompey's wife, had died in childbirth. |
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After the early death of Isabella of Hainaut in childbirth in 1190, Philip decided to marry again. |
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The explanation may be the premature death of the mother in childbirth as Cecily Neville, Edward IV's mother raised Lady Elizabeth Plantagenet. |
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In 1560 Mary Queen of Scots had Margaret's head removed to Edinburgh Castle as a relic to assist her in childbirth. |
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Her daughter, Isabella of Aragon, died in childbirth whose son Miguel da Paz also died at the age of two. |
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During childbirth, there are times when the obstetrician advises the woman not to push. |
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Prayer is obligatory for all Muslims except those who are prepubescent, menstruating, or in puerperium stage after childbirth. |
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Hannah Slater died in 1812 from complications of childbirth, leaving Samuel Slater with six young children to raise. |
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To her a child seemed to be the achievement of female sexuality and childbirth appeared as a superorgasm. |
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The end of conventional childbirth might only be a matter of time. |
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A post-mortem has since revealed she died of amniotic fluid embolism, an extremely rare condition that affects women in childbirth. |
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Kudo wanted to examine how they reacted to their babies during the first month after childbirth. |
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Women's memory of labor pain appears to fade over time, unless they viewed childbirth overall as a negative experience. |
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Mr Odell also said that with childbirth becoming more acceptable, there has been a decline in so-called shotgun weddings. |
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However new research carried out in Sheffield has found that emergency caesareans are not linked with anxieties about childbirth. |
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The FM104 motormouth asked the child if she had ever suffered the pain of childbirth. |
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In many cases, C-sections are medically unnecessary, which not only adds additional risk to childbirth, but also racks up huge costs. |
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However, the sacroiliac joints may be strained in pregnancy when the ligaments soften, as a result of childbirth or of overstriding when running. |
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For example, some women develop PTSD after childbirth when they have been afraid for their own or their baby's safety. |
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Intense expulsive pains during childbirth also stimulate the formation of hemorrhoids. |
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Thus, childbirth is related to a significant increase in psychiatric consultations, while induced abortion is not. |
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A Tocophobia comes from tocos meaning childbirth and phobos meaning fear. |
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Annick Swenson, a brilliant but prickly ethnobotanist whose research in the remote Amazon rain forest could revolutionize fertility and childbirth. |
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Women evolved from having constant estrus to having monthly menses and hidden ovulation in response to a surge in the death rate of women and infants during childbirth. |
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The study found that older, more educated, and nulliparous women were more likely to attend childbirth education classes than younger, less educated and multiparous women. |
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The experimental approach could replace local anesthetics used to suppress the pangs of childbirth, stop toothache during root canals or relieve chronic soreness or itch. |
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Now the standard ante-natal advice is to do regular pelvic floor exercise, or Kegels, before and after childbirth to keep everything honeymoon fresh. |
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I could handle just about anything except childbirth without squickage, but there was something so biologically nasty about childbirth, just couldn't handle it at all. |
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Anne died a few months later in childbirth, leaving him a daughter. |
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For example, an obstetrician who fails to warn a mother of complications arising from childbirth may be held to have breached their professional duty of care. |
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In the US, abortion was more dangerous than childbirth until about 1930 when incremental improvements in abortion procedures relative to childbirth made abortion safer. |
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Lucina, the Sabine goddess of light, was combined with the Roman Juno, and as Juno Lucina, goddess of childbirth, she brought children into the world. |
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