Been catching up on Call the Midwife.
Dec. 26th, 2019 03:45 amYou know, back when the nieces were itsy bitsy I spent a lot of time at The Babywearer Forums, and then when they were in middle school I spent a lot of time at the homeschool forum, two rather crunchy places.
And something that comes up in rather crunchy places where many people have young children and are expecting another is... well, everything, but the relevant thing here is the umbilical cord, namely, when to clamp it. You may have never given this much thought in your life, and probably don't have an opinion, but if you did have an opinion it would likely be "delayed clamping". Something about anemia? If you have no opinion you'll happily let the hospital decide, of course, and the very use of the term "delayed" here suggests that they probably won't do that.
Consequently, after all the discussion of this I read, every time I see a Call the Midwife birth I'm left with the uneasy sensation that they cut the cord really early... even though, of course, they're well within modern day hospital norms and (I assume) the period-appropriate norms as well.
And something that comes up in rather crunchy places where many people have young children and are expecting another is... well, everything, but the relevant thing here is the umbilical cord, namely, when to clamp it. You may have never given this much thought in your life, and probably don't have an opinion, but if you did have an opinion it would likely be "delayed clamping". Something about anemia? If you have no opinion you'll happily let the hospital decide, of course, and the very use of the term "delayed" here suggests that they probably won't do that.
Consequently, after all the discussion of this I read, every time I see a Call the Midwife birth I'm left with the uneasy sensation that they cut the cord really early... even though, of course, they're well within modern day hospital norms and (I assume) the period-appropriate norms as well.
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Date: 2019-12-28 01:20 pm (UTC)(Ridiculous. Not actually bitter. Bitter in the same way I am about how I think one of my toes is more crumpled than the other and is that a genetic defect from my mother refusing to stop drinking Dr. Pepper?)
This is just to say, that some how, opinions on umbilical cords can be formed even by people (me) who assiduously avoid all mentions of birth, pregnancy, and the biological processes of reproduction.
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Date: 2019-12-28 01:54 pm (UTC)My nurse and midwife textbook is from the mid 1980s so it's not a good guide to the period shown in the program.
-m
(edited for typos)
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Date: 2019-12-28 05:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-12-28 02:10 pm (UTC)I suspect it's one of those cases of "reality is unrealistic": if they aren't shown cutting the cord fairly early, people will think the film-makers have forgotten that this needs to be done; even if they wait the period-appropriate time and then clearly show the cutting of the cord, people will either think that they don't know how birthing works, or that they're forcing a modern discourse on historical characters.
Or, of course, they just didn't do the research, and simply assumed that this modern day norms were always the norm, including lying down in bed to do the birthing - or cutting the umbilical cord a couple of seconds after birth...
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Date: 2019-12-28 05:19 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-12-28 02:30 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-12-28 05:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-12-28 04:46 pm (UTC)Considering a newborn only has about 250 mL blood total in its system, an extra 100 mL would make a big difference...
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Date: 2019-12-28 05:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-12-28 08:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-12-29 10:06 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-12-29 08:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-12-29 10:06 pm (UTC)