Pre-conception health

Most couples may spend a good deal of time discussing the joy of having a baby and when the best time is from a personal and financial perspective. You may spend a year or so doing things before you start a family or have another baby – things such as travelling, or saving money or moving into your new home to make room for a bigger family. But how much time do you take preparing your health and body for the pregnancy?

How healthy you and your partner are will to some degree determine how easy your pregnancy will be and how healthy your child will be. Quite a good investment then, especially when you consider that a little forward planning may benefit not only your child’s health but, some research suggests, it may determine the health of your children’s children!

This pre-conception preparation is ideal for a first or any subsequent child. It can be particularly important if you have had your children close together. Pregnancy and breastfeeding can leave you depleted and in need of a nutritional boost before another pregnancy. Benefits that you can hope for, if you and your partner take time to improve your health and nutritional status, include greater fertility, less likelihood of pregnancy health issues, reduced incidence of more serious pregnancy complications, more straightforward labour with improved healing afterwards, a healthy baby and successful breastfeeding. Not to mention the improvements in your energy and vitality and the clearing of any minor health issues.

How long should the preparation take?

This depends on your starting place. If you have been prone to immune or other health issues you may need longer but a rough guide is four months prior to starting to attempt to conceive. This allows time for the egg and the sperm to benefit fully from your dietary and lifestyle changes.

Pre-conception steps

1. Gentle detoxification

In many cases this just means being mindful of what you are eating. The key things to avoid would be cigarettes, alcohol, coffee and limit sugar intake. Avoid fried foods, soft drinks and junk foods. With a focus on fresh fruits and vegetables, wholefood cereals (such as oats, sourdough rye or wholemeal breads, brown or basmati rice), a variety of quality proteins such as fish, lean meat, eggs, nuts & seeds and pulses. Fish ideally three times a week and reduced intake of those fish that may be higher in mercury such as tuna, swordfish and shark.

Part of this eating plan will be to help you reach a good weight. If you are either over or underweight this can impact on your ovulation and menstruation and it may affect your fertility and the chance of a healthy pregnancy.

2. Reduce environmental toxins?

The sperm and ova are susceptible to damage during their maturation so during this 4 month period it is important to reduce environmental toxins. This may simply mean eating organic foods whenever possible to limit the pesticides that we ingest. It is also worthwhile going green in the cleaning department with non-chemical cleaners around the house. If you think about it one of the main exposure we have to chemicals is those found in body creams, make-up, shampoos, perfumes and hair dye. What we put on our skin goes within and can do damage to our cells so source brands that are organic and don’t use chemicals.

3. Special nutrients

Most women are aware that taking folic acid before pregnancy is required to decrease the risk of neural tube defects. The level required is a minimum of 400mcg per day and around 600mcg once the pregnancy has been established.

It is less well known that there are many other vital nutrients that we need in good amounts in pregnancy, and it is time to ensure these are adequate in your diet before becoming pregnant. For example B12 is also needed for neural tube development and in pregnancy iron requirements nearly double. If you start from low iron stores you will forever be playing catch-up during the pregnancy and may suffer from anaemia. It is thought that 12-16% of women are iron deficient and some studies suggest that as high as 36% may be deficient. So checking your iron stores with a blood test from your GP is well worthwhile so you can supplement if needed to get your iron into an acceptable range.

There is also increasing evidence of vitamin D deficiency in the general population and studies are showing that 30-40% of pregnant women may be marginally deficient. Bone health and immunity as well as reproductive health are just a few of the reasons to ensure you are getting adequate levels via your diet and through sunshine. In summer 10 minutes of sunshine a day between 11am and 3pm and without sunscreen is best – but please don’t burn.

Requirements for zinc also increase at the pre-conception stage. Zinc is extremely important for both male and female fertility. Semen has high levels of zinc and so inadequate levels may be implicated in poor sperm count and non viable sperm. Zinc is important before and during pregnancy and can be found in good quality (ideally grass fed) meat, fish, nuts, seeds, eggs and oats. In some cases improving digestive function will be needed to increase the availability of zinc.

4. Pre-conception check-up

It is good advice to go along to your GP 4-6 months before you want to start trying for a baby to have some general pre-conception checks. This may include your iron stores, vitamin D as well as the more usual rubella and other infection checks. The recommended tests may vary depending on your past and current health issues.

To learn more and for specific advice about diet and nutritional requirements and to achieve optimal pre-pregnancy health, it is advisable to see a naturopath with specific knowledge in this area. They will be likely to look at your hormonal balance, general and reproductive health, pre-conception health checks with your GP, gentle detoxification and will advise on diet and the best quality and safe levels of nutrient supplements.

Gina-Fox3

Written by Naturopath Gina Fox, BHSc (nat), Grad. Cert. Reproductive Medicine

Fertile Ground Health Group, Albert Street Medical Centre, Suite 3, Level 6, 372-376 Albert Street, East Melbourne 3002. Ph 03 9419 9988. www.fertileground.com.au

Getting Pregnant Faster by Dr Marilyn Glenville

Getting Pregnant Faster offers a comprehensive outline of the processes and benefits of natural preconception healthcare. Citing statistics and scientific research, Dr Marilyn Glenville (a British nutritionist) makes the argument for adopting a healthy diet and lifestyle before attempting conception (something that we at FGHG highly recommend!). With science now showing that health factors such as diet, lifestyle and stress are just as important prior to conception as they are during pregnancy, this book pulls together essential and up-to-date research from varying sources, offering easy access to the information every couple should know before conceiving.

Dr Glenville effectively combines nutritional guidelines with information about conventional medical options, including details on IVF, ICSI and other assisted reproductive technology. The clear step by step approach helps the reader to easily follow the preconception care plan, whilst also assisting in the successful navigation of medical fertility testing and procedures. By clearly setting time requirements around each step, the reader is easily able to judge their readiness for every stage of the process, and to identify the correct time to seek medical assistance.

By adopting the practices outlined in this book, Dr Glenville shows that everyone has the power to positively influence their fertility. Proper preconception care can benefit many aspects of fertility, including: the chances of natural conception; conditions affecting ovulation and egg-quality (such as polycystic ovarian syndrome- PCOS); male fertility factors; the success rates of IVF and ICSI cycles; miscarriage risks; maternal health; and, of course, offering your newborn the best possible start to life.

At Fertile Ground Health Group, we recommend everyone, no matter where you are in your fertility journey, take the time to read this book, consult with our practitioners, and implement the changes that can support the best possible outcomes for you and your family.

Now In Stock. RRP $25.50

To order your copy of Getting Pregnant Faster by Dr Marilyn Glenville, call our reception on 03 9419 9988 or email us on reception@fertileground.com.au.

Alternatively, books may be purchased securely through Amazon.com by clicking the link.

TUNING IN TO YOUR NATURAL CYCLE

Whether trying to conceive naturally or with help from IVF, suddenly like never before, you become hyper vigilant of your body’s changes.

“Have I got fertile mucous; am I in my fertile window; is that a pre-period niggle or something different – could I be pregnant?” It seems like something you may have taken for granted, dreaded or outright avoided your whole life suddenly seems to hold all the answers.

In some ways this is just another noisy passenger for your mind to worry over as you try to take this fertility journey a day at a time. That is the great challenge isn’t it? How not to be absorbed in the what-if’s, buts and maybe’s, the dreams of a future you hardly dare hope for? How not to succumb to the pressure, the angst, the constant scheduling and juggling of appointments, injections, sprays, blood tests, scans and examinations – all while maintaining the nonplussed façade of one who isn’t even thinking about having a baby (because really, very few people know).

But there is another way to think about this.

A gift our bodies give us that perhaps you haven’t considered yet. Our natural medicine approach to managing healthy menstruation and fertility focuses us on four phases of the cycle: menstruation, pre-ovulation, ovulation and pre-menstrual (or pregnant). These phases are a gift to us in diagnostic terms because they provide a barometer of what is happening for you at a particular time, against what we would expect should be happening in a normal, healthy cycle. We can focus our treatments to support normal function at different phases. In many ways, women’s hormone cycles provide a rich insight into the body that is not so obvious in men’s bodies.

You too can tune in to your cycle as something healthy to work with rather than a further source of stress.

Rather than worrying about where you might be in 28 days, you can ask, “Where am I up to today?” and respond accordingly.

For example, it is very common for a woman to feel fatigued and hungry in the lead up to her period. This is a time to pay attention to those signals and do more to nourish yourself: relaxation, meditation, massage, yoga, warm baths, nourishing foods and plenty of early nights are appropriate for this time. Over time as you tune in and respond appropriately to what your body needs you find there is less PMT, less stress, less noise in your head, a sense of nourishment, wellness.

Tuning in to your cycle can introduce you to a level of self-care that is essential for wellness, fertility and health, but is something we often see missing in many women – especially those trying to conceive. So often we hear women say that they can’t invest hope in themselves because they will be too devastated if it doesn’t work out. To which we always gently respond that they will be devastated anyway, and at least being kind to yourself in the meantime gives you increased health and wellness, more likelihood of conceiving and ultimately a more positive framework to live in while you are going through this.

This process is about learning to care for ourselves, to be as gentle with ourselves, as you will be with that new baby when it finally arrives. It is like creating the loving kindness ahead of time, priming it for the time when your baby comes and needs that give muscle to be well and truly toned. And a mother with well-toned give muscles, with well-versed skills in tuning in and listening in the moment will have much to offer her complex little bundle of demands.

So, how will you begin the process of listening to your body?

We have a great suggestion from the lovely Be Fertile ladies: our very own Gina Fox and Charmaine Dennis. Their lovely range of meditations and guided relaxations are specifically designed to support your journey: choose from natural conception, IVF stimulated cycle or early pregnancy. Their naturopathic and fertility expertise has enabled them to design something that is very unique and specific to your particular stage. Get your copy from our online shop.

Guide to Fertility and Assisted Conception by Zita West

Embarking on IVF – or any assisted fertility treatment – can be a very demanding and stressful experience, but the right physical, nutritional and emotional support can lessen these stresses and strains and increase your chances of success.
In Zita West’s Guide to Fertility and Assisted Conception leading fertility and pregnancy expert, Zita West, offers an in-depth explanation of all aspects of fertility and, uniquely, addresses the issues involved in using assisted conception. In her clear, yet sensitive, style Zita explains:
All aspects of fertility – from preconception and trying naturally through to assisted conception
What is involved in the IVF process
How to prepare your body to increase your chances of conceiving successfully
The importance of a proactive approach to diet and nutrition
How complementary therapies, such as acupuncture, can increase your chances of success
Including interviews with leading experts in the field, case histories from patients and Zita’s own holistic principles, this is an invaluable guide for the growing number of people who are considering, or have already embarked on, medical intervention to enable them to conceive.
Guide to Fertility and Assisted Conception may be securely purchased through Amazon.com by clicking the link.

“AN OUNCE OF PREVENTION IS WORTH A POUND OF CURE” Benjamin Franklin

There is nothing good health is not good for! This is my motto and I believe it with all my heart. Our health is the foundation of our ability to do almost everything else in our life and the degree to which we are healthy influences, I believe, everything from how much we can achieve, how well we function day to day, how happy we feel, the kind of illnesses we get, how much wealth we have and how we relate to the world. The more energy you pour into your wellness, the more you get out of life (even financially – less sick days, more energy, increased creativity, clearer thinking – all mean more capacity for manifesting more in your life).

At Fertile Ground Health Group we specialise in the care of couples trying to conceive – it is true – fertility, preconception health and pregnancy form a large part of our work. And we love it! But in reality what we are practicing is the ancient art of PREVENTION. Think fertile ground for health! Wellness and prevention are THE catch-phrases for the future focus of the health industry and yet, this is something we have been doing for over ten years!

But what does that mean for you?

It means that rather than wait for problems to arise, you have the power to avoid many health problems before they even arise – even the so-called genetic conditions. For example, obesity and late onset diabetes have been labeled as ‘diseases’ that people may have a genetic pre-disposition to. However, we would describe the majority of cases of diabetes as lifestyle-influenced meaning that it can almost always be avoided with good, preventative health care.

The idea is to identify problems or risks in the early stages or before they even happen and to make choices and implement changes that support a different outcome. When problems arise, applying more of the same behaviour that got you into that situation does not help you to get out of it. Something different has to happen to take you to a different outcome!
Here are some ways and times you can think about implementing prevention in your life for a healthier, happier, richer (in all senses of the word) life!

Fertility wellness &prevention = preconception care

No matter where you are in your fertility journey, taking a step back to look at the overall picture is hugely beneficial. Preconception care usually refers to the 3-4 months of focused tweaking and change to improve overall wellness and improve conditions which may be impacting on your fertility. It is about enhancing the good and limiting or eliminating the bad to create the best possible conditions for fertility, conception and a healthy baby and family life forever!

Even if you are well into a more complex treatment process, there is still opportunity to make pre-conception-type changes. You can take a break or incorporate it into your overall treatment plan – it can be very flexible and a process of continuous improvement that leads you to your ultimate goal.

Pregnancy wellness &prevention = pre-birth preparation

Strangely the word ‘induction’ is a controversial one. Most professional carers (including us) have concerns about any kind of forced induction without medical necessity. And most importantly everyone feels concerned that women feel pressured to go into labour ‘on time’ or early or on any kind of schedule.
We find the most positive solution to supporting women to go into labour naturally and in a timely manner is the process of birth preparation. This starts at around 34-36 weeks and involves weekly visits to promote physical and emotional balance. Encouraging babies into a good position and helping mums achieve relaxation in body and mind are among the important elements that help her to go into labour without unnecessary intervention and also to have the most efficient labour possible.

Working against the clock at the last minute often means we are working with a whole different set of stress related hormones which can work against the ultimate goal of going into labour. Early preparation means reduced stress, increased support and improved outcomes – even the research says so!

General health wellness & prevention = checking in regularly

Good health is a gift to be maintained like any other thing of value in life. Whether you are blessed with uncomplicated good health or if you have a more complex health picture, everyone can implement actions to improve some aspect of their general health. Usually this requires the support of a good wellness practitioner – that means a naturopath or an acupuncturist or similar. Doctors treat illness not wellness – which is fine, but the difference needs to be made clear.

To maintain wellness, a minimum seasonal check in with your preferred health care professional is a must. Preparation for the season ahead and repairing minor issues that have come up in the current season is a simple rule of thumb to keep you topped up.

For example, this long hot summer can contribute to heat related conditions which can include symptoms as diverse as cough, constipation, sleep issues, heart palpitation, dryness, anxiety and more. Untreated this can linger and develop over Autumn and into winter where long standing niggles and a consistently challenged and depleted immune system can’t stand up to the serious challenge of a long winter.
Do you really need a flu injection, or should you just think about checking in with your acupuncturist, naturopath, integrative doctor or other wellness practitioner to see where the gaps are and what you can do to improve all aspect of your health the now to gain most benefit in in readiness for the months to come.

It is that simple. A little preparation goes a long way no matter what life throws at you! Improved health can be created by you, with a little help, foresight, guidance and treatment. You have the power, you really do! Let us help you uncover it. Make an appointment for a chat with one of our wellness professionals and be inspired for a better life.

“BIRTH WITH CONFIDENCE”

We are thrilled to stock Rhea Dempsey‘s long awaited new book – Birth With Confidence!

For more than 30 years, Rhea’s work with women and couples around transforming pain in labour has positively influenced thousands of births. Her passion and skill as a powerful educator about normal physiological childbirth is captured potently in this book. She is truly a wise woman of our time.

We are thrilled that this book has finally arrived, making available Rhea’s extensive experience and profound perspective on birth in the “labour by-pass era”. Her work has been highly influential to the practice of our specialist practitioners in their understanding of normal birth. Most importantly Rhea has inspired a heartfelt understanding of the challenges facing the birthing woman and the kind and degree of support they will require in this transformative life stage. As a trainer of birth attendants, Rhea’s work is amply represented by our team of practitioners, most of which have undertaken some component of her work, and many work in the community providing essential support to families in health and birth.

Rhea reclaims the language of birth and women’s experiences: reinstating pain, birth and women’s bodies as normal physiological, spiritual and human experiences, rather than a ‘faulty design’ to be avoided, fixed, manipulated. With normal birth under threat from a culture of fear and medicalization, this work is an inspiring investigation of the complex psychological, physical and societal pressures coming to bare on a process we have been successfully experiencing for eons: birth! Rhea’s capacity to shed light on the complex physiological and psychological factors that influence birth is unique, insightful and transformative.

Available now at the FGHG online shop!

Natural induction of labour

Our acupuncturists and massage therapists are often requested to provide ‘induction’ services for women who wish to go into labour. Mostly these are women who are overdue for their dates and who do not wish to undergo medical induction. Sometimes they are referred by a medical carer, but often they have found us in desperation through Google or word of mouth after being told medical induction was imminent.

Acupuncture and massage can each be very effective in helping a woman to relax and encourage the natural onset of labour. The term induction is possibly used out of context here and can be cause for concern among your medical carers as they equate it with medical induction, with inherent risks and a cascade of interventions that may follow. Importantly, neither acupuncture nor massage has the same effect on a woman as medical induction using synthetic syntocinon. Labour is rarely initiated immediately or during treatment (though occasionally this will happen in a very ‘ready’ mum). With both acupuncture and massage induction, labour will have the same gradual onset as would occur with a natural onset of labour.

“At full term, the intention of our induction treatment is to calm the mind, relieve anxiety
and worry, promote restfulness and enhance and strengthen energy flow. When necessary, we gently move energy around the baby to encourage optimal positioning and engagement,
gentle cervical stimulation to help soften and ripen the cervix and encourage appropriate hormone balance for this stage.” Rachel Steward, Registered Acupuncturist

The natural induction approach in mums who are more physically and emotionally prepared and ready for the challenges of labour and babies who are ready to be born! Natural induction can help prevent the need for medical induction in many cases, and, for most, it feels preferable to avoid medical intervention where possible.

However, working with pregnant women at the last minute is usually the least preferred option. Seeing pregnant women when they have become fearful of induction and anxious about time frames actually makes the job more difficult and the hoped for outcome somewhat less likely. A mum’s highly adrenalized and fearful emotional state actually works against the production of oxytocin – the hormone which is required for them to go into labour naturally in the first place.

Why is medical induction something to avoid if possible?

It is important to say that sometimes a medically induced labour is a necessity for the health of mother and baby. But there are some good reasons to avoid it if you can. The inherent risks associated with medical induction are medically acknowledged and consequently, constant fetal monitoring is necessary throughout the labour. This means wearing a monitor on your belly for the duration of the labour and these monitors may or may not be attached to a machine, restricting your movements and capacity for active labour. Even if your hospital provides remote monitoring (not attached to the machine), you still have to wear the monitor on your belly and it seems we are yet to find a device that can fit a pregnant, contracting, active belly which means your midwife is constantly hovering, holding the monitor trying to get a good trace of your baby’s heart rate. At the very least this is disturbing for the mother and in most cases becomes down right annoying.

Medical induction involves a continuous intravenous application of synthetic oxcitocin (Sintocinon) – another thing you are attached to for the whole labour. Sintocinon stimulates labour differently to the natural co-ordination of hormones between mother and baby in a natural onset of labour (think, 0-100 in 5-15 minutes compared with a slow, steady progression over hours or days that gradually stimulate contractions as well as hormones and endorphins to help you work with contractions and gradually increasing pain). Medically induced labour starts quickly and intensifies quickly. It takes a very well prepared mother with good support to find her rhythm and work with these contractions without the help of endorphins and other hormones which won’t kick in until later. While an induced labour can find its rhythm and progress as any other labour would, those first few hours of contractions can be very challenging to say the least.

Consequently, what is known as the “cascade of interventions” often follows the onset of a medically induced labour. Epidural, caesarean and assisted births (forceps/vontuse) and episiotomy have all been shown to be far more likely to occur following a medical induction.

Following you will find some tips for getting your labour started without the help of medical induction. However, we cannot know who will need to be induced and who will not. There are too many variables at work in each individual for this to be predictable. The TWO BEST things you can do to help ensure a natural onset of your labour:

1. Make sure you are birthing in the context where you feel most comfortable and safe. Whether this be hospital, birth centre or home under either obstetric or midwife lead care is less important than the fact of your feeling of safety. It is imperative that you feel good about where you are going to give birth to your baby. If you have doubts, find a good childbirth educator, birth attendant, midwife or sympathetic obstetrician to discuss your concerns with.
2. Get good birth support. A doula/birth attendant or independent midwife is invaluable support for you and your partner during labour. It has been shown again and again that continuous care from a known, trusted provider throughout the birth enhances birth outcomes. This will most certainly be the case if you need to be medically induced and is the best thing for helping you have a birth you feel satisfied with, regardless of which way it goes. Having someone to answer your questions, calm your nerves, reassure your doubts, help you research and understand your options, remember to ask questions you may not, support your partner and implicitly trust in your capacity for a normal physiological childbirth is just immeasurably helpful.

Ideally, pregnant women should begin acupuncture or massage from around 34-36 weeks to help prepare them for birth. This treatment approach entails weekly treatments geared toward a relaxed, healthy body and mind that is balanced to create the right conditions to enable labour to occur naturally and without intervention. When the time comes, we find actual induction treatment unnecessary for many of these women as they are well prepared and go into labour without help.

Choose your practitioner carefully as a good understanding of pregnancy, labour and birth dynamics is essential to obtain a good result. Pushing for contractions to begin without considering the full picture can produce spurious labour and result in extended on and off contractions which can be exhausting for the mother. Considering factors such as how the baby is currently positioned and what physical and emotional stressors are playing out for the mother help to determine what needs to happen at each appointment to progress positively.

The best approach is to support the mother, body and mind to find support and correct treatment for the most positive outcome for mother and baby – a naturally occurring and effective labour that gives birth to a healthy baby and mum.

Now for some tips to maximise your chances of going into labour naturally!

Top tips for getting your labour started

  • PATIENCE! Not easy at this time, I know! In the same way that your body knows how to initiate a period, have a poo and digest your food without you controlling it, your body also knows when it is time for your baby to be born. A delicate balance of hormonal communications between your baby and your body are silently at work helping your baby mature and giving your body the right signals for when your baby is ready. Trusting in this process disables your fears, inhibits the production of anxiety related hormones and enables your body to produce adequate hormones to go into labour spontaneously. Meditation, lots of rest, gentle yoga, long walks and surrounding yourself only with loving, positive, safe and supportive friends/family are highly recommended.
  • Sex (if you’re up for it!): Semen is a natural source of prostaglandins – the very same stuff that is in the gel your obstetrician might use to induce you if overdue. Nature has its own version and orgasm is bound to get that pelvic floor rocking!
  • Nipple stimulation: gentle rubbing or rolling of the nipple can bring on contractions.
  • Walking: particularly up stairs or hills but just around the block is good to get your pelvis moving. But remember you really need to find the balance between REST and activity. There is no point getting yourself into labour in a totally exhausted state. You need your energy FOR your labour so be active and get walking but don’t overdo it and make sure you REST A LOT! Also try dancing (especially belly dancing), bouncing on a fit ball or a tractor drive down the paddock (or just a drive down a long bumpy road used to do the trick in the old days!)
  • Raspberry leaf tea – a strong cup every 2 hours: Raspberry leaf has a direct tonifying effect on the smooth muscle of the uterus. This means it will stimulate more Braxton Hicks contractions (practice contractions your body uses to strengthen the uterus) if the uterus is weak, or relax the smooth muscle if it is too taught. Very useful throughout the last trimester, but a great addition to your self-induction efforts.
  • Homeopathic birthing drops: available at FGHG and taken weekly from 34 weeks and daily in the lead up to labour.
  • Induction Acupuncture: Acupuncture has been proven to be a successful induction method for labour, and also helps to shorten labour times. We recommend patients begin birth preparation up to six weeks prior to their due date. With this approach we find patients are more likely to go into labour spontaneously & respond best if induction methods are required.
  • and/or Induction Massage: Massage is particularly good if you are tired, wound up, stressed or if you are feeling fearful (especially if you are fearful of acupuncture!). Massage helps to relax the whole body and consequently changes the chemistry from stress to relaxation. Research does show that relaxation, touch, love, enjoyment and pleasure all help to stimulate oxytocin – the love hormone that really gets your labour going. Oxytocin can be ‘inhibited’ by adrenalin which is why massage is so important along with relaxation, PLENTY of rest and making sure you are getting lots of support around any fears you may have about your labour. Our massage therapists also use acupressure points (similar to acupuncture), essential oils and other techniques to facilitate the onset of labour.
  • Castor oil: this one is a little contentious with many health professionals warning against it due to the risk of inducing diarrhoea and dehydration. However, while it is true that castor oil will move your bowels and give you a good clean out, diarrhoea is usually only caused when too much castor oil is taken. We recommend no more than 30mls of organic, cold-pressed castor oil per dose per day. The best way to take it is mixed into something very tasty like your Vitamin C powder, vigorously shaken and then down the hatch super quick. It is not yummy! Of course in pregnancy we recommend only using organic castor oil which can be sourced from FGHG. Try one dose and a good REST …
  • Curry: did you think this was an old wives tale? The spices in a good curry have a similar affect to castor oil – if your bowels are sensitive to a good curry (and perhaps a little more pleasant to consume!). As the bowels and uterus are supplied by the same nerves, anything that stimulates the bowels will naturally stimulate the uterus into action also. Emptying the bowel can also help bring the baby’s head further down onto the cervix, which can itself help kick things along. Try a curry before bed and a good long REST …
  • Stretch & Sweep: part of the magic trilogy (acupuncture, castor oil and a Stretch & Sweep), this one has to be done by your midwife or obstetrician if they are willing. A stretch and sweep is like an uncomfortable vaginal examination where the midwife/doctors fingers sweep the membranes from the cervix and give the cervix a good stretch. Often this disturbance will activate contractions. This can only happen if your baby is engaged (head well down in the pelvis) and the cervix is ‘ripe’ (soft, pliable and starting to open). It is really a last resort if all your other efforts have not been successful.

And of course, don’t forget the value of talking to your counsellor, midwife or dear friend. There is nothing like a good cry and emotional release to clear your blockages and get things moving. And did i mention REST

Milly Dabrowski is a writer, registered Acupuncturist and Co-Director of Fertile Ground Health Group, a Melbourne-based natural medicine practice specialising in preconception care, fertility and pregnancy. In ten years of practice as an intuitively inspired acupuncturist and birth attendant, Milly has been intimately involved in supporting women and families through all of life’s major transitions.

Milly sees purpose and opportunity in life’s major challenges and all her work is now directed to working with transformational change. Her mantra “there is nothing good health is not good for” and her passion for leaving people open to their true self and potential now inspire her work as a coach, mentor, speaker, writer and change agent.

The Melbourne Acupuncture Multibed Project (MAMP)

The Melbourne Acupuncture Multi-Bed Project draws on international trends which make acupuncture more accessible, convenient and cost effective. Specialising in fertility, IVF support and pregnancy, the Multi-Bed Project is a unique approach to this specialist area, providing Melbourne with the highest quality natural medicine health care with some of the most experienced practitioners in this field.

Our Multi-bed Project is one space with three beds divided by screens and curtains for privacy, with one practitioner attending to multiple beds. Each patient listens to guided meditation or relaxation music on individual headphones for increased privacy, efficacy and depth of relaxation.

Multi-Bed appointments are suitable for:

  • Repeat visits
  • IVF pre/post transfers
  • Labour Induction
  • Morning sickness
  • Birth preparation
  • Hormone/menstrual cycle regulation
  • Men’s fertility
  • Patients with time constraints

All patients require an initial consultation when attending FGHG for the first time. You may require a number of one-to-one sessions before an appropriate plan can be put in place for multi-bed attendance. Some exceptions will be possible for IVF and induction patients. Chat with your practitioner about your eligibility for the multi-bed.

What to expect at your multi-bed acupuncture experience:

  1. Present to reception at FGHG as usual on arrival. You will be asked to pay for your appointment before your treatment so you are able to simply leave when you are finished.
  2. You will be directed to the waiting area in Suite 2 where your practitioner will collect you. You should not be kept waiting long.
  3. You will be shown to your bed. While you are waiting, remove any tight jeans, stockings, socks and shoes, coats, etc. and lie down on the bed. Use the towels and blankets provided to stay warm while you wait. Your treatment has begun so take some deep breaths and start to relax. Your practitioner will check your multibed plan (determined at the time of your last long consultation with your primary practitioner)
  4. Your practitioner will come in and have a brief chat with you and may perform channel palpation, pulse and tongue diagnosis to help guide the treatment for the day. You will notice there is much less talking and an atmosphere of quiet in the multibed. This is to both protect your and other patient’s privacy as well as maintaining a deeply relaxing environment. We don’t encourage lots of discussion in the multibed so if new issues have arisen or you haven’t been to the multibed within the last month, you will need a long consultation with your primary practitioner to make a new plan for your multibed consultations.
  5. Once needles are in, you will be provided with wheat bags and covers as usual. You will also receive headphones with an ipod and your choice of appropriate meditations or music to listen to while you rest with your needles. We have found that patients find the guided meditations especially helpful to their relaxation and studies show that both increased relaxation and meditation are beneficial to almost all conditions. The headphones also provide privacy so that while you are resting you are not able to hear the conversation of treatments happening around you.
  6. Remember your multibed appointment happens in a shared space so there will be noises from other patients having their treatments. Call out to your practitioner for help adjusting your headsets if you are having trouble screening external sounds.
  7. At the end of your treatment, needles are removed and your practitioner will leave you to get up and dress and then you can simply leave.

Appointment scheduling. It is important that you book review sessions with your primary acupuncturist as indicated in your long consultations with them. This review will determine the treatment plan that your pracitioner will be following in your multi-bed consultations. Most importantly it provides an opportunity to report any changes or to talk about other issues that may present in the meantime.

If you are unclear about your appointment schedule, please email your primary practitioner or telephone reception to clarify. You should have approximately 3-6 multi-bed appointments followed by one long consult with your primary practitioner. All other appointment conditions apply as usual, including the 24-hour cancellation fee.

We look forward to welcoming you to the Melbourne Acupuncture Multibed Project. For more information check out our website or call our helpful reception team on 9419 9988.

IVF and Ever After: The Emotional Needs of Families by Nichola Bedos

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“IVF and Ever After” moves beyond the here and now’ to look at the hard issues involved in IVF, such as telling a child about IVF conception, what to do with spare frozen embryos, and the implications of legislation about surrogacy. Couples thinking about IVF treatment, those undergoing treatment and IVF parents who are experiencing emotional lows’ without knowing why will find this an invaluable guide, as will health professionals who work with IVF families.
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