All About Pushing During Labor

Despite what the media likes to depict, pushing while lying flat on your back during labor may not the most comfortable, helpful or efficient way to birth a baby. According to the Lamaze Healthy Birth Practices, “Upright positions—such as standing, kneeling, or squatting—take advantage of gravity to help your baby move down into the pelvis. Squatting increases the size of the pelvis, providing more room for the baby to move down (N. Johnson, V. Johnson, & Gupta, 1991; Simkin & Ancheta, 2005).”

Additionally, the outdated holding-your-breath-and-count-to-10-and-PUSH! method of pushing is not ideal. Also known as “purple pushing” (because your face turns purple when you hold you breath!), this style of pushing is often used in many hospital labor rooms, but it can deprive your body of oxygen, add undue stress to you and your baby, and increase your risk for perineal tears and further weaken your pelvic floor muscles after birth. A healthier way to push is to follow your body’s instincts and cues to push, taking breaks when needed and bearing down when you feel the urge.

Want to learn more by seeing examples? Watch this helpful video, created by Lamaze, which shows women birthing in hospitals– with and without epidurals — using different positions for pushing.

 

Avatar of Cara TerreriAbout Cara Terreri
Cara began working with Lamaze two years before becoming a mother. Three kids later, she's a full-fledged healthy birth advocate and the Site Administrator for Giving Birth with Confidence. She is enamored with the awesome power and beauty in pregnancy and birth, and enjoys helping women to discover their own power and ability through the journey to motherhood.

Comments

  1. Amy Bauer says:

    As a labor and delivery nurse, I like to make use of open-glottis pushing techniques by encouraging my patients to make noise while they push. They still maintain control and focus during each push, and it’s better for mom and baby than the typical “hold your breath and bear down” method that we so often see in the hospital setting. I also encourage my patients to push in a variety of positions, encouraging them to push in different ways and positions to encourage the decent of the baby. Some positions prove to be more comfortable than others, but I believe it’s the movement itself that really does the trick.

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