Modesty 
                  During Childbirth 
                  
                Many people falsely assume that 
                  women don’t care about their modesty during childbirth 
                  because they are in too much pain, but that is simply not true. 
                  There are many women who feel that their modesty during childbirth 
                  is extremely important. Some women and husbands don’t 
                  want a male ob/gyn or any other male medical professional to 
                  be present for the birth of their baby. All too often families 
                  have their wishes for modesty violated as they gave birth. The 
                  birth of your child should be a joyful time and it is tragic 
                  how violations of modesty have made birth experiences traumatic. 
                  Even female ob/gyns can be insensitive. Some female doctors 
                  have ignored women's wishes for privacy and allow medical students 
                  to be present for all parts of birth even when asked otherwise. 
                  
                 Home (or birthing center) births 
                  with a midwife attending is an excellent choice for healthy 
                  women with low risk pregnancies. Giving birth is a natural function, 
                  not an acute illness. You are often treated like a sick patient 
                  at the hospital, while home birth is much more natural. You 
                  are free to eat, drink, and walk around. You choose who is there 
                  with you – family, friends, or neighbors. There are no 
                  externally-imposed visiting hours in your home, before, during, 
                  or after the birth. Women's wishes for modesty in hospital settings 
                  are disregarded routinely. Unnecessary medical interventions 
                  are common. The list is huge, but a few examples are: too many 
                  pelvic examinations, episiotomies and unnecessary C-sections. 
                  Medical students strive to do as many pelvic exams as they can 
                  for their requirements and many women are taken off guard because 
                  they have medical students coming into their room uninvited 
                  doing these invasive exams and other procedures without asking. 
                  Midwives do fewer pelvic exams and always ask first. With respect 
                  for you as a laboring woman, you will reduce your chance of 
                  having these unnecessary interventions.  
                If you choose an out-of-hospital 
                  birth, look for an appropriate back-up plan, preferably with 
                  an all female ob/gyn practice to deliver your baby. Always 
                  be prepared for complications that could happen that would require 
                  you to be transported to the hospital from a birthing center 
                  or your home so it is very crucial that you prepare a back up 
                  plan ahead of time. Make it clear to your midwife that 
                  you don't want a male gynecologist. Many midwives even do breast 
                  examinations, pap smears, gynecological examinations, and even 
                  some procedures for women who are not pregnant.  
                For a planned hospital birth, 
                  (or unplanned as in the case of a transport from home or birth 
                  center), if a birthing mother wishes for an all female team 
                  and maintain that her husband is the only man present, she will 
                  need to choose an all-female ob/gyn practice that doesn't rotate 
                  with other practices of male doctors. Keep in mind that all 
                  doctors in a practice rotate. There are many wonderful female 
                  ob/gyns in mixed practices, but you usually cannot be guaranteed 
                  a female ob/gyn in a mixed practice. If you use a practice that 
                  has two female doctors and two male doctors, you have a 50% 
                  chance of having a male doctor deliver your baby unless you 
                  have a scheduled C-Section with one of the female doctors.  
                Discuss with your ob/gyn your 
                  desires for an all female medical team for the birth of your 
                  baby. You should also visit the hospital and meet the nurses 
                  especially the nursing supervisor to let them know your desires. 
                  Remember that the team may consist of the female ob/gyn doctor, 
                  nurses, anesthesiologist and/or nurse anesthetists, and surgical 
                  scrub technician. If you need an epidural, you will need an 
                  anesthesiologist. It's best if your team consists of all females, 
                  a female anesthesiologist or nurse anesthetist. Many hospitals 
                  employ at least a few nurse anesthetists. Nurse anesthetists 
                  are often able to administer anesthesia without an anesthesiologist. 
                  If it isn't possible, speak to the doctor and nurses and request 
                  that they keep your private parts covered while the anesthesiologist 
                  or anesthetist is present to protect your dignity and modesty. 
                  If you must have a Cesarean Section, you will be required to 
                  have a catheter inserted. You should ask that the male anesthesiologist 
                  or anesthetist stay out of the room until all of the prepping 
                  for surgery including insertion of the urinary catheter has 
                  been done. Check out this article, C-Section 
                  Who Is Involved? about who all could be present for your 
                  C-Section.  
                One of the goals of Medical 
                  Patient Modesty is to help women succeed in having a respectful, 
                  all female team and be more assured of having modesty protected. 
                  We hope to educate medical professionals, including female gynecologists, 
                  about the importance of patient modesty and how they can protect 
                  a women’s dignity and make a hospital birth more joyful. 
                  A number of hospitals in the United States, especially rural 
                  areas, have mostly male ob/gyns and few or no female ob/gyns. 
                  We consider this is a very serious problem. Many women don’t 
                  want a male gynecologist to deliver their baby and feel violated 
                  by most of them. Far too many hospitals cannot assure families 
                  that their desires for modesty will be met. We want to contact 
                  those hospitals and set up dialogue about this issue. All hospitals 
                  should offer this choice for women, to be able to birth with 
                  a woman. There are a number of wonderful all female ob/gyn practices 
                  in the United States that work hard to accommodate patients’ 
                  wishes for an all female team. Unfortunately, it is hard to 
                  find an all female ob/gyn practice in small towns so women who 
                  reside in those areas have limited choices unless they are willing 
                  to drive to a bigger city. Before 1990, there were not many 
                  all female ob/gyn practices so women's choices were very limited. 
                  About 80-90% of current ob/gyn residents are female so there 
                  will be an increase of hospitals that can guarantee a woman 
                  a female OB/GYN for the birth of her baby in the years to come. 
                   
                Important Tips For Pregnant 
                  Women Concerned About Modesty During Childbirth:  
                1) Choose an all female ob/gyn 
                  practice that doesn't rotate with other practices that have 
                  male doctors.  
                2) Visit the hospital that 
                  the practice delivers at and ask to speak to the nursing supervisor 
                  or the manager for the Labor & Delivery unit. Discuss your 
                  wishes about who you want to be present and how the nurses can 
                  protect your modesty in case a male anesthesiologist or pediatrician 
                  is required to be there for some parts of the birth. Make sure 
                  you indicate if you don't wish for even female medical students 
                  to be there. Some women who want an all female team are open 
                  to female medical students observing them giving birth. 
                3) Request that the amount 
                  of vaginal exams be kept to a minimum. Vaginal exams cannot 
                  tell you exactly how close you are to giving birth. They can 
                  increase the risks of infection even when done carefully and 
                  with sterile gloves.  
                4) Speak up immediately if 
                  you feel your wishes are not being honored.  
                5) Create a birth plan. Make 
                  sure that you include who you want to have present. If you don't 
                  want medical students or male medical professionals to be present, 
                  indicate that on your birth plan. Make sure you come up with 
                  a plan in case the unexpected happens.  
                6) Consider hiring a doula 
                  to provide support during your labor. She is an advocate who 
                  can help you to speak up for your wishes about modesty if you 
                  are birthing in the hospital.  
                ** Check out the testimony 
                  of a lady we helped to take steps to ensure she had an all-female 
                  staff for the birth of her baby. ** 
                Some Important Links: 
                   
                Do 
                  Not Disturb: The Importance of Privacy in Labor 
                Informed 
                  Decision Making, Informed Consent or Refusal  
                 
                  The Myth of a Vaginal Exam  
                Vaginal 
                  Exams - Why They are Unnecessary in Normal Labors  
                C-Section 
                  Who Is Involved? 
                 
                    
                 
                   
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