Dystocia or failure to progress in labor is the main reason for cesarean deliveries. The second edition of this successful text focuses on simple non-invasive interventions to prevent or treat difficult labor. It describes positions, movements and techniques based on principles of anatomy, physiology and psychology of childbirth.The Labor Progress Handbook is organized by stage of labor for easy reference, enabling the care giver to quickly identify appropriate low cost, low risk interventions and treat dystocia effectively, at an early stage before it becomes severe. The new edition has been thoroughly revised and updated and includes a new chapter on assessing progress in labor, together with new sections on managing labor pain, normal labor and additional positions and maneuvers. The rationale for all techniques is included based on the authors ' clinical experience and wherever possible on the underlying evidence base.
As another reviewer stated, every labor attendant should read this. Moms-to-be would benefit from it too – although it’s technical, it’s still comprehensible and organized well, especially if you’re reading other books in tandem. My doula said it’s the one book she always has with her.
This book is fantastic. The information is research based (with references at the end of every chapter!) and the organization really does make it a handbook. In addition to early chapters that deal with general dytocia causes and recommendations, later chapters are divided up by the stage of labor, and with two additional chapters at the end that are references re labor positions with purposes and proscriptions, and comfort measures.
I feel my confidence in dealing with fetal malposition and tolerating labor pain has improved exponentially and I would recommend this book to all birth attendants, women who want to be informed re labor, and labor coaches. Now if I can just be sure my husband understands all the information in here too we'll be set.
My one qualification is that the second edition is now five years old and I think Simkin should give us a third edition with more updates re recent research. I would buy it!
Excellent book for healthcare providers, nurses, and doulas supporting women through labor. Goes into great depth on potential challenges at each stage of labor, reasons, preventions where possible, diagnostics, and ways to address them to improve birth outcomes. Very evidence-based guide and organized in such a way as to be a good reference guide to keep in the doula bag. More technical than the birth partner but was a great read to piggyback on its resources for a deeper understanding.
Great alternative to birth-preparation books aimed at parents. This one doesn't try to sell you any kind of specific philosophy, but simply concentrates on approaches that promote low-intervention birth and are supported by evidence or at least experience. All the advice is neatly summarized in chapters 9 and 10, so that you can review it whenever you need to.
The book focuses on reasons for slow progress and solutions to try - including positions, comfort techniques, and resolving any emotional reasons. It's a great reference for anyone working in birthing. I liked that it included what scientific studies have said about the subject.
This book is full to the brim with useful tips, instructions, and facts to help a laboring women deliver with the least possible need for cesarean section or other intervention
Incredibly helpful and well laid out as a resource both for birth assistant training and during births. Thorough, well-researched, and the diagrams are useful. Highly recommend.
Great resource. Well organized. Such a shame that they chose to use gendered language, as if making a note about it at the beginning is acceptable penance.
I'm not a medical professional but still found this book to be immensely valuable in reading as a parent to be. Could be particularly helpful for those who have had a belly birth before, or would like to be proactive in potentially preventing one.
Wow. This book is so useful, especially for someone like me whose mind works best in a linear, graphic way. Starting with definitions and moving from before labor through pre-labor, early labor, active labor, to second stage, the authors explore why and how labor can be dysfunctional and what to do to restore it to functionality. There are also sections with specific descriptions of maternal positions and movements, and comfort measures.
I do know, however, that in labor or when with a woman in labor, one doesn't necessarily use the information laid out here in such a linear A-B-C way. Intuition plays a big role, and communication, in deciding what to actually do in the moment when something is making a labor difficult and long. Oftentimes, though, I think birth attendants can feel just as "stuck" as the mom does when things are not going smoothly, and having the information in this book (or maybe even the book itself!) at hand to get some new ideas working could be a huge help at those times.
The information provided in the book is research based and the citations can be found at the end of every chapter, so you can read it from the source. It's laid out just like a handbook. In addition to early chapters that deal with general dytocia causes and recommendations, later chapters are divided up by the stage of labor, and with two additional chapters at the end that are references for labor positions with purposes and proscriptions, and comfort measures. I love that the updated version includes some info from Gail Tully on fetal positioning and what we can do about it.
Way more information than you could possibly need unless you're a OBGYN or neonatal nurse, but since I'm the type of person that is soothed by over-learning about the thing that's freaking me out, I liked this book a lot. Being pregnant is indeed both a super amazing and terrifying experience and even though my brain completely quit working during labor so that everything I learned about giving birth didn't matter anyway, I still really enjoyed this book.
so so wonderfully, clearly and succinctly written. penny simkin is a birthing goddess. one of my heroes. she is so grounded and direct in her suggestions, all backed by scientific evidence - hard to dispute even by the worst of the OB brigade.
Love this book and love the easy look ups for labor postions, transition periods, different ways to help with labor pain. I take this book with me during my doula visits to the hospital and when I am teaching classes on labor and delivery because of how easy it is to read and look things up in
Fantastic book for any birth attendant, OB, L&D nurse, midwife, doula... considering that, as the book states, labor dystocia is the most common reason for cesarean... so having a handbook like this that is easy to reference with tons of solutions for a stalled labor is invaluable.