Reader View: Acupuncture can benefit pregnant women
By Pamela Gregg Flax
When Jane from the new hit TV comedy
Jane the Virgin was told her baby was in a breech position (head up,
bottom down), her OB-GYN warned that she could be at risk for a cesarean
section.
Jane got the baby to turn with an
Oriental medicine technique called moxibustion, in which dried mugwort herb is
burned indirectly over acupuncture points. As the show’s narrator said, “Google
it! It’s a real thing.” Moxabustion was a great dramatic tool for the TV show.
That night, the baby turned but Jane fell asleep while using the moxibustion
and her ottoman caught fire. Before trying this at home, I would say seek a
professional!
For most Americans, acupuncture and
Oriental medicine for pregnancy and birth is the next big discovery waiting to
happen — a treasure trove of help for the common challenges of pregnancy.
Licensed practitioners of acupuncture and herbal medicine can help decrease
stress and anxiety, calm nausea, treat sciatic pain, and improve sleep and
energy. Some practitioners are trained to prevent the transfer of parental
toxins to the fetus, which are reputed to decrease the risk of childhood
epidemics and environmental toxins. For these treatments, visits at the end of
each trimester are essential.
Preventing miscarriage is another
strength of acupuncture and Oriental medicine. Western medicine has limited
treatments for threatened miscarriage. Common treatments include blood thinners
such as heparin or aspirin and the hormone progesterone.
Since the medical options are so
limited, most doctors try what they can, while they are resigned to wait to see
what happens. Oriental medicine, on the other hand, has a different framework
that allows us to diagnose specific patterns of an underlying cause and treat
them, ideally even before the risk fully manifests as bleeding, blood clots or
dilated cervix.
Even less known is its excellent
ability to forecast and decrease risk of complicating factors such as preeclampsia,
low amniotic fluids or delayed labor — all of which may endanger the fetus and
require medical interventions. Even if a pregnancy has been uneventful,
visiting an acupuncture and Oriental medicine practitioner at the beginning of
the third trimester, at minimum, is wise. We will diagnose constitutional
tendencies and potential risks. We will treat to encourage vitality and a
smooth, harmonious pregnancy, birth and postpartum experience.
Acupuncture lowers perceived levels
of stress, according to a 2010 study.
Imagine how much acupuncture would
have helped Jane download all the stressful events in her pregnancy — two
breakups, her grandmother’s near death, two new jobs, a crime syndicate and a
murder, meeting her father for the first time and unexpected motherhood, and
single motherhood at that.
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