I wrote this blog post for The Daisy Foundation all about what the postnatal period is, and you can help yourself feel better during it.
What is the postnatal period?
The postnatal period is roughly those first 6 weeks
following the birth of your baby during which you start to recover physically
and emotionally from giving birth. And I say start because although, as we’ll
see, there’s an expectation that women heal quickly if not immediately,
research has been conducted which shows that women aren’t healed for up to a
year – even with a straightforward, low-intervention birth.
What happens during the postnatal period?
If you’ve discussed your postnatal period with your midwives,
it’s likely that you’ll have focussed on those first few days following the
birth of your baby.
This conversation will probably focus on the care you’ll
receive in those first couple of weeks. In the immediate days following birth
you will be monitored for bleeding, bowel and bladder function, that feeding is
established and that you know how to care for your baby. If you give birth in a
hospital the average stay for a vaginal birth is 1-2 days, and for a caesarean
section 3-4 days, although if you’re well and choose to leave you could leave
hospital within a couple of hours if everything is as it should be. Therefore a
lot of that initial monitoring will be carried out in hospital. Midwives will
then visit you at home following an individualised care plan and then your care
will be transferred over to the Health Visiting team. This will be at around
day 10 but might be later if there’s a need for you to stay under the midwifery
team.
As your baby gets a little older you will start to see your
health care professionals less frequently – this doesn’t mean that they aren’t
still there for you though, you can contact them at any time if you have
concerns.
Mentally the postnatal period is important too. There’s a
transition time between not being a mother and being a mother. Your body is
physically transitioning and your mind is transforming too – it can be such a
big event that there’s even a psychological label that can be applied
‘Adjustment Disorder’.
Why is it so important? All that matters is a healthy baby.
So what’s so important about this time? Well, it takes this
long for your body to start to heal. Even with a straightforward delivery your
body has been through some really big changes; growing in size, making new
organs, increasing blood volume then releasing baby during delivery, getting
rid of the placenta, the extra fluid, lactating…it takes a lot of hard work
from your body. And that’s not to mention any other related discomforts such as
Pelvic Girdle Pain or gestational diabetes! But a healing body isn’t the only
thing.
You will have heard many people say ‘all that matters is a
healthy baby’ when talking about birth but is this true? Does this diminish
what a mother goes through in having a baby, and all that comes afterwards?
Mothers matter too. The postnatal period – that first month and a half – is the
time when a woman is particularly vulnerable for developing post-natal
depression. So it’s especially important that a woman is supported both by
healthcare professionals and other people in her life, to ensure that if she
starts developing signs and symptoms of it, she’s well looked after in the most
appropriate way. Around 10% of mothers (and 4% of fathers) will develop PND and
it’s thought to be a number of factors coming together rather than there being
just one cause. These include having previous mental health issues, feeling
unsupported by partner, family and friends, having a birth they feel was
traumatic, struggling to breastfeed and being exhausted. If you think that 25% of women suffer mental
health issues in their lifetime, 40% would describe their birth as traumatic,
and 59% don’t breastfeed for as long as they would initially hope to –
highlighting a lack of support to help them breastfeed successfully – you can
see that the postnatal period is a really important time to be supporting a
mother.
What do women do in this time?
Having seen the importance of the postnatal period to ensure
that moms are physically and mentally looked after and healing, what do we as a
society think or expect mothers to be doing in the postnatal period?
When baby’s born, how quickly are you asked if people can
come and have a cuddle? Pretty quickly, right? And how comfortable do you feel
if someone walks into your house asking them to make a brew, or push a hoover
round? You don’t, do you? I certainly don’t! So you end up making tea, and
pottering about when you should be resting. And I know some of you are thinking
that you’re not the type to be lazing on the sofa while people work around you
but factor in soreness, tiredness, blood loss increasing if you’re too active…
And you’ve been in hospital for a few days, and not seen the
outside of those walls, and you need to get something from Tesco (and admit it,
you want to show off your tiny baby!) so you pop to the shops which always
takes longer than you think it will. And maybe you have other children who need
taking to school… Or your grandma can’t drive so you offer to travel the hour
it takes to go and see her…And your workplace want to meet the new baby… It all
starts adding up, doesn’t it? And very quickly instead of resting and allowing
your body to heal, you’re trying to carry on at exactly the same speed as you
were before you got pregnant!
And that’s not to mention the physical things that you need
to learn as well! How to care for baby when they’re here; how to recognise
their feeding cues, sleeping cues, if they’re over-stimulated, if they need
their nappy changing… parenthood is a learning curve and a steep one for you,
dad and baby! It’s like walking into a CEO job of a Fortune 500 company knowing
you’ve lied on your CV about your A levels – you know you can do it but you’re
scared of being found out anyway!
You can see, then, that when a mother is in a vulnerable
state anyway any anxiety she has over how she’s parenting (the so-called mommy
wars!) could overwhelm her and link into her emotional state and possibly
contribute to her PND. Part of this comes from the expectations she has of how
life with a newborn is. Perhaps she’ll feel like she’ll ‘bounce back’ like
magazines insist on celebrity mothers doing, or carry on her life exactly as
before because it looks to her like everyone else is. Perhaps she doesn’t
expect the constant feeding, or short bursts of sleep to continue for more than
a week or so. Perhaps she doesn’t fully understand the sheer relentlessness of
looking after another person who relies on you for everything. It’s easy to
look at a snapshot of other peoples lives and think they’ve got it together
while you’re in 2 day old clothes and haven’t washed your hair for a week and
feel like you’re failing. That your baby is broken. But if we can change your
expectation that you have of a newborn and the way your new life is going to
be, then it’s a great way to help stop that feeling of helplessness that you’re
not doing things ‘right’. One of the overwhelming things we hear from new
mothers is ‘I didn’t know it would be like this’ and this is what we’re here to
help you with.
What did women used to do?
It’s interesting that as life generally has got faster-paced
and more demands placed on us, that the demands placed on a new mother have
increased, with a shift in what she would be expected to do and how others
would support her.
In a practice called ‘churching’ a woman in the UK would be
set apart from their community for 5-6 weeks (or 40 days) while they tended to
their new baby and healed, with help from other close women – usually family or
neighbours. The timings differ slightly depending on which variant of
Christianity they were but at the 40 day or 6 week point they would be
reintroduced to their community with a blessing at their church. Although this
was primarily a religious ceremony, the 40 day timing linked closely with the
time it takes for a mother’s body to have that healing process, and this time
frame is seen over and over across different cultures.
This tradition has fallen by the wayside in the UK due to a
number of factors; the decline of Christianity, the medicalisation and
masculinisation of birth and the birth world, migration of labour creating more
fragmented communities, changes to the working patterns of women…many things,
but increasingly women are trying to carve back this time for themselves to be
looked after.
What happens around the world?
I’m willing to bet that you’ve either said or heard about a
woman in a different culture giving birth in a field then getting right back to
the work they were doing, right? It’s a trope trotted out frequently but
actually it doesn’t have much basis in truth. Most pre-industrial or
traditional cultures all honour the 40 day period after a woman has given
birth, with additional support being given to her and her family. Nobody is
compelled to feel like they have to get right back into the swing of things,
and they’re honoured and celebrated for bringing new life into the world.
China – zuo yuezi – sitting the month – a big focus on the
warm, nourishing food for the new mother to eat and replenish herself with, as
well as practical support
Korea – no cold or hard foods, and no going out into cold
weather. New moms are looked after for 21 days but sometimes this increases all
the way up to 100!
Latin America – la
cuarentena (quarantine) – Approved food, no sex, no hair washing, lots of rest!
Now it’s clear that times have moved on and there’s very few
women who would consent to following the full confinement to the full extreme –
I definitely couldn’t go without washing my hair for more than a couple of
days! But it’s interesting that universally there is an acceptance that time
cherishing the mother after a baby is born is really, really important for so
many reasons. The way in which we look after the mother and allow her the space
she needs to recuperate and to learn how to be a mother shows how we understand
and appreciate the newborn baby. And in some respects having that protected
time without having to worry about too much of the outside world can make the
intensity of life with a newborn seem easier as your focus is on them and not a
hundred other things.
Make a plan
When you’re pregnant and planning for life with a baby,
think about creating a postpartum plan. After all, we spend time planning our
births, planning what car seat and pram we’ll use, what nursery they’ll attend
– isn’t planning to protect your wellbeing equally as important? Think about
who can help you in the early days, and what they can do that’s practical and
will mother the mother; think about what external support you might need and
where you could go for that; think about if things aren’t going so well and you
need help urgently – what might that look like and have you got people who know
what to look for?
Most of all – take care of yourself, and enjoy that lovely new baby.