Womens Health News

Entries categorized as ‘Pregnancy’

Caffeine Intake In Pregnancy Leads To The Risk Of Miscarriage.

March 12, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Is caffeine safe for pregnant women? There has been speculation that excessive caffeine intake can lead to pregnancy loss. The Kaiser Permanente Division of Research conducted a study on 1,063 pregnant Kaiser Permanente members in San Francisco from October 1996 through October 1998 to answer this question. The researchers examined the caffeine effect on women who never changed their pattern of caffeine consumption during their pregnancy.

Women who consumed 200 mg or more of caffeine per day (two or more cups of regular coffee or five 12-ounce cans of caffeinated soda) had twice the miscarriage risk as women who consumed no caffeine. Women who consumed less than 200 mg of caffeine daily had more than 40 percent increased risk of miscarriage. The increase in the risk appears to come from the caffeine itself. The main message from this study is that pregnant women who consume caffeinated beverages should go off caffeine.

Reference: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/01/080121080402.htm

Categories: Pregnancy · Premature labor · coffee and premature labor · complications of pregnancy

Caffeine and Increased Miscarriage Risk – A Portion Problem?

March 11, 2008 · Leave a Comment

I haven’t yet read the study that has been widely reported as demonstrating that caffeine consumption can increase the risk of miscarriage. However, this quote from one of the researchers, regarding the problem of consuming 200 mg caffeine stood out to me:

That’s about the amount of caffeine in two five-ounce cups of coffee, five 12-ounce cans of soda or six five-ounce cups of tea, Li said.

Who drinks 5-ounce cups of coffee?!? Seriously. I dare somebody to try to even find a 5-ounce coffee cup, at home or from a coffee place. And no, the teacups in your grandmother’s china set that you never take out of the cabinet don’t count.

Seriously, though, I think we’re on the whole pretty bad at estimating portion sizes, and the amount of caffeine is going to vary among different brews. It’s going to be exceedingly difficult for individuals to determine what 200 mg of caffeine is in beverages they make themselves.

Categories: Health Research · Pregnancy

WIC Program (Barely) Increasing Access to Fruits & Veggies

March 11, 2008 · Leave a Comment

The WIC program to improve low-income women and children’s nutritional status is being revised, and it is finally going to cover produce (other than carrots – did you know that baby carrots were explicitly excluded?). What’s the big improvement? A whopping $8/month in produce coverage. Read more in my post at Our Bodies Our Blog.

Categories: Breastfeeding · Health · Pregnancy · Women's Health

On Sushi, Mercury, and Women’s Health: Can’t See the Pollution for the Fish

March 11, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Amidst the relentless recent coverage of mercury in tuna, sushi and fish in general, I’ve read and heard a lot of hand-wringing over what is and is not a safe level of mercury, and how it’s really the pregnant women, the breastfeeding women, the pre-pregnant women (get it? the women!) who need to worry, but I haven’t heard one account that actually addresses how all this mercury gets in the fish in the first place.

In case you thought mercury fairies were poisoning your sushi just to ruin your trips to big coastal cities, here’s what the EPA says:

Mercury is found in the environment as a result of natural and human activities. The amount of mercury that cycles in the environment has increased since the industrial age. The main source of mercury is air emissions from power generation and other industrial and waste disposal activities.

Or, more explicitly, from a 2001 EPA report:

Solid waste incineration and fossil fuel combustion facilities contribute approximately 87% of the emissions of mercury in the United States. Other sources of mercury releases to the air include mining and smelting, industrial processes involving the use of mercury such as chlor-alkali production facilities and production of cement.

Mercury is released to surface waters from naturally occurring mercury in rocks and soils and from industrial activities, including pulp and paper mills, leather tanning, electroplating, and chemical manufacturing. Wastewater treatment facilities may also release mercury to water. An indirect source of mercury to surface waters is mercury in the air; it is deposited from rain and other processes directly to water surfaces and to soils. Mercury also may be mobilized from sediments if disturbed (e.g., flooding, dredging).

Sources of mercury in soil include direct application of fertilizers and fungicides and disposal of solid waste, including batteries and thermometers, to landfills. The disposal of municipal incinerator ash in landfills and the application of sewage sludge to crop land result in increased levels of mercury in soil. Mercury in air may also be deposited in soil and sediments.

In other words, the vast majority of the mercury that ends up in your air, dirt, water, and fish ultimately has a human industrial cause. Rather than fretting endlessly about how many bits of sushi our womenfolk can consume safely, we could focus on the cause and how to remedy it. Did I hear that discussed in all of this media coverage? No, no I didn’t.

Categories: Health · Pregnancy · Women's Health

Reproductive Health and the Catholic Hospital Conundrum

March 11, 2008 · Leave a Comment

In my near-hometown of Knoxville, TN, healthcare economics and religious dogma have combined to limit the choices of women who want to control the reproductive aspects of their lives. Struggling Baptist Hospital has been “merged” into St. Mary’s hospital, and the partnership’s parent company is now Catholic Healthcare Partners. As a result, patients of Baptist no longer have the option to have a tubal ligation, as it is at odds with the Catholic belief structure. A spokesperson say, “This component of our business is negligible,” despite indicating that 9% of last year’s deliveries at Baptist involved this procedure. Vasectomies are also out, “at any clinics owned by St. Mary’s or Baptist,” although they have indicated that emergency contraception will be available to rape victims.

To be perfectly clear, I understand that private hospitals may have every right to perform only procedures that do not conflict with their religious missions, as patients are free to go elsewhere. I worry, however, about those women whose insurance dictates a provider list at hospitals that do not perform the procedures they need – those women are only free to choose another provider to the extent that they are able to pay out-of-network charges and another provider is available within an accessible distance and time frame. I grew up in a state where, with the exception of a handful of “cities,” each county might have one, maybe two, hospitals – these policies seem likely to disproportionately affect poor and rural women.

I also worry about the forcing of two surgical procedures when one would have sufficed. These hospitals are essentially telling women who need a c-section and wanted tubal ligation while their abdomens were already open, “Sorry, you’ll have to pay another OR fee, and accept the risks of another round of anesthesia, another round of surgery, another period of recovery, because we don’t believe in what you want to do.” I can certainly understand why a woman mid-pregnancy would be disinclined to switch from a familiar provider and hospital, leaving her to choose between her known provider and two surgeries instead of one if she wants to control her fertility. Tennessee Guerilla Women reported yesterday on a friend who was trying to very quickly find a new provider for her daughter’s impending birth, hoping to find care elsewhere in a very small window of time.

The issue of services of Catholic hospitals is not a new one. Similar merger-related worries are being discussed in Colorado, and the Wisconsin legislature just passed a bill requiring all hospitals to provide emergency contraception (even the Catholic ones), which has been an issue in Massachusetts as well.

I have seen women on various blogs indicate that they will no longer give their business to St. Mary’s or Baptist, now that they know one’s existing policies and the changes to Baptist’s. One point specific to the Knoxville situation that is extremely interesting to me is that of the affiliation of the Lisa Ross Birthing and Women’s Center with St. Mary’s. To my knowledge, this is the only CNM-staffed birthing center in Knoxville, and for miles around – and their transfer agreement is with St. Mary’s, which is also where they offer midwife-attended births. In investigating my own options for possible future birth, I considered the possibility of camping out in K-town, close to my family and friends, and using the Center. Now that I know more about St. Mary’s (and now Baptist’s) policies, I absolutely would not. I’m making a consumer choice, and it’s to avoid spending my money at hospitals with policies like these. Additionally, I wonder how these religion-based policies square with Ross’s mission statement, which declares, “The woman has opportunities and responsibilities in decision making regarding her care” and “All women deserve equal treatment, regardless of ethnic, racial, or cultural differences, education, or socioeconomic status.”

[Thanks to Katie Allison Granju for the tip. The Archcrone also has commentary.]

Categories: Access · Choice · Contraception · Pregnancy · Rights · Women's Health