by Beverley Lawrence Beech
Childbirth is a normal physiological event. However, since the
advent of universal hospitalisation, for the majority of women
childbirth has been transformed into a medical event where labour is
processed, monitored and controlled by the medical profession from
beginning to end.
Although childbirth propaganda promotes the normality of birth,
few women giving birth in large centralised medical establishments
will experience a normal birth. Instead, they will find themselves
and their babies subjected to a whole range of powerful drugs.
Although women allegedly give informed consent for the use of
those drugs, the reality is that the majority of women have little
information about drugs in labour. The propaganda promotes the
"advantages" of drug use, but little is said about the
disadvantages, particularly the long-term effects. It is those
effects that I would like to examine.
All drugs have unwanted effects, some more serious than others.
In the 1950s and 1960s thousands of babies, all over the world, were
born with severe limb abnormalities as a direct result of their
mothers taking thalidomide during their pregnancies. It took ten
years for researchers to establish that thalidomide was to blame,
while the medical profession and the drug companies vigorously
denied any connection.
Diethylstilboestrol
During the 1940s and 1950s the hormone diethylstilboestrol (DES)
was used on pregnant women in the belief that it could prevent
miscarriage. Unfortunately, it was widely adopted—particularly in
the United States—before any randomised clinical trial was done to
show whether it was effective. When such a trial was eventually done
the drug was shown not to work. Nonetheless some doctors continued
to use it. The time bomb effect came to light when a cluster of
young women in one town developed an unusual form of cancer—clear
cell carcinoma of the vagina. Had they developed a more common
cancer—squamous cell cancer of the cervix, for example—the link
would not have been made. They also had other problems, such as
abnormalities of the genital tract. However, more subtle
difficulties were discovered only when British researchers (Vassey
et al., 1983) studied the now grown-up offspring of women who had
been involved in a randomised clinical trial, in which half were
given stilboestrol when pregnant, with the other half serving as
controls. Exposed children were significantly more likely to have
serious mental illness, and boys were less likely to have married.
Furthermore, 40 to 50 percent of DES-exposed daughters have
pronounced uterine structural abnormalities. Infertility was
reported among the women and diminished fertility among the men.
More than four to eight times as many of the DES-exposed children
went on to have tubal pregnancies as the unexposed. A quarter of all
pregnancies among the DES-exposed children went on to miscarry
compared with the normal 10 percent rate. Premature birth occurred
in three times as many babies.
For DES-exposed sons, nearly a third had testicular abnormalities
that decrease male fertility, including undescended testes, sperm
abnormalities and low sperm counts. It would appear that many of the
non-physical but serious adverse effects would not have been
identified except for the fact that exposed girls had developed a
particularly unusual cancer. In the United States, the
granddaughters of women given stilboestrol in pregnancy are now
suing for injuries they suffered because of alleged
stilboestrol-induced abnormalities in the genital tracts of their
mothers who were exposed in the womb. This is an example of how
damage may be transmitted from generation to generation. Therefore,
one would expect the medical profession to be particularly careful
about using drugs in pregnancy and labour.
Demerol
One of the most common drugs used in the labour ward is
pethidine, a synthetic, addictive, narcotic drug that is similar to
morphine. In Britain, it is also known as meperidine and, in
America, Demerol. It has become the drug of first choice for the
majority of UK midwives, mainly because it is the only
pharmacological narcotic they are licensed to prescribe.
Commonly, women are given a dose of 150 mg., yet those midwives
who use Demerol sparingly often give a much smaller dose, 25 mg. for
example, and claim it is just as effective.
Demerol readily crosses the placenta. The baby may have greater
sensitivity to the drug because of the immaturity of the blood-brain
barrier and the circulatory bypass of the liver (Burt,1971). If the
baby is expected to be born within an hour, most midwives try to
ensure that Demerol is not given because of the risk that the drug
will be present in the baby. However, research shows that Demerol is
most likely to have a depressant effect on the fetal respiratory
system if the dose is administered two or three hours before birth.
The higher the dose to the mother the greater the effect on the
fetus (Yerby, 1996). Because the baby's liver is immature, it takes
a great deal longer—eighteen to twenty-three hours—to eliminate the
drug from its system.
Although 95 percent of the drug is excreted in two to three days,
this can have significant implications for breastfeeding. Rajan
demonstrated that "Demerol proved to be the (drug) most inhibiting
to breastfeeding." By breastfeeding, the mother often unknowingly
gives the baby a second dose of Demerol as the drug is transferred
to the baby through the breastmilk. She may not be aware that
Demerol is the cause of her "sleepy" baby and her problems getting
the baby latched on.
Little research has been done into the long-term effects of
Demerol. However, infants with high Demerol exposure were more
likely to cry when handled on days seven, twenty-one and forty-two,
as were those with a high cord blood concentration on day
twenty-one. Demerol also reduced the infant's ability to quiet
himself once aroused. This was still observed at three and six weeks
(Belsey, 1981). It is interesting that researchers consider three to
six weeks to be "long-term." Our definition would be in years.
For those babies whose breathing is depressed at delivery
naloxone is given to reverse the effects, but the reversal is only
temporary unless it is given in an adult dose (Weiner, 1977). We
know of no research that investigates the short or long-term effects
of naloxone on the baby.
The pain of
labour
A consistent criticism Association for Improvements in the
Maternity Services (AIMS) members make of obstetrically managed
births is that there is pressure to deliver all babies as quickly as
possible, as if this were a benefit to both mother and baby. We know
of no study that asked women whether or not they wanted a faster but
more painful labour.
It is extremely difficult to assess the level of pain a woman is
experiencing; different women react in different ways.
Interestingly, when a woman fails to experience pain relief from
Demerol or other drugs, she will often be told that she has a "low
pain threshold." I have yet to hear the problems described as a
failure of the drug to act effectively. In a survey of pain relief
in childbirth (Chamberlain 1993) 84 percent of midwives rated
Demerol as very good or good, compared with only 71 percent of women
and 72 percent of partners. The authors speculated: "Perhaps the
drowsiness of the woman following the administration of pethidine
(Demerol) is associated with effective pain relief by the midwife?"
From the woman's perspective Demerol has been described as causing a
loss of control, disorientation, dizziness and as one mother
described it: "I felt that my brain had gone out to lunch. I could
not put a sentence together, but it did nothing for the pain—it just
shut me up."
Women who end up with caesarean sections have often experienced
induced or accelerated labours, and Demerol is often one of the many
drugs they have been given during that time. However, Demerol delays
maternal gastric emptying and, in concert with sedation, increases
the risk of aspiration and thus the danger of general anaesthetic
(Olofsson 1997).
Chamberlain's study Pain
and Its Relief in Childbirth found that Demerol appeared
last on a list associated with enjoyment of labour, being in control
of labour and delivery, and physical and mental health afterwards.
Demerol was unlikely to be wanted for future delivery and was most
strongly associated with problems in the baby such as side effects,
temperament, and feeding difficulties. It gave low satisfaction for
pain in labour and especially pain during delivery, was associated
with poor physical and mental health in the mother after delivery
and had a fairly low rating for enjoyment of labour and control.
Epidural
anaesthesia
Instead of urging non-pharmacological methods of pain relief (for
example, water pools), the latest research paper to reveal the
inadequacy of Demerol's pain-relieving effects suggests that
epidural anaesthesia should now be widely available (Olofsson,
1996). The authors have few worries about the adverse effects of
this drug.
In 1981 Rosenblatt published a six-week follow-up of the effects
of epidural anaesthesia, which showed that immediately after
delivery, infants with greater exposure to bupivacaine in utero were
most likely to be cyanotic and unresponsive to their surroundings.
Visual skills and alertness decreased significantly with increases
in the cord blood concentration of bupivacaine, particularly on the
first day of life but also throughout the next six weeks. Adverse
effects of bupivacaine levels on the infant’s motor organisation,
his ability to control his own state of consciousness and his
physiological response to stress were also observed. Interestingly,
this study considered six weeks to be a "long-term," but what are
the long-term effects at five, ten, twenty or fifty years?
Women who choose water for pain relief have been warned that a
rise in the water temperature over 37°C could cause a rise in the
mother's temperature and result in brain damage in the babies, with
no research evidence whatsoever to support that suggestion. As a
result, many UK hospitals have refused women access to water pools.
However, research by Lieberman (1997) revealed that intrapartum
fever greater than 100.4°F occurred in 14.5 percent of women
receiving an epidural. If the labours lasted longer than eighteen
hours the fever rates increased to 36 percent. Not a single
paediatrician has expressed concern about this risk.
Brain
development
In her submission to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA),
Yvonne Brackbrill commented that at that time there had been at
least forty studies of neurobehavioural changes in human infants
that were observed after administration of anaesthetic and
pre-anaesthetic agents to their mothers during labour and delivery.
"None has shown that drugs enhance or improve behavioural
functioning in infants," she wrote (Brackbrill, 1979).
In the human being, the period of vulnerability to central
nervous system damage from exposure to drugs and chemicals lasts a
long time. Even after birth, important areas of the brain are still
developing and differentiating at a very rapid rate, and because of
this rapid period of growth they are maximally vulnerable to damage.
It has been estimated for example that the brain growth spurt in the
cerebellum lasts for eighteen months after birth and in the
hippocampus for about four and a half years.
Some parts of the brain are fairly well developed at the time a
human being is born, but other parts are not. Some parts,
particularly the cerebellum, are very underdeveloped, and the
introduction of toxic substances during this period of rapid
development, even for a single acute administration, can either kill
cells or cause aberrations in them. When cells proliferate in the
cerebellum, that’s not the end of it—they have to migrate into their
final position and link up with other cells. Both the rate of cell
death and the patterns of migration of cells in the cerebellum have
been shown to be very sensitive to the introduction of toxic
substances (Brackbrill, 1979).
Desmond Bardon, a respected British psychiatrist, asked what
prolonged exposure to maternally administered drugs means to the
later neurologic development and behaviour of the offspring.
Drug-induced biochemical alterations within the brain of the about
to be born or newly born infant have the potential for permanently
disrupting the normal link-up of the baby's brain cells by altering
the biochemical markers which guide the cells into their proper
places. It is somewhat analogous to the unintentional spilling of a
chemical over telephone wires that are being connected according to
the colour code at the end of each wire. The chemical removes the
colour from the wire ends. The technician must continue to connect
the wires, not knowing exactly which wires to connect with which.
The circuitry is completed: it functions, but imperfectly.
While the process of cell migration is not yet fully understood,
present knowledge of neurobiology suggests that the normal
biochemical message left along the pathway of the neuron by the
preceding cell (as it travels to its proper place within the central
nervous system) serves to direct the next brain cell into place.
Drug-induced changes in the biochemical message can disrupt this
vital process. Could dyslexia be the result?
Drug
addiction
In the developed world there is an epidemic of dyslexia, drug
addiction and behavioural problems. I suggest that one of' the
reasons for this is the over-use of powerful drugs in labour.
I find the hypocrisy about drug use quite astonishing. In the
United States, it appears that women who smoke or drink alcohol in
pregnancy can be publicly chastised; if they take heroin, or other
street drugs, they can find themselves in jail or threatened with
removal of the baby and their other children. But no one raises even
a murmur about the far more powerful addictive drugs that are used
on the labour ward, and no one appears concerned about the effects
these drugs can have on a still developing fetal brain.
There are plenty of studies examining the immediate effects of
drugs in labour, but where are the studies examining the long-term
effects? By that I mean effects which can emerge, five, ten, twenty
or even fifty years later.
I suggest we are sitting on a time bomb, and we persist in
ignoring the research because of the horrendous implications. No one
wants to admit that their care is creating drug addicts, but I
believe the overuse of drugs in pregnancy and childbirth is doing
just that.
In a well-designed case control study at the Karolinska Institute
in Stockholm in 1990, researchers compared children exposed to pain
relieving drugs in labour with those who were not and discovered an
increased risk of drug addiction later in life (Jacobson et al.,
1990). In 1988 they showed that when nitrous oxide was given to the
mother the child was five and a half times more likely to become an
amphetamine addict than a brother or sister born to the same
parents. In their paper in the British Medical Journal
(1990), patients who had died from opiate addiction were
compared with brothers and sisters; the researchers found that if
the mothers had been given opiates or barbiturates or larger doses
of nitrous oxide the risk of opiate addiction to the child in later
life was increased 4.7 times. In a further study, researchers
discovered that the risk of drug addiction was related to the
hospital in which they were born. In other words, the likelihood of
a child developing drug addiction in later life depended on the
labour ward policies of the hospital the mother chose for the birth,
and I quote: "For the amphetamine addicts, hospital of birth was
found to be an important risk factor even after controlling for
residential area" (Nyberg, 1993). Jacobson and Nyberg’s research
suggests that the use of opiates, barbiturates and nitrous oxide in
labour causes imprinting in the babies, and we are now reaping the
whirlwind.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services estimated that
one out of every nine American children is significantly learning
disabled despite having normal intelligence. Seventy-five percent of
these children are born at full term into middle and upper class
families. The U.S. National Institute of Health estimates that 75
percent to 85 percent of all disabled children in the United States
were born within the normal range of birth weight and gestational
age and had no familial or sociologic predisposing factors (Haire,
1989).
In 1984, Desmond Bardon suggested that a significant proportion
of the millions of children and youths in the United States who are
afflicted with significant mental and neurologic dysfunction are the
victims of obstetric medications administered with the very best of
intentions to the mother during labour and birth in medicalised
maternity units. Not only have Bardon’s concerns not been addressed,
but since that time even more women and babies are subjected to high
levels of drugs in pregnancy and labour, and little has been done to
investigate the possibility that the huge increases in drug
addiction and associated crime are a direct result of the drugs used
on the labour wards. While various agencies work hard to pull the
bodies out of the river, no one is investigating who is pushing them
in upstream. It is time they did.
Beverley A Lawrence Beech, Honourary Chair of the Association for
Improvements in the Maternity Services (AIMS), is a freelance writer
and lecturer and lives in the United Kingdom.
Editor’s Note: This paper was presented at the Midwives of North
America (MANA) Conference in November 1998.
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Reprinted from Midwifery Today E-News (Issue No. 2:3 January 21, 2000)
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