obstetric$54384$ - traduction vers néerlandais
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obstetric$54384$ - traduction vers néerlandais

HYPOTHESIS ABOUT HUMAN CHILDBIRTH
Obstetrical Dilemma; Obstetric paradox
  • The diagram compares the size and shape of the pelvis as the infant's skull must move through it for the Chimpanzee, ''Australopithecus afarensis'' and ''Homo sapiens sapiens''. This comparison is one of the pieces of evidence physical anthropologists use to support the Obstetrical Dilemma hypothesis
  • A male pelvis (left) compared to a female pelvis (right) from a posterolateral view. Differences in the sciatic notch and overall shape of the ilium can be observed.

obstetric      
adj. van vroedvrouw; van bevalling
bear children         
  • Oxytocin facilitates labour and will follow a [[positive feedback]] loop.
  • The hormones initiating labour
  • Sequence of images showing the stages of ordinary childbirth
  • 810 women die every day from preventable causes related to pregnancy and childbirth. 94% occur in low and lower middle-income countries.
  • Stages in the birth of the baby's head
  • Engagement of the fetal head
  • Mechanical fetal injury may be caused by improper rotation of the fetus.
  •  name-list-style = vanc }}</ref>
  • Newborn rests as caregiver checks breath sounds.
  • [[Kangaroo care]] by father in [[Cameroon]]
  • fibula]] showing a woman giving birth between two [[antelopes]], ornamented with [[flowers]]. From Iran, 1000 to 650 BC, at the [[Louvre museum]].
  • Medieval woman, having given birth, enjoying her [[lying-in]] ([[postpartum confinement]]). France, 14th century.
  • Model of pelvis used in the beginning of the 19th century to teach technical procedures for a successful childbirth. Museum of the History of Medicine, [[Porto Alegre]], Brazil
  • more than 1850}}
{{refend}}
  • access-date=5 March 2020}}</ref>
  • Share of women that are expected to die from pregnancy-related causes
PHYSIOLOGICAL PROCESS OF EXPELLING A FETUS FROM THE PREGNANT HUMAN MOTHER'S UTERUS
Child birth; Labor (childbirth); Labour (childbirth); Labor (physiology); Labor pain; Stages of labor; Latent phase; Peripartum; Vaginal childbirth; Give birth; Human birth; Labor and Delivery; Maternity ward; Labor ward; Labour ward; Labor and delivery; Partum; Pain in labor; Labour pain; Molding (obstetrics); First stage of labor; Second stage of labor; +2 (childbirth); Augmentation (obstetrics); Fetal expulsion; Giving birth; Birthing; Second labor stage; Delivery ward; Hospital labor ward; Maternity unit; Analgesics in childbirth; Labor progression; Monitoring in childbirth; In labor; In labour; Alternatives to abortion; Labor Interventions; Stages of labour; Hospital birth; Phase of labour; Augmentation of labor; Augmentation of labour; Birth complications; Childbirth complications; Active phase of labour; Delivery (childbirth); Labour and delivery; Bear children; Accouchement; Obstetric labor; Obstetric delivery
kinderen baren
give birth         
  • Oxytocin facilitates labour and will follow a [[positive feedback]] loop.
  • The hormones initiating labour
  • Sequence of images showing the stages of ordinary childbirth
  • 810 women die every day from preventable causes related to pregnancy and childbirth. 94% occur in low and lower middle-income countries.
  • Stages in the birth of the baby's head
  • Engagement of the fetal head
  • Mechanical fetal injury may be caused by improper rotation of the fetus.
  •  name-list-style = vanc }}</ref>
  • Newborn rests as caregiver checks breath sounds.
  • [[Kangaroo care]] by father in [[Cameroon]]
  • fibula]] showing a woman giving birth between two [[antelopes]], ornamented with [[flowers]]. From Iran, 1000 to 650 BC, at the [[Louvre museum]].
  • Medieval woman, having given birth, enjoying her [[lying-in]] ([[postpartum confinement]]). France, 14th century.
  • Model of pelvis used in the beginning of the 19th century to teach technical procedures for a successful childbirth. Museum of the History of Medicine, [[Porto Alegre]], Brazil
  • more than 1850}}
{{refend}}
  • access-date=5 March 2020}}</ref>
  • Share of women that are expected to die from pregnancy-related causes
PHYSIOLOGICAL PROCESS OF EXPELLING A FETUS FROM THE PREGNANT HUMAN MOTHER'S UTERUS
Child birth; Labor (childbirth); Labour (childbirth); Labor (physiology); Labor pain; Stages of labor; Latent phase; Peripartum; Vaginal childbirth; Give birth; Human birth; Labor and Delivery; Maternity ward; Labor ward; Labour ward; Labor and delivery; Partum; Pain in labor; Labour pain; Molding (obstetrics); First stage of labor; Second stage of labor; +2 (childbirth); Augmentation (obstetrics); Fetal expulsion; Giving birth; Birthing; Second labor stage; Delivery ward; Hospital labor ward; Maternity unit; Analgesics in childbirth; Labor progression; Monitoring in childbirth; In labor; In labour; Alternatives to abortion; Labor Interventions; Stages of labour; Hospital birth; Phase of labour; Augmentation of labor; Augmentation of labour; Birth complications; Childbirth complications; Active phase of labour; Delivery (childbirth); Labour and delivery; Bear children; Accouchement; Obstetric labor; Obstetric delivery
v. bevallen

Définition

Obstetric

Wikipédia

Obstetrical dilemma

The obstetrical dilemma is a hypothesis to explain why humans often require assistance from other humans during childbirth to avoid complications, whereas most non-human primates give birth unassisted with relatively little difficulty. This occurs due to the tight fit of the fetal head to the maternal birth canal, which is additionally convoluted, meaning the head and therefore body of the infant must rotate during childbirth in order to fit, unlike in other, non-upright walking mammals. Consequently, there is a usually high incidence of cephalopelvic disproportion and obstructed labor in humans.

The obstetrical dilemma claims that this difference is due to the biological trade-off imposed by two opposing evolutionary pressures in the development of the human pelvis: smaller birth canals in the mothers, and larger brains, and therefore skulls in the babies. Proponents believe bipedal locomotion (the ability to walk upright) decreased the size of the bony parts of the birth canal. They also believe that as hominids' and humans' skull and brain sizes increased over the millennia, that women needed wider hips to give birth, that these wider hips made women inherently less able to walk or run than men, and that babies had to be born earlier to fit through the birth canal, resulting in the so-called fourth trimester period for newborns (being born when the baby seems less developed than in other animals). Recent evidence has suggested bipedal locomotion is only a part of the strong evolutionary pressure constraining the expansion of the maternal birth canal. In addition to bipedal locomotion, the reduced strength of the pelvic floor due to a wider maternal pelvis also leads to fitness detriments in the mother pressuring the birth canal to remain relatively narrow.

This idea was widely accepted when first published in 1960, but has since been criticized by other scientists.