Background: Forms of social interaction may occur among the participants in medicalized births, in which a woman in labor is experiencing strong involuntary urges to push but has not yet been found to have a completely dilated cervix. This article examines the social events and communications that occur at the change between first and second stages of labor: Method: Three cases are described from videotapes of women in the second stage of labor and their caregivers. Results: Severul social and interactive features occurred, in which (1) the caregivel; usually a nurse, by invoking the "no pushing rule," insisted that the woman suppress her involuntary urges to push; (2) both the caregiver and the parturient displayed an orientation toward the future and the eventual certification of full cervical dilation by a designated authority, usually a physician, regardless of the actual state of the woman5 cervix or her involuntary urges to push; and (3) the certification process marked a ritual transition to "official" second stage labol; in which the woman's involuntary urges were considered appropriate and actively encouraged. Conclusion: A discrepancy between a laboring woman's sensations and caregivers' ideas about how labor should be conducted has implications for clinical care of women, wherein the goal should be to facilitate the woman's accomplishment rather than to direct the "
A discrepancy between a laboring woman's sensations and caregivers' ideas about how labor should be conducted has implications for clinical care of women, wherein the goal should be to facilitate the woman's accomplishment rather than to direct the "delivery."
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