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Why do nurses always scold mothers for shouting too much when giving birth? Shouldn't you shout when giving birth?
I'll answer that.

Because giving birth to a child is a protracted war, which takes hours or even days. And it hurts. The process of natural childbirth is painful. But make a hullabaloo about will not help the delivery except expending energy. When a lying-in woman makes a hullabaloo about, she will swallow a lot of gas through her mouth. When the gas enters the digestive tract, it will cause flatulence and affect normal eating, which may lead to dehydration, dysuria and other symptoms, resulting in flatulence. In the second stage of labor, due to the oppression of the fetal head, pregnant women will involuntarily hold their breath downwards, which is the feeling of defecation. At this time, the midwife should guide the parturient to exert strength and give birth smoothly. If the parturient makes a hullabaloo about, she will soon run out of energy, can't use abdominal pressure in coordination with uterine contraction, and the labor process will stagnate, and the fetus will not be born, which will affect the fetal heart and become dystocia, and she will have to take cesarean section. Moreover, yelling is easy to form psychological hints and lack self-confidence.

My point of view was mentioned above.

If you have the strength to shout, it is better to keep the strength to push the child out of the birth canal.

Before giving birth, I was also afraid of meeting a grumpy nurse. I was born in September last year, and the epidemic situation is basically stable, but everyone still pays great attention to prevention. The hospital only needs one person to accompany the delivery, so it was checked on the day of admission. My husband and my mother are at home during the day. In the evening, my husband went home to cook and fried several dishes. There is no feeling after eating, because the hospital charges more than an hour. I told him to put down his meal and left after eating. My mom said I didn't move. After eating, my stomach hurts a little. Slowly circle around the fence until it hurts every four minutes. In fact, it was not too painful at that time, so I went out for a walk. It hurts every two minutes, and I don't move. Listening to the shouts in the delivery bed, I didn't dare to cry, and I kept my strength until someone was born. A shaky signature is painless only when a nurse comes to check a few fingers. As a result, before the anesthesiologist came, I opened eight fingers. Just listen to the midwife, and it hurts six times. I can cry when I scratch my hands at ordinary times, and I haven't lost a tear when I gave birth to a child. Two hours after giving birth, she informed her father to come to the hospital with her mobile phone. hahaha.

It's no use shouting, you can only consume your own strength. Nurses may get a little bored listening to people yelling all day. When it's their turn to push, they push, and it's even more troublesome to shout tired (if no one sympathizes). Cooperation is the best!

Save your strength.

I gritted my teeth without shouting when I gave birth to my second child. Of course, there will be a little faint groans and tears, because it really hurts-so all I feel is encouragement and refueling. In addition to instructing me to exert myself, the doctor will also give me pressure (let me work hard or the child will shrink back) and hope (let me persist). It's not that it doesn't hurt not to call me, it's just my personality. Life is the same, I don't like to complain.