Hens and Chicks/Hen House Project

Hens and Chicks/Hen House Project I'm a DONA Certified postpartum doula, serving moms and their families in the Central Kentucky regio http://www.facebook.com/henhouseproject

Permanently closed.

Postpartum doulas are trained, non-medical professionals who specialize in understanding newborns, supporting the postpartum woman and helping the entire family in this life changing event. Studies show that parents who receive support postpartum have quicker recoveries, greater success in breastfeeding, healthier babies, and a lower risk of postpartum mood disorders.

Hello everyone! I rarely post here anymore and have been given notice by FB that this page will be deleted soon. So, I j...
03/04/2021

Hello everyone! I rarely post here anymore and have been given notice by FB that this page will be deleted soon. So, I just wanted to hop on here and say I have enjoyed our time together on this page. If u would like to stay connected you may friend my personal page on FB. Thanks to all for joining and sharing! Donna

Very very interesting on premature births and the pandemic!
07/19/2020

Very very interesting on premature births and the pandemic!

Hospitals in several countries saw dips in premature births, which could be a starting point for future research.

Hi everyone —here’s an interesting article on breastfeeding and Covid in the breastfeeding mother. If you happen to know...
05/27/2020

Hi everyone —here’s an interesting article on breastfeeding and Covid in the breastfeeding mother. If you happen to know a breastfeeding mom who has had Covid please pass this on. They can participate in this research —there’s contact info at the end of the article.

Rebecca Powell is collecting breast milk samples from women who've had COVID-19. The substance could provide a key to a future coronavirus treatment.

At a time when life is even more stressful, please share with your family/friends who are pregnant or with a new baby. T...
04/24/2020

At a time when life is even more stressful, please share with your family/friends who are pregnant or with a new baby. This website has always been a great resource!

Symptoms and risk factors of perinatal mood and anxiety disorders.

Help for mommas during this stressful time...
03/29/2020

Help for mommas during this stressful time...

EXCITING NEWS!

We have been working tirelessly for the past few weeks to create an inexpensive resource in response to the immediate need for mental health providers to utilize telemental health platforms.

We have created a webinar series that teaches professionals how to quickly transition to providing telemental health services. All sessions will include attention to the priorities of confidentiality, client privacy and accessibility to telephone or teletherapy.

Sessions start March 30th so register TODAY: https://bit.ly/2QPgqfJ

If you are a mental health professional who had previously offered in-person sessions but would now like to figure out how to offer teletherapy sessions, this webinar training is for you!

If you are using some form of technology would like to really understand how to grow your practice and serve more moms and families, this webinar training is for you!

LIVE courses begin Monday, March 30th so register TODAY: https://bit.ly/2QPgqfJ

Learn more here: https://www.postpartum.net/professionals/trainings-events/teletherapy-and-perinatal-mental-health/

How cool is this that I had the opportunity to facilitate a Hens and Chicks gathering in Okinawa Japan?!! These sweet wo...
01/17/2020

How cool is this that I had the opportunity to facilitate a Hens and Chicks gathering in Okinawa Japan?!! These sweet women and their precious babes made my day!😍

Please help spread the word and share!
10/25/2019

Please help spread the word and share!

A new study confirms that all inclined infant sleepers pose risks to babies, prompting Consumer Reports to recommend that all of the products be banned.

We talked about this in the Hens and Chicks group fairly often! This helps us understand why babies want to be held by t...
09/05/2019

We talked about this in the Hens and Chicks group fairly often! This helps us understand why babies want to be held by their caregivers in a standing position-fascinating! Donna

From Neurochild Community on why cuddles (especially standing up and moving) are so important and so calming for our children. When we stand while we cuddle our babies and children we are actually decreasing their stress and changing their vital signs. These are physical changes happening because of a simple gesture. When someone tells you to leave your crying baby, show them this...

Hold your babies, people!! Preferably up, as far as the child is concerned... and much to the dismay of tired parents around the world who are exasperated at an infant’s insistence at holding them standing.

A study by Esposito et al. (2013), published in the Journal of Current Biology, demonstrated for the first time that the calming response to parents holding them is a coordinated set of central, motor, and cardiac regulations and is a conserved component of parent-infant interactions in mammals.

Using electrocardiograms (ECG) to monitor twelve healthy human infants’ heartbeats, along with their behaviour and vocalisations, they recorded mother-infant pairs during behavioural tasks that consisted of the child lying in a crib, being held by the mother who was sitting on a chair ( ), or being held by the mother who was walking continuously ( ).

The researchers found a sustained elevation of heart interbeat intervals due to carrying in awake infants could not be explained by any known cardiac vagal reflex, including the orienting reflex (brief period of heart rate deceleration by mild sensory stimulus), suggesting that carrying evokes a sustained heart rate reduction in concert with the rapid behavioural changes in human infants via a novel mechanism.

The researchers furthermore found that in mouse pups, carrying induced calming responses similar to those in human infants, even though maternal carrying methods differed. This draws parallels between the carrying-induced state evoked in human babies and other mammalian young such as cats or squirrels who adopt a still, compact posture with their hind legs drawn up when maternally carried. The reduced mobility, reduced distress vocalisations, and reduced heart rate appears to be adaptive.

The calming responses evoked by carrying are thought to be an evolutionary measure to increase the survival probability of the infant in cases of emergency escape by the mother and child, and so ultimately works to strengthen the mother-infant relationship. There is adaptive value in this behaviour in carer-infant relationships and, as a consequence, infant survival.

The study found that the effects of carrying on the infant’s parasympathetic nervous system were significant, and it provides a scientific understanding of this physiological infant response that could be beneficial for parents and early childhood educators to understand.

Considering the physiological response of the infant when being carried may lead to greater parent and carer patience, reduced frustration and an increased appreciation of age-old parenting techniques such as and parenting.

https://www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(13)00343-6

06/06/2019

Please share to educate! Car seats safety!

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