Delivery room

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A delivery room ( Switzerland : delivery room or -zimmer ) is the delivery room of a hospital , where pregnant women - with the support of midwives and obstetricians  - their children's birth .

etymology

The defining word for the delivery room is the verb kreißen , “ Wehen haben”, “ gebären ” from Middle High German krîzen , actually “screaming”, “moaning”, from which screeching is also derived.

Furnishing

Delivery bed

A modern delivery room is (possibly) equipped with:

  • Bed (e.g. special delivery bed)
  • Birthing stool
  • Romarad (also known as the birth wheel), a modern “birth stool” that is supposed to convey a feeling of weightlessness, such as during a water birth
  • Equipment for relaxation such as ropes, balls seat or wall bars
  • (Birthing) bathtub; Water birth tubs are constructed slightly differently and are significantly larger than normal bathtubs; In order to spare the laboring woman from climbing over the edge of the tub, tubs with a large, almost level entrance door are usually used
  • Seating for the father or another person of trust
  • Technology for monitoring mother and child, e.g. B. CTG for heart tone (in children) and labor control
  • Supply devices for the baby (bathtub, heat pillow, etc.)

Web links

Wiktionary: Delivery room  - explanations of meanings, word origins, synonyms, translations

Individual evidence

  1. cf. “The mountain twitched and gave birth to a mouse.” Loosely based on Parturient montes, nascetur ridiculus mus . Horace De arte poetica , verse 139.
  2. ^ Friedrich Kluge, Elmar Seebold: Etymological dictionary of the German language . 24th edition. ISBN 3-11-017473-1 . Page 537.
  3. circle . In: Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm: German dictionary