The Complete Birth Ball / Exercise Package by The Miracle Box
For mums and mums to be, The Box includes:
· One high quality anti-burst birth/exercise ball
· Dual action pump for quick inflation
· DVD “Simple guide to pelvic floor and core exercises”
· 3 A2 Wall Charts illustrating pregnancy, post natal and advanced exercise with the ball.
· 0.25p donation to the NCT
Here are 7 great reasons why you should have a miracle box for mums and mums to be...
1. Exercising mums can have shorter labours and easier births
2. We include easy to read essential pre and post natal exercises
3. A Birth Ball helps get baby in the best position for birth
4. Our Ball is high quality anti-burst and non-slip for peace of mind
5. A Birth Ball keeps your 'core' muscles strong, alleviating back pain
6. We include a dual action pump for quick and easy inflation
7. We include an excellent educational DVD "A Simple Guide to Pelvic Floor and Core Exercises" as uses on some NHS post natal wards
If you are Pregnant! Why have a Birthing/Excercise Ball?
Unless there are medical reasons to avoid it, pregnant women can and should try to exercise moderately for at least 30 minutes a day, 3-4 times a week. Birthing Balls, commonly known as an Exercise Ball, Gym Ball, Swiss Ball or Fitness Balls, are great for relieving discomfort during pregnancy. They provide a firm, yet soft place to sit. They also force good posture, allowing for decreased straining of your muscles. In the short term, exercise helps all of us feel better physically and emotionally, and the calories burned helps prevent excessive weight gain. People who exercise regularly develop stronger muscles, bones and joints. And over time, the benefits of regular exercise are even more impressive: lower risks of premature death, heart disease and other serious illnesses.
Using the birthing ball throughout pregnancy will keep the deep supportive muscles of the spine in shape and help stimulate postural reflexes. The birthing ball has many additional uses in the later stages of pregnancy when sitting can become very uncomfortable and getting up and down from a chair becomes increasingly hard. The pregnant woman can roll up off the ball; it's much easier than getting out of a normal chair.
For pregnant women, however, exercise has added benefits. There is evidence that exercise can help prevent gestational diabetes, a form of diabetes that sometimes develops during pregnancy. And for women who already have gestational diabetes, regular exercise is recommended along with changes in diet to help bring the disease under control.
In addition, exercise can help relieve stress and build the stamina needed for labour and delivery. It's also worth mentioning that exercise can be very helpful in coping with the postpartum period. Exercise can help new mothers keep the "baby blues" at bay, cope with postnatal depression, regain their energy and lose the weight they gained during pregnancy.
In studies on maternal position during the second or pushing stage of labour, it has been found that either sitting up or lying on the side to push instead of lying on the back resulted in:-
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Shorther second stage of labour
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A reduction in assisted deliveries (vacuum and forceps)
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A reduction in episiotomies
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A smaller increase in second-degree perineal tears
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Reduced reporting of severe pain during second stage of labour
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Fewer abnormal foetal heart rate patterns
Available in two sizes depending on whether yiou are under or over 5 feet, 5 inches tall