Reports that Mila Kunis, the actress, plans on a “natural” delivery are all over the internet.
As a celebrity, she is clearly a medical expert and somehow it is relevant to hear how an actress with no financial concerns, doesn’t need to work on her feet until she goes into labour, has a BMI of 19 (ok that’s a guess) and who has never delivered before is planning to have her baby.
Mila Kunis obviously represents the average woman’s pregnancy experience.
But keeping the distaste of asking celebrities their medical opinions and prying into intimate details of their personal lives aside, this is an opportunity to discuss the implications of what Ms. Kunis said.
For starters, the term “natural” as it applies to delivering a baby would be unassisted by anyone with any training, without electricity and without medications to stem hemorrhage or treat infection from obstructed labour. In Africa, where most women have “natural” deliveries there is a 1 in 40 chance of dying during pregnancy and childbirth.
But it wasn’t this misuse of “natural” that got me peeved, it was this specific comment about not planning on an epidural…
I’m crazy. I mean, I did this to myself — I might as well do it right.
Having an epidural or needing pain medications isn’t doing it wrong. Asking for all the help that modern medicine has to offer isn’t wrong, it’s a choice. There is no prize for pain and it certainly doesn’t make you a better person if you sweat it out for 24 hours or more without help from pharmaceuticals. I despise the idea that if you need, or God forbid desire, analgesia during your labour and delivery that somehow you just aren’t mum enough.