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New Mothers Speak Out Report (2008)
Childbirth Connection's landmark Listening to Mothers I survey (2002) was the first time that women in the United States were polled at the national level about their maternity experiences. Listening to Mothers II, a national survey of women who gave birth in U.S. hospitals in 2005, continued to break new ground by documenting many core items measured in the first survey, exploring earlier topics in greater depth and including some new and timely topics. We recontacted mothers in mid-2006, six months after they participated in Listening to Mothers II, and most also participated in a follow-up survey that focused on their postpartum experiences. The New Mothers Speak Out (PDF) report presents postpartum results from both surveys and gives a ground-breaking view of experiences of mothers with young children in the United States at this time. The surveys were conducted by Harris Interactive and carried out in partnership with Lamaze International.
New Mothers Speak Out reports that life is challenging for many women at this time, who
- experienced new physical and emotional problems following technology-intensive births with high rates of surgery and other interventions
- struggled to get exercise and rest, eat a healthy diet and manage stress
- did not return to their pre-pregnancy weight
- got limited support from husbands/partners and others
- were unable to start or continue breastfeeding as they wanted
- wanted but did not have the maternity benefits that women in other affluent countries take for granted
- returned too quickly to employment due to financial pressure.
Report highlights include:
- Extent to which mothers experienced 26 health conditions as a new problem in the first two months after birth, and extent to which the problems persisted to six months or more
- Net weight gain above mothers' weight just before pregnancy over the first 18 months after birth
- Results of two validated postpartum depression screening tools
- First national data about post-traumatic stress with reference to women's childbirth experience, using a validated screening tool
- Breastfeeding patterns and whether mothers achieved their goals for exclusive breastfeeding and for duration of breastfeeding
- Baby co-sleeping with mother or others in first six months
- How women and their husbands or partners shared child care
- How women rated the support they received from their husbands or partners and from others
- Extent to which women who were employed in pregnancy received paid maternity leave benefits versus their ideal length of paid maternity leave
- Patterns of staying home with baby and transitioning to employment over the first 18 months after birth
- Whether employed women were able to to stay home with their babies as long as they wanted
- Challenges in the transition to employment after birth.
The report also includes dozens of comments from the mothers themselves about these topics.
The Quick Links box, above, provides access to the New Mothers Speak Out (PDF) report without charge, along with related documents. You can also get Quick Facts (PDF) from the report, overviews of the methodology for the Listening to Mother II and Listening to Mothers II Postpartum surveys, questionnaires used for both surveys, a comparison of the survey populations to childbearing women nationally, and the report press release (PDF).
The Listening to Mothers II National Advisory Council provided guidance on the development, implementation and reporting of both Listening to Mothers II surveys. Council members and the organizations they represented at the time of their participation are listed here.
With the release of the New Mothers Speak Out report, the PDF file of the Listening to Mothers II report (PDF) is now available without charge. You may still buy a printed and bound Listening to Mothers II report in our bookstore.
Most recent page update: 10/25/2008
© 2010 Childbirth Connection. All rights reserved.
Childbirth Connection is a national not-for-profit organization founded in 1918 as Maternity Center Association. Our mission is to improve the quality of maternity care through research, education, advocacy and policy. Childbirth Connection promotes safe, effective and satisfying evidence-based maternity care and is a voice for the needs and interests of childbearing families.
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News and Features
New VBAC Guidlines ACOG has just issued new Guidlines for VBAC. What changed? What continues?
We've Moved! On July 1, 2010, the Childbirth Connection office moved to 260 Madison Avenue, 8th Floor, New York, NY 10016. All other contact information is unchanged.
New Pregnancy Video Library AvailableOur new Video Library features links to a wealth of resources for health professionals as well as for women who are planning pregnancy, are pregnant or are new mothers. Visit the Video Library 
"2020 Vision" and "Blueprint for Action" Reports Available
Leaders from across the U.S. health care system have prepared several reports for improving the maternity care system. Learn about Transforming Maternity Care project Read the "2020 Vision" Read the "Blueprint for Action" Read the Consumer Workgroup report Help implement Blueprint recommendations Listen to report release event audio, 1/2010
Help Transform Maternity Care!
Please join our efforts to make quality maternity care a top national priority. Your support will help make the transformation possible. View 2010 Supporter Roster 
Rising Maternal Mortality Analysis of maternal mortality data for the state of California, with 14% of the nation's births, strongly suggests that maternal mortality is increasing in tandem with rising rates of cesarean section and obesity. Read article about maternal mortality in California  Read companion Q&A 
Updated Maternity Care Statistics Available A fact sheet summarizes U.S. maternity care trends and figures from the latest federal reports. A new table updates state-level maternity statistics. These update background information in the 2008 Milbank Report on Evidence-Based Maternity Care. Get the fact sheet  Get state-level statistics (PDF)  Read Evidence-Based Maternity Care 
US Cochrane Center (USCC)/Consumers United for Evidence-based Healthcare (CUE) Visit the USCC/CUE website for the latest pregnancy and childbirth systematic reviews. 
Evidence-Based Maternity Care Report Released A major new report takes stock of the U.S. maternity care system and finds great opportunities for improvement. Childbirth Connection collaborated with the Reforming States Group and the Milbank Memorial Fund to develop the report. Learn more, get the report  Read companion USA Today article  Read the USA Today article  Read the Consumer Reports story  Take the Consumer Reports quiz Read Our Bodies Our Blog entry 
New Mothers Speak Out National Report Released The latest report in Childbirth Connection's Listening to Mothers series is now available. Get an eye-opening look at the reality of life as a mother of young children in the United States, based on national surveys conducted by Harris Interactive. Learn more, get the report Read the Wall Street Journal story and listen to the podcast  Download Quick Facts (PDF) 
"A boppy is invaluable for a breastfeeding mother, especially at first."
-Listening to Mothers® survey participant
Every woman has the right to full and clear information about benefits, risks, and costs of the procedures, drugs, tests and treatments offered to her, and of all other reasonable options, including no intervention. She should receive this information about all interventions that are likely to be offered during labor and birth well before the onset of labor.
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