
Why suffering people can benefit from special clinics
Bethani Murray experienced two early pregnancy losses last year and wanted to wait for follow-up mental health care.
In the last winter, when the dead were five weeks pregnant, she realized that she was heavy bleeding and fled to the emergency department. She was destroyed to end pregnancy. She and her husband tried again after months, but during an ultrasound appointment, she learned that her second pregnancy also ended quickly.
“My mind was just walking,” Murray remembered. “You consider everything guilty on yourself, even if at the end of the day, you finally know that you have done nothing.”
According to the Society of Canada (SOGC) obstetric and gynecologist, about 15 percent of pregnancies end up before 14 weeks of pregnancies.
Some will face loss of early pregnancy, usually called abortion, many times.
According to SOGC, psychological crises such as depression, anxiety and post-tractic stress disorder are common after such damage.

The new guidelines issued at the annual SOGC conference at Whistler, BC this week are designed to improve patients’ care. they include:
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Run initial pregnancy assessment clinics, where nurses and physicians provide kind of kindness to women in a private sector of emergency departments that are under 20 weeks and experience pregnancy complications such as nausea, vomiting, vaginal bleeding, abdominal pain or cramps.
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Offer some first quarterly pregnancy damage to avoid surgery to free medicines used to free medicine from medicine.
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Regular depression and improvement of mental health screening to check for post-trace disorder (PTSD) in diagnosis of pregnancy loss.
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Provide condolences and other resources to help women facing early disadvantages of pregnancy.
SOGC President Dr. Lynn Murphy-Kalebac said, “Studies have clearly offered compassionate care in a proper manner, which can reduce that effect,” SOGC President Dr.. Lin Murphy-Kalebek said, “.
The new national guidelines from Canadian obstetrics and gynecologists’ obstetrics and gynecologists aim to help patients to experience early abortion, with specific trauma-informed care and improved mental health screenings.
All-in-one clinics provide benefits
Murray agreed with the recommendations, saying that she wants someone to talk with her in the hospital and connected her to the support network.
When she went to mental health consultation, Whitbi, Onts.
“I think there should be a separate room for women who have suffered early or late pregnancy losses, where you are not, you know, sitting in a room filled with pregnant women.”
SOGC recommendations include a call for more early pregnancy evaluation clinics to be established across the country, similar to people in Britain.
Dr. Modupe Tunde-Bass, a maternity specialist and gynecologist who trained in Britain, introduced a clinic of such a clinic at the North York General Hospital where she currently works.

He welcomed the recommendation and estimates that approximately one-third of hospitals provide similar clinics, concentrated in major cities.
SOGC President Murphy-Kalbeck says the recommendations continuously and for equitable care, especially important for rural areas where the emergency department is often the only option.
Early pregnancy loss is still “a situation that no one talks about,” said Tunde-Bass, who is also an associate professor of maternity and gynecology at the University of Toronto.
Permanent depression and anxiety
Tunde-Boys stated that a health care provider in a welcome environment with “Fine-Tuned” care could make a difference to long-term health.
Instead of using a whole new set of resources, clinics use existing hospital staff and location. In the clinic of Tunde-Boys, patients who experience bleeding, abdominal pain and cramps are taken care of in a private room instead of the emergency department.
The wife of Etienne Crevier had an abortion two weeks ago. He wants the father to grieve for access to the insurance benefits of the same parent to mourn the loss of a child.
Tunde-Bais said that training nurses or doctors in condolences or breaking bad news will help in such clinics.
“When you think of depression, after painful stress disorders, after anxiety, it actually runs for six to 12 months,” Tunde-Boys said, existing children and partners are also affected.
Osthetician and gynecologist Elisay Kami, who works in the early pregnancy clinic of North York General Hospital and not involved in developing guidelines, says that emergency departments are designed to treat serious, potentially life-threatening disease or injury.
“But the initial loss of pregnancy is never an intense condition, it is something that appears from days to weeks,” Laxi said.
So those who experience early disadvantages of pregnancy sometimes have to wait for hours in the emergency department, while an early pregnancy assessment clinic is more ideal.
“We provide nursing care, physician care, ultrasound lab care at one place,” Laxi said. “So we can help patients understand what is going on in their early pregnancy complications.”
Murray called the loss of back-to-back pregnancy “Soul Crushing”, and now turns to a support group for those who have experienced what he did.
“I’m doing much better now, but it was not an easy process to go through unfortunately,” she said.