August 31, 2007

Iran Adopts a Custom Long Seen As a Sign of Western Social Progress

This summer Sarem hospital in Tehran became the first in Iran to allow a father inside a delivery room during the birth of his child. “Now a custom long seen as a sign of western social progress is being adopted in the conservative setting of Iran,” journalist Robert Tait writes in The Guardian (July 23, 2007).

Dr. Abutaleb Sarem, a western-trained specialist obstetrician and medical director is making an effort to persuade more women to have natural childbirth. In Iran, 70% of babies are born by caesarean section, a procedure with high risks of infection and other serious side effects. Doctors find that the presence of the father calms the mother’s fears and the support helps make a natural birth easier.

Dr. Sarem said of this groundbreaking event, “The husband was emotional and in tears.” We hear it all the time, “Having a baby changes everything.” Seeing their children enter the world, being present with the mother as she goes through the labor process, surely that would affect fathers psychologically. It’s interesting to consider what might result socially and politically as more and more fathers in Iran share this experience.

Our expert, Laura E. Berk, professor of developmental psychology, Illinois State University, weighs in:

Iran’s sky-high cesarean rate is believed to be an outgrowth of the
country’s Islamic revolution, which required women to cover their bodies in Islamic dress. They focused on beautifying what remained visible—their faces—and opted for “nose jobs” in record numbers. A new generation receptive to elective surgery arose in which C-sections became routine, a trend supported by the procedure’s affordability. In Iran, the surgery costs only slightly more than a vaginal delivery.

Needless C-sections, however, pose risks. Although the surgery itself is safe, mother and baby require extra time for recovery. Anesthetic often crosses the placenta, making newborns sleepy and unresponsive and placing some at risk for breathing difficulties. These factors can make a cesarean newborn more difficult to care for, with potential negative effects on the early parent-infant bond.

Alarmed by the high cesarean rate, the Iranian government recently initiated media campaigns that inform the public of health risks. The time has grown ripe in Iran to draw women away from routine C-sections toward natural childbirth, with the incentive of a peak life experience. Because men, including husbands, are banned from delivery rooms in Iranian hospitals, Dr. Sarem’s achievement—a father supporting the mother during childbirth—is truly a landmark event.

Social support—the presence of a trained, caring companion who encourages, touches, and promotes relaxation—is crucial to the success of natural childbirth techniques. It is linked to a shorter labor, fewer birth complications, higher Apgar scores (a rating of the newborn’s physical condition), and more positive interaction between mother and baby. Continuous—rather than intermittent—social support strengthens these favorable outcomes.

A father’s early interaction with his baby is also beneficial. Most fathers are overjoyed at the arrival of their son or daughter, describe the experience as “awesome” and “unforgettable,” are intensely interested in the newborn child, and touch, look at, talk to, and kiss the newborn as much as mothers do. And as with mothers, certain hormonal changes in fathers, which are triggered by the presence of the newborn, help foster their involvement and sensitivity.

In sum, when fathers participate in natural childbirth, mothers recover more quickly from the birth experience and are more effective newborn caregivers. And paternal contact with the baby in the minutes and hours after birth may be one of several factors that help build a good father–infant relationship.

Boys, They Aren’t What They Used To Be

(Note to parents: You might want to share this good news story with your teenage boys. After all, when was the last time they heard the media say something positive about them?)

“Boys today look pretty good compared with their dads and older cousins,” writes David Von Drehle in “The Myth About Boys" (Time, July
26, 2007). “By some measures, our boys are doing better than ever.”

In fact, Justice Department statistics show that the juvenile crime rate is down by two-thirds from its peak in 1993 and the juvenile male prison population is only half its historical high.

“My favorite statistic seemed to sum up all the others,” writes Von Drehle, “fewer boys today are deadbeats. The percentage of young men between 16 and 19 who neither work nor attend school has fallen by about a quarter since 1984.”

Von Drehle, father of a 10-year-old son himself, gives us a lot of good news regarding the state of our boys and offers some wise advice about where we can go from here. He points out that perhaps boys are doing better in part simply because we’re paying more attention to them. In particular, he sites a University of Michigan sociological study that indicates that there has been a sharp increase since the 1970s in the amount of time men spend with their children.

Click here to read the full, encouraging Time article, which includes interesting stats and a photo essay, "The Boys are All Right," by David Burnett. (It’s in the August 6, 2007 print issue.)

Reality Check Quickie #1

Today’s youth are doing better than we give them credit for. Here are just a few telling stats:

According to the 2006 Monitoring the Future survey of eighth, tenth, and twelfth graders, there has been an across-the-board decline in drug use among U.S. teens.

The teen birth rate in the U.S. has fallen to its lowest level ever recorded, according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

And, since 1991, the prevalence of many health-risk behaviors among high school students nationwide has decreased, according to The National Youth Risk Behavior Survey, the results of which were released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

For more reality check stats and stories, read the “Youth and Hope” chapter of And Now for the Good News.

Athletes and Dogs—They CAN Be a Healthy Combination

A lot of media attention has been given to one well-known athlete and his criminal mistreatment of dogs. Let’s switch our focus for a moment, shall we, to an athlete who’s helping promote positive interaction with animals.

Olympic and World champion Bruce Jenner will host the 2007 Cynosport World Games. The event is put on by the United States Dog Agility Association (USDAA) and will benefit The Human Society of the United States, an organization that helps improve the lives of dogs and other animals across the nation.

Jenner will be joined by other high-profile athletes including boxer Winky Wright and Olympic diving champion Greg Louganis, who actually participates in agility programs with his own dog.

The USDAA is the world’s largest independent authority for the sport of dog agility, a competitive sport that tests a person’s skills in training and handling of dogs over a timed obstacle course. With scoring based on faults similar to equestrian show jumping, dog agility has become an exciting spectator event for many.

The USDAA has more than 30,000 registered competitors and more than 30,000 dogs representing 200 different breeds of dogs, including mix-breeds, which means even loveable mutts can join in the games.

Dog lovers, mark your calendars. This year's Cynosport World Games will be held October 31 through November 4 at the Westworld Equestrian Center in Scottsdale, Arizona. For more information, visit www.cynosport.com.

Dreaming About Building a New Home? Read This First—It Could Save You a Ton of Dough and Help Save the Planet at the Same Time

The 2007 Modern Marvels Invent–Now Challenge which celebrates ingenuity, imagination, and inventions that could change history, awarded its 2007 Grand Prize to homebuilder Michael Sykes and his Enertia Building System.

Sykes’ Enertia homes save money in building costs, dramatically decrease heating and cooling costs, are built from a 100% renewable resource, and last far longer and are far stronger than conventional homes. They even look like a regular earthling home (your neighbors won’t curse you and your alien home).

Enertia—which means Energy from a shift-in-time—is a new energy technology, invented by Sykes, using the thermodynamic properties of—surprise—wood. There’s nothing new about building with wood, of course; it’s the type of wood and method of construction that make the difference.

Enertia homes are built with "Green Building Blocks" which are glue-laminated wooden blocks precut and numbered to form a prefab Geo-solar house. The wooden structure of the home doubles as a "thermal battery," shifting daytime solar gain to nighttime heating needs.

The blocks, made from tree-farmed, certified-sustainable Southern Pine timber, are 100% natural and 100% renewable. The US Southern Pine Forests are so vast, and the trees grow so fast, that the material used for the house will rejuvenate in less than 30 seconds. (that’s not a typo, 30-seconds.) The whole structure is Green and carbon negative when solar thermal panels and solar electricity are installed.

The blocks also speed up the construction time and can lower the cost of construction. During most of the building process the only tool needed is a high-torque electric drill. According to Sykes, building and living in an Enertia home is the environmental equivalent of taking 50 cars off the road.

Curious? Visit Enertia.com.

Sykes and his invention were recently featured on the new Discovery Science Channel series ECO-TECH. If you missed it, check channel listings as it will be re-broadcast.

The Invent–Now Challenge is sponsored by the History Channel, the US Patent office, Lexus, and Time magazine. Find details at The History Channel.


Palestinians and Israelis Eat, Drink, and Make Merry—Together

In mid-August over 6,000 religious and secular Jews and Muslims gathered in Latrobe, Israel, for a three-day festival of food, music, and dance. The event, now in its fifth year, with attendance continuing to grow, is an effort to promote peace between Israelis and Palestinians.

The “On the Way to Sulha” retreat was cofounded by Israeli Gabriel Meyer and his Palestinian counterpart, Elias Jabbour, and is designed to be a living example of peaceful coexistence among the “family of Abraham.”

Forgiveness is a major theme of the gathering. Palestinians and Israelis who have lost family members to the violence between the two groups sit and listen to each other tell their stories. “We have to be honest,” a male attendee said. “I don’t want to be ‘right’ anymore.”

One young Israeli attendee, her arm around a head-scarved Muslim woman, summed it up this way, “We can’t leave peace to politicians because they’re not leading us to peace.”

Skeptics say the event is just a small naive group of people. Maybe, but then we could characterize the beginning of most successful social movements that way, couldn’t we?

“Look at France and Germany,” said a Palestinian attendee, “there was so much destruction there during the war, and now there are open borders, same passports, same money.” Anything’s possible.

To read Peace in the Middle East, One Gathering at a Time” by Aliyana Traison in Haaretz, the Daily Israel newspaper (English edition), click here.

For a 2-minute video report by Simon McGregor-Wood of ABC, click here. (Have 30-seconds worth of patience handythis video is preceded by a short video ad.)

August 30, 2007

Today's Inspiring Boot in the Behind

Brought to us by Walt Whitman (1819 – 1892), American poet who espoused individual worth and the oneness of humanity:

Long enough have you dream’d contemptible dreams
Now I wash the gum from your eyes,
You must habit yourself to the dazzle of the light and of every moment of your life.

Long have you timidly waded holding a plank by the shore,
Now I will you to be a bold swimmer,
To jump off in the midst of the sea, rise again, nod to me, shout, and laughingly dash with your hair.

from “Song of Myself,” Leaves of Grass
verse 46, lines 28-33