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A Reading List for ‘The Retrievals' Season 2
A Reading List for ‘The Retrievals' Season 2

New York Times

time24-07-2025

  • Health
  • New York Times

A Reading List for ‘The Retrievals' Season 2

By Susan Burton Hi 'Retrievals' listeners! Episode 3 drops today. (If you're just joining us, catch up with our newsletters about Episode 1 and Episode 2.) In Episode 3, we meet Susanna Stanford, who lives in England. In my estimation, Susanna has done more than anyone in the world to try to solve the problem of pain during cesarean — despite the fact that she has no medical training. When I first met Susanna, a little over a year ago in a hotel room in London, she handed me a folder of documents. Many of the documents were articles from medical journals about pain during cesarean, including some Susanna had written herself. You might think that medical journal articles would be dry, but I found them fascinating. Taken together, they told their own story of how we got to this point with pain during cesarean. These studies spoke to key moments in obstetric anesthesia, offering insight into how pain was discussed at different points in recent history, and when and how researchers began to elevate it as an important area of study. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

‘The Retrievals' is not meant to scare you
‘The Retrievals' is not meant to scare you

New York Times

time17-07-2025

  • Health
  • New York Times

‘The Retrievals' is not meant to scare you

By Susan Burton Hi Retrievals listeners, Episode 2 drops today! If you missed the Episode 1 newsletter, about what led me to report on the problem of severe pain during C-sections and the people trying to solve it, you can find it here. Episode 2 takes up the question of 'why?' Why are patients feeling everything during C-sections? It's not an easy question to answer, and in this episode, we hear what happens when a doctor gets up onstage and asks a ballroom full of anesthesiologists to wrestle with it. Last week, when we announced the new season on Instagram, hundreds of readers responded in the comments, often with personal stories of painful C-sections. Others questioned whether it was even a good idea to put this type of content out there on Instagram. Personally what I find scary is that 100,000 U.S. patients a year are feeling significant pain during major abdominal surgery and that hardly anyone knows about it. Yes, it would be great if everyone could have a one-on-one consultation with an anesthesiologist before they even go into labor. It's not such a pie-in-the-sky idea: People are thinking about how to make this a reality. (Search this report for 'prenatal anesthesia consultations.') But right now that's not how our system works. So now that you know that this can happen during a C-section, what do you do with that information? Often the answer to this question is: Advocate for yourself! And, yes, but that should not be the only answer. The responsibility should not be on patients to fix this problem. Yesterday a listener sent me an email saying that when the doctors tested her spinal block before her C-section, she could tell the block wasn't working. Initially she was met with disbelief, and so, lying exposed on the operating table she had to, she wrote, 'project manage' the OR in order to get the care she needed. You should not have to project manage your own C-section. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

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