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Myth: I heard that
you're not to take baths because germs could get into your vagina and be
passed to the baby.
Truth: This is
false. Baths are very good for pregnant women. The problem is more the
temperature than the actual bath.
Be sure that you avoid the use of hot tubs and hot baths (above 100
degrees F). These can cause your body temperature to rise, and this can
cause problems for a developing baby, particularly in the first
trimester.
Baths are a great source of relaxation and also work well for the
aches and pains of pregnancy.
Your baby is not in danger of getting germs from bathing. The baby is
protected by the amniotic sac and the mucous plug. Although studies that
have shown that water doesn't really enter the vagina during bathing
anyway.
Comments: This is a
thoroughly modern superstition, given that germs and their relationship
to disease were unknown prior to the 19th century. It was Louis Pasteur
(1822-1895), a French scientist looking for ways to improve the quality
of his nation's beer, who first understood the function of bacteria and
promoted better hygiene as a way of staving off disease.
It's ironic that Pasteur's discoveries, responsible for saving the
lives of countless women in childbirth due to improved sanitary
practices, should result in the myth that bathing during pregnancy
endangers the health of the fetus. But simple misunderstandings of fact
are often the precursors of questionable folk wisdom.
Superstitions about pregnancy and childbirth were even more common in
ancient times, of course, but fear of bathing was not among them. In
fact, Roman physicians encouraged regular baths for pregnant women.
Soranus of Ephenus, writing in the second century A.D., advised bathing
in "sweet water" and drinking wine for relaxation throughout
pregnancy. Something tells me modern obstetricians might take issue with
with the latter.
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