Monday, July 23, 2012

Childhood Stress


Several families I know have been affected by war.  The families have all had their fathers deployed with having small children.  The impact on the chidlrne varied with the ages of the children.  When the children were young with the father deployed, it led to more melt downs and tantrums in the first few months, especially if the daily routines were interrupted or changed.  After a while things improved.  When the father returned after being gone roughly a year, it took a little while for them to warm back up to them if they were very young.  The families that had children in elementary school, several had noticed changes in attitude, behavior, and academics of the children.  As time went on the families became more unified and close as the toll of dad being gone started affecting them.  The older children of one family joined into military children support groups and this really helped them cope with the fears and issues they had of their dad being gone.  The boys of one family stepped up to lead the role of the man of the house while dad was gone as well. 

Africa houses 70% of adults and 80% of all the children in the world that have AIDS.  With that many people suffering from the disease there are many stressors that are placed upon the children.  The first is that many children are losing their parents to the disease.  If not losing or lost one, they are often losing both.  Then they are either orphaned or taken in by family members, who often also being affected by the disease.  The children are losing other family members and friends to the disease that can also cause stress.  When children lose a parent not only is the emotional loss of a parent but they are also now at a much higher risk for poverty, if not already there, or going further into poverty if it was the bread winner that has passed in the long run. Some places actually give families a government stipend when a life is lost.  Other stressors placed upon the children are that they are now responsible for the agricultural family responsibilities.  This includes both tending to the livestock and the crops.  Many children have not yet had to learn this responsibility yet. Some countries have implemented extension programs to help these children learn the skills needed to care for the animals and grow the crops.  Education and protection is the best way to help these children cope with the loss of their loved ones and to protect themselves in the future. 

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

I love this site!


Sunday, July 8, 2012



Throughout history we have seen epidemics wipe out mass quantities of populations.  With the discovery of medicines that can help prevent and control diseases such as polio, pertussismeasles, flu and now even chicken pox.  We see in countries such as those in Africa where diseases are still abundant but are not in countries with advanced medicine.  With the use of vaccines throughout the last few hundred years we have been able to almost eliminate many of the inhibiting diseases that were common.  It is critical for parents to continue to immunize their children and continue eliminating such diseases.  As times have changed and suspect of conditions such as Autism being linked to the MMR vaccine, it has caused controversy over teh benefits of the immunizations.  It seems to be that the prevention of such death from disease would be a much better outcome that possibilities of developing autism (which was denounced as falsified documents and tainted studies).  We need to continue immunizing all children and adults around the world to to help eliminate deadly diseases.  I cannot imagine risking my children's health for them to develop one of the horrid diseases due to my choice of not immunizing them.  


This information will impact my future work by incorporating the importance of immunizations in my training that I provide to my staff.  My staff will then be well informed and be able to pass this information on to the parents in our program.  If we can encourage just one parent to immunize their children, we could be saving a life.  


Why Immunize?
For Parents


Why immunize our children? Sometimes we are confused by the messages in the media. First we are assured that, thanks to vaccines, some diseases are almost gone from the U.S. But we are also warned to immunize our children, ourselves as adults, and the elderly.
Diseases are becoming rare due to vaccinations.
It's true, some diseases (like polio and diphtheria) are becoming very rare in the U.S. Of course, they are becoming rare largely because we have been vaccinating against them. But it is still reasonable to ask whether it's really worthwhile to keep vaccinating.
It's much like bailing out a boat with a slow leak. When we started bailing, the boat was filled with water. But we have been bailing fast and hard, and now it is almost dry. We could say, "Good. The boat is dry now, so we can throw away the bucket and relax." But the leak hasn't stopped. Before long we'd notice a little water seeping in, and soon it might be back up to the same level as when we started.
Keep immunizing until disease is eliminated.
Unless we can "stop the leak" (eliminate the disease), it is important to keep immunizing. Even if there are only a few cases of disease today, if we take away the protection given by vaccination, more and more people will be infected and will spread disease to others. Soon we will undo the progress we have made over the years.
Japan reduced pertussis vaccinations, and an epidemic occurred.
In 1974, Japan had a successful pertussis (whooping cough) vaccination program, with nearly 80% of Japanese children vaccinated. That year only 393 cases of pertussis were reported in the entire country, and there were no deaths from pertussis. But then rumors began to spread that pertussis vaccination was no longer needed and that the vaccine was not safe, and by 1976 only 10% of infants were getting vaccinated. In 1979 Japan suffered a major pertussis epidemic, with more than 13,000 cases of whooping cough and 41 deaths. In 1981 the government began vaccinating with acellular pertussis vaccine, and the number of pertussis cases dropped again.
What if we stopped vaccinating?
So what would happen if we stopped vaccinating here? Diseases that are almost unknown would stage a comeback. Before long we would see epidemics of diseases that are nearly under control today. More children would get sick and more would die.
We vaccinate to protect our future.
We don't vaccinate just to protect our children. We also vaccinate to protect our grandchildren and their grandchildren. With one disease, smallpox, we "stopped the leak" in the boat by eradicating the disease. Our children don't have to get smallpox shots any more because the disease no longer exists. If we keep vaccinating now, parents in the future may be able to trust that diseases like polio and meningitis won't infect, cripple, or kill children. Vaccinations are one of the best ways to put an end to the serious effects of certain diseases. 

Why Immunize?  Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.  2012. 

What Would Happen If We Stopped Vaccinations?


In the U.S., vaccination programs have eliminated or significantly reduced many vaccine-preventable diseases. However, these diseases still exist and can once again become common—and deadly—if vaccination coverage does not continue at high levels.

Introduction

In the U.S., vaccines have reduced or eliminated many infectious diseases that once routinely killed or harmed many infants, children, and adults. However, the viruses and bacteria that cause vaccine-preventable disease and death still exist and can be passed on to people who are not protected by vaccines. Vaccine-preventable diseases have many social and economic costs: sick children miss school and can cause parents to lose time from work. These diseases also result in doctor's visits, hospitalizations, and even premature deaths.
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Polio

Stopping vaccination against polio will leave people susceptible to infection with the polio virus. Polio virus causes acute paralysis that can lead to permanent physical disability and even death. Before polio vaccine was available, 13,000 to 20,000 cases of paralytic polio were reported each year in the United States. These annual epidemics of polio often left thousands of victims--mostly children--in braces, crutches, wheelchairs, and iron lungs. The effects were life-long. UPDATED April 2007
In 1988 the World Health Assembly unanimously agreed to eradicate polio worldwide. As a result of global polio eradication efforts, the number of cases reported globally has decreased from more than 350,000 cases in 125 countries in 1988 to 2,000 cases of polio in 17 countries in 2006, and only four countries remain endemic (Afghanistan, India, Nigeria, Pakistan). To date polio has been eliminated from the Western hemisphere, and the European and Western Pacific regions. Stopping vaccination before eradication is achieved would result in a resurgence of the disease in the United States and worldwide.
This section last updated April 2007.
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Measles

Before measles immunization was available, nearly everyone in the U.S. got measles. An average of 450 measles-associated deaths were reported each year between 1953 and 1963.
In the U.S., up to 20 percent of persons with measles are hospitalized. Seventeen percent of measles cases have had one or more complications, such as ear infections, pneumonia, or diarrhea. Pneumonia is present in about six percent of cases and accounts for most of the measles deaths. Although less common, some persons with measles develop encephalitis (swelling of the lining of the brain), resulting in brain damage. 
As many as three of every 1,000 persons with measles will die in the U.S. In the developing world, the rate is much higher, with death occurring in about one of every 100 persons with measles.
Measles is one of the most infectious diseases in the world and is frequently imported into the U.S. In the period 1997-2000, most cases were associated with international visitors or U.S. residents who were exposed to the measles virus while traveling abroad. More than 90 percent of people who are not immune will get measles if they are exposed to the virus.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), nearly 900,000 measles-related deaths occurred among persons in developing countries in 1999. In populations that are not immune to measles, measles spreads rapidly. If vaccinations were stopped, each year about 2.7 million measles deaths worldwide could be expected.
In the U.S., widespread use of measles vaccine has led to a greater than 99 percent reduction in measles compared with the pre-vaccine era. If we stopped immunization, measles would increase to pre-vaccine levels.
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Haemophilus Influenzae Type b (Hib) Meningitis

Before Hib vaccine became available, Hib was the most common cause of bacterial meningitis in U.S. infants and children. Before the vaccine was developed, there were approximately 20,000 invasive Hib cases annually. Approximately two-thirds of the 20,000 cases were meningitis, and one-third were other life-threatening invasive Hib diseases such as bacteria in the blood, pneumonia, or inflammation of the epiglottis. About one of every 200 U.S. children under 5 years of age got an invasive Hib disease.Hib meningitis once killed 600 children each year and left many survivors with deafness, seizures, or mental retardation.
Since introduction of conjugate Hib vaccine in December 1987, the incidence of Hib has declined by 98 percent. From 1994-1998, fewer than 10 fatal cases of invasive Hib disease were reported each year.
This preventable disease was a common, devastating illness as recently as 1990; now, most pediatricians just finishing training have never seen a case. If we were to stop immunization, we would likely soon return to the pre-vaccine numbers of invasive Hib disease cases and deaths.
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Pertussis (Whooping Cough)

Since the early 1980s, reported pertussis cases have been increasing, with peaks every 3-5 years; however, the number of reported cases remains much lower than levels seen in the pre-vaccine era. Compared with pertussis cases in other age groups, infants who are 6 months old or younger with pertussis experience the highest rate of hospitalization, pneumonia, seizures, encephalopathy (a degenerative disease of the brain) and death. From 2000 through 2008, 181 persons died from pertussis; 166 of these were less than six months old.
Before pertussis immunizations were available, nearly all children developed whooping cough. In the U.S., prior to pertussis immunization, between 150,000 and 260,000 cases of pertussis were reported each year, with up to 9,000 pertussis-related deaths.
Pertussis can be a severe illness, resulting in prolonged coughing spells that can last for many weeks. These spells can make it difficult for a person to eat, drink, and breathe. Because vomiting often occurs after a coughing spell, persons may lose weight and become dehydrated. In infants, it can also cause pneumonia and lead to brain damage, seizures, and mental retardation.
The newer pertussis vaccine (acellular or DTaP) has been available for use in the United States since 1991 and has been recommended for exclusive use since 1998. These vaccines are effective and associated with fewer mild and moderate adverse reactions when compared with the older (whole-cell DTP) vaccines.
During the 1970s, widespread concerns about the safety of the older pertussis vaccine led to a rapid fall in immunization levels in the United Kingdom. More than 100,000 cases and 36 deaths due to pertussis were reported during an epidemic in the mid 1970s. In Japan, pertussis vaccination coverage fell from 80 percent in 1974 to 20 percent in 1979. An epidemic occurred in 1979, resulted in more than 13,000 cases and 41 deaths.
Pertussis cases occur throughout the world. If we stopped pertussis immunizations in the U.S., we would experience a massive resurgence of pertussis disease. A study* found that, in eight countries where immunization coverage was reduced, incidence rates of pertussis surged to 10 to 100 times the rates in countries where vaccination rates were sustained. 
*Reference for study: Gangarosa EJ, et al. Impact of anti-vaccine movements on pertussis control: the untold story. Lancet 1998;351:356-61.
This section last updated August 2010.
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Pneumococcal

Before pneumococcal conjugate vaccine became available for children, pneumococcus caused 63,000 cases of invasive pneumococcal disease and 6,100 deaths in the U.S. each year. Many children who developed pneumococcal meningitis also developed long-term complications such as deafness or seizures. Since the vaccine was introduced, the incidence of invasive pneumococcal disease in children has been reduced by 75%. Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine also reduces spread of pneumococcus from children to adults. In 2003 alone, there were 30,000 fewer cases of invasive pneumococcal disease caused by strains included in the vaccine, including 20,000 fewer cases in children and adults too old to receive the vaccine. If we were to stop immunization, we would likely soon return to the pre-vaccine numbers of invasive pneumococcal disease cases and deaths.
This section last updated April 2007.
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Rubella (German Measles)

While rubella is usually mild in children and adults, up to 90 percent of infants born to mothers infected with rubella during the first trimester of pregnancy will developcongenital rubella syndrome (CRS), resulting in heart defects, cataracts, mental retardation, and deafness.
In 1964-1965, before rubella immunization was used routinely in the U.S., there was an epidemic of rubella that resulted in an estimated 20,000 infants born with CRS, with 2,100 neonatal deaths and 11,250 miscarriages. Of the 20,000 infants born with CRS, 11,600 were deaf, 3,580 were blind, and 1,800 were mentally retarded.
Due to the widespread use of rubella vaccine, only six CRS cases were provisionally reported in the U.S. in 2000. Because many developing countries do not include rubella in the childhood immunization schedule, many of these cases occurred in foreign-born adults. Since 1996, greater than 50 percent of the reported rubella cases have been among adults. Since 1999, there have been 40 pregnant women infected with rubella.
If we stopped rubella immunization, immunity to rubella would decline and rubella would once again return, resulting in pregnant women becoming infected with rubella and then giving birth to infants with CRS.
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Varicella (Chickenpox)

Prior to the licensing of the chickenpox vaccine in 1995, almost all persons in the United States had suffered from chickenpox by adulthood. Each year, the virus caused an estimated 4 million cases of chickenpox, 11,000 hospitalizations, and 100-150 deaths.
A highly contagious disease, chickenpox is usually mild but can be severe in some persons. Infants, adolescents and adults, pregnant women, and immunocompromised persons are at particular risk for serious complications including secondary bacterial infections, loss of fluids (dehydration), pneumonia, and central nervous system involvement. The availability of the chickenpox vaccine and its subsequent widespread use has had a major impact on reducing cases of chickenpox and related morbidity, hospitalizations, and deaths. In some areas, cases have decreased as much as 90% over prevaccination numbers.
If vaccination against chickenpox were to stop, the disease would eventually return to prevaccination rates, with virtually all susceptible persons becoming infected with the virus at some point in their lives.
This section last updated June 2011.
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Hepatitis B

More than 2 billion persons worldwide have been infected with the hepatitis B virus at some time in their lives. Of these, 350 million are life-long carriers of the disease and can transmit the virus to others. One million of these people die each year from liver disease and liver cancer.
National studies have shown that about 12.5 million Americans have been infected with hepatitis B virus at some point in their lifetime. One and one quarter million Americans are estimated to have chronic (long-lasting) infection, of whom 20 percent to 30 percent acquired their infection in childhood. Chronic hepatitis B virus infection increases a person's risk for chronic liver disease, cirrhosis, and liver cancer. About 5,000 persons will die each year from hepatitis B-related liver disease resulting in over $700 million in medical and work loss costs.
The number of new infections per year has declined from an average of 450,000 in the 1980s to about 80,000 in 1999. The greatest decline has occurred among children and adolescents due to routine hepatitis B vaccination.
Infants and children who become infected with hepatitis B virus are at highest risk of developing lifelong infection, which often leads to death from liver disease (cirrhosis) and liver cancer. Approximately 25 percent of children who become infected with life-long hepatitis B virus would be expected to die of related liver disease as adults.
CDC estimates that one-third of the life-long hepatitis B virus infections in the United States resulted from infections occurring in infants and young children. About 16,000 - 20,000 hepatitis B antigen infected women give birth each year in the United States. It is estimated that 12,000 children born to hepatitis B virus infected mothers were infected each year before implementation of infant immunization programs. In addition, approximately 33,000 children (10 years of age and younger) of mothers who are not infected with hepatitis B virus were infected each year before routine recommendation of childhood hepatitis B vaccination.
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Diphtheria

Diphtheria is a serious disease caused by a bacterium. This germ produces a poisonous substance or toxin which frequently causes heart and nerve problems. The case fatality rate is 5 percent to 10 percent, with higher case-fatality rates (up to 20 percent) in the very young and the elderly.
In the 1920's, diphtheria was a major cause of illness and death for children in the U.S. In 1921, a total of 206,000 cases and 15,520 deaths were reported. With vaccine development in 1923, new cases of diphtheria began to fall in the U.S., until in 2001 only two cases were reported.
Although diphtheria is rare in the U.S., it appears that the bacteria continue to get passed among people. In 1996, 10 isolates of the bacteria were obtained from persons in an American Indian community in South Dakota, none of whom had classic diphtheria disease. There was one death reported in 2003 from clinical diphtheria in a 63 year old male who had never been vaccinated.
There are high rates of susceptibility among adults. Screening tests conducted since 1977 have shown that 41 percent to 84 percent of adults 60 and over lack protective levels of circulating antitoxin against diphtheria.
Although diphtheria is rare in the U.S., it is still a threat. Diphtheria is common in other parts of the world and with the increase in international travel, diphtheria and other infectious diseases are only a plane ride away. If we stopped immunization, the U.S. might experience a situation similar to the Newly Independent States of the former Soviet Union. With the breakdown of the public health services in this area, diphtheria epidemics began in 1990, fueled primarily by persons who were not properly vaccinated. From 1990-1999, more than 150,000 cases and 5,000 deaths were reported.
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Tetanus (Lockjaw)

Tetanus is a severe, often fatal disease. The bacteria that cause tetanus are widely distributed in soil and street dust, are found in the waste of many animals, and are very resistant to heat and germ-killing cleaners. From 1922-1926, there were an estimated 1,314 cases of tetanus per year in the U.S. In the late 1940's, the tetanus vaccine was introduced, and tetanus became a disease that was officially counted and tracked by public health officials. In 2000, only 41 cases of tetanus were reported in the U.S.
People who get tetanus suffer from stiffness and spasms of the muscles. The larynx (throat) can close causing breathing and eating difficulties, muscles spasms can cause fractures (breaks) of the spine and long bones, and some people go into a coma, and die. Approximately 20 percent of reported cases end in death.
Tetanus in the U.S. is primarily a disease of adults, but unvaccinated children and infants of unvaccinated mothers are also at risk for tetanus and neonatal tetanus, respectively. From 1995-1997, 33 percent of reported cases of tetanus occurred among persons 60 years of age or older and 60 percent occurred in patients greater than 40 years of age. The National Health Interview Survey found that in 1995, only 36 percent of adults 65 or older had received a tetanus vaccination during the preceding 10 years.
Worldwide, tetanus in newborn infants continues to be a huge problem. Every yeartetanus kills 300,000 newborns and 30,000 birth mothers who were not properly vaccinated. Even though the number of reported cases is low, an increased number of tetanus cases in younger persons has been observed recently in the U.S. among intravenous drug users, particularly heroin users.
Tetanus is infectious, but not contagious, so unlike other vaccine-preventable diseases, immunization by members of the community will not protect others from the disease. Because tetanus bacteria are widespread in the environment, tetanus can only be prevented by immunization. If vaccination against tetanus were stopped, persons of all ages in the U.S. would be susceptible to this serious disease.
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Mumps

Before the mumps vaccine was introduced, mumps was a major cause of deafness in children, occurring in approximately 1 in 20,000 reported cases. Mumps is usually a mild viral disease. However, serious complications, such as inflammation of the brain (encephalitis) can occur rarely. Prior to mumps vaccine, mumps encephalitis was the leading cause of viral encephalitis in the United States, but is now rarely seen.
Serious side effects of mumps are more common among adults than children. Swelling of the testes is the most common side effect in males past the age of puberty, occurring in up to 37 percent of post-pubertal males who contract mumps. An increase in miscarriages has been found among women who develop mumps during the first trimester of pregnancy.
Before there was a vaccine against mumps, mumps was a very common disease in U.S. children, with as many as 300,000 cases reported every year.  After vaccine licensure in 1967, reports of mumps decreased rapidly. In 1986 and 1987, there was a resurgence of mumps with 12,848 cases reported in 1987. Since 1989, the incidence of mumps has declined, with 266 reported cases in 2001. This recent decrease is probably due to the fact that children have received a second dose of mumps vaccine (part of the two-dose schedule for measles, mumps, rubella or MMR).  Studies have shown that the effectiveness of mumps vaccine ranges from 73% to 91% after 1 dose and from 79% to 95% after 2 doses and that 2 doses are more effective than 1 dose.
We can not let our guard down against mumps. A 2006 outbreak among college students led to over 6500 cases and a 2009-10 outbreak in the tradition-observant Jewish community in 2 states led to over 3400 cases. Mumps is a communicable disease and while prolonged close contact among persons my facilitate transmission, maintenance of high 2-dose MMR vaccine coverage remains the most effective way to prevent and limit the size of mumps outbreaks.

What Would Happen if We Stopped Immunizing? Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.  2012. 



Sunday, July 1, 2012


The only birth experiences that I have taken part in are my own.  I have given birth to two children.  I have a three year old and an 11 month old.  I can remember both clear as day as they took forever!  My daughter was my first.  She was 11 days late and I was induced.  I had planned to do it natural after taking the Bradley Method classes.  With an induction coming I knew that play may be slightly changed.  I went in Wednesday night at about 8pm and was hooked up and ballooned by 9pm.  Then the overnight wait for me to dilate.  My water was broken about 8am when I was 4cm and I had already been contracting.  Around noon they were heavy and by two pm I felt like I was dying.  I was bound and determined to do this without drugs.  My husband went home to let the dog out at about 4pm when they said I was still at 4cm.  I cried.  All day and I had made no progress.  I finally caved after being in pain for so long and exhausted and finally asked for drugs at about 5pm.  I got my epidural and it was glorious!  If I knew it worked that great I would have asked long before that! 
After that things picked up the pace.  I flew dilating.  By ten Thursday night I was ready to push and after ten minutes of that they made me stop and wait for the doctor.  It seemed like it took forever for her to get there.  She got there and four pushes later, Allie came flying into the world.  The doctor pretty much had to catch her coming out.  She scored low on her first APGAR and didn’t want to breathe very well and scared me.  Then on her five minute APGAR she scored a 9 so that was wonderful. 
The moment she was set on my chest is one that I will never forget.  My husband said “Welcome to Earth” and she turned her head right around to him.  She definitely knew the sound of her daddy’s voice.  We were all cracking up.  It really shows how well a fetus can hear in the womb and be able to recognize the voices they are familiar with when they come out. 
My son was kind of the same story but this time I had been diagnosed with Factor V Leiden a blood disorder.  My blood is thicker than normal.  When Allie was 6 months old I spent four days in ICU with massive blood clots in my leg and all over my lungs.  It was pretty scary.  I had to be very careful when I got pregnant because of the drugs I was on.  I was on Lovenox shots twice a day for my entire pregnancy and for 7 months after.  (Thus being the reason Tommy is probably our last baby)  I was induced a week early to help control my drugs and having to stop the Lovenox 48 hours before delivery just in case I had to have a C-section, that I wouldn’t have to be put all the way under, and I could get an epidural. 
I went in on Sunday morning about 8am, got hooked up and unfortunately I was not one of them that the second baby comes much faster.  He still took forever.  I didn’t wait so long for the epidural but that didn’t even help me progress and it took two different doctors to do it, then it only numbed half of me so they had to redo it.  That was rough.  Finally at 2am Monday morning I was ready to push and Tommy arrived at 2:32am.  Again that moment with him put on my chest is just amazing.  There really is no other feeling in the world and one that I will never forget. 
Now it’s a different story watching them grow up.  We have learned over our college careers about all the different stages of development and how they impact a child.  It is surreal to actually sit here watching your own children and see the stages play out in real life.  Then it becomes scary because you know what the next stage is going to be and you know you are in trouble!

I chose Japan to learn about their birth customs and ways of having a child.  I found a page written by a father on the birth of his twins.  He gave a personal experience through his eyes.  I found several other articles that aligned with his statements as well. 
Unlike pregnancies in the US, which encourage a minimum weight gain, in Japan doctors urge against weight gain?   Having a birth plan like many here in the United States doesn’t fit well with many Japanese doctors or hospitals.  Patients are most likely to go with the doctors schedule and policies rather than what the mother wants to happen. Obstetrician  see many, many patients a day and you do not receive much time to ask questions as the doctor has many other patients to get to.  Many of the hospitals work with midwifes and let the doctor handle the actually delivery. 

In Japan it seems customary for the hospital staff to care for the baby for the first three days that the mother is in the hospital and briefly see the baby.  The tradition of “rooming in” is not the norm.  It is customary to have natural births without the use of drugs and is seen as honor passage into motherhood.  (Schalken, 2012)Fathers must attend prenatal classes with the mother in order to be in the delivery room and they are not permitted in the operating room during a C-section and are to wait for the surgery to be finished.  The babies are to remain in an incubator for 24 hours with a C-Section.  The typical stay in the hospital for recovery with a vaginal delivery is minimum of five days, with a cesarean it is ten days.  Most stays in the US is 2-4.
Customs are that new mothers stay with the mother’s family for some time after the birth.  The new mom is to also stay in bed for 21 days to recover.  As opposed to the US where women are encouraged to move around and become active as their body lets them.  I went grocery shopping on the way home from the hospital with my son.  Some places in Japan also give a living subsidy for those families with small children until the age of five.  This is offered to all families as long as the area participates.  The only way this would happen in the US is if you are on state assistance and income qualify. 
There are many similarities and differences.  The main similarity is that in both countries most births occur in a hospital setting by an attending physician.  There are however many differences such as length of stay, using a birth play, the role of the father, and where the baby stays after delivery.  I do not think I would be comfortable having child in such an environment in which I was not in control of.  This is my body and my baby.  I should be the one mostly in charge of what is happening with us.  I also know I would never be able to spend the first month or two with my parents after giving birth.  I need the time and space with just my immediate family for bonding and our privacy.  I am very grateful that I had wonderful experiences and little issues or complications with either birth. 

Grey, Andy.  2008.  Giving Birth, Having a Baby in Japan http://www.globalcompassion.com/japan-birth.htm
Schalken, Laura.  (2012)  Birth Customs Around the World.  American Baby.  Meredith Corporation.  http://www.parents.com/pregnancy/giving-birth/vaginal/birth-customs-around-the-world/?page=4