BRAINED
Trying to make a decision? Get BRAINED!
Ask yourself, and your caregivers, these questions:
Benefits - How could the recommended course of action help me or my baby?Trying to make a decision? Get BRAINED!
Ask yourself, and your caregivers, these questions:
Risks - How could the recommended course of action harm me or my baby?
Alternatives - Are there any other courses of action I could consider?
Intuition - What are my gut feelings about this?
Nothing - What happens if I do nothing?
Evaluate - Can you give me some time to consider my choices? Then...
Decide - Now that I have the information I need, I'm ready to make a decision.
BRAINS
Benefits- How will this procedure benefit me and my baby?Risks - What are the risks to me and my baby?
Alternatives - What are some other things we might try instead?
Instinct/Intuition - What is your gut telling you?
Now/Never/Nothing - What if we don't do the procedure right now? What if we never do it? What if we do nothing?
Safety/Satisfaction - Will this procedure increase the safety and satisfaction of the birth for me and my baby?
To give credit where it's due: the BRAINED acronym comes from a handout that someone gave me from "Lucina Birth Services." The BRAINS acronym was passed around on a doula list serve.
Thanks for sharing those! I've only heard and use "BRAND" but I love the addition of "intuition".
ReplyDeleteI recently found your blog through another blog. Just wanted to post and let you know I am really enjoying your posts and your wealth of knowledge! :)
Thanks - those are great acronyms!
ReplyDeleteHere's a good one - HBABS
ReplyDeletekb, I am sensing a lot of hostility from your posts ("home birth advocate b.s." is what I am guessing your acronym was meant to convey). You are welcome to ask questions, disagree, discuss, whatever--but I will not welcome pure meanness on my blog. This is your final warning.
ReplyDeleteBy the way, I would argue that this stuff isn't just "BS"--being informed of the risks, benefits, and alternatives of every single medical procedure, and allowing the woman to make the final decision, is not only an ethical foundation of medicine; it's a legal obligation.