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Re: Eating meat caused CPD was:Re Would you eat meat from cloned anim als?From: Henry Gregor (henrygregor@yahoo.com)Wed Jan 16 16:59:35 2008
Sure enough, and everyone paid a lot less malpractice premiums then too, so no discussion of CS rates can really occur, IMHO, in this country in the absence of some type of health court system or other overhaul of the adversarial tort system. Hank...just my opinion, but I could be....well, we all know that one, right? :-) "R. Daniel Braun" <rd.braun@gmail.com> wrote: When I was a resident, If the section rate got above 2.5%, we were raked over the coals and had to re-evaluate all the sections we had done in the last 6 months. Dan On Jan 16, 2008 12:21 PM, Ina May Gaskin < inamaygaskin@gmail.com> wrote: Dan, would be the "fast track" version of evolution? (I'm remembering that the c-section rate when I was a new midwife was 5.5%.) Ina May On 16 Jan 2008, at 09:07, R. Daniel Braun wrote: Or it could be the result of performing cesarean sections and saving the lives of children with small pelves so that they can then reproduce. Dan On Jan 16, 2008 8:03 AM, westsidebirthservice@juno.com < westsidebirthservice@juno.com> wrote: Now, now, now--what do you think those pointy teeth in our heads are for anyway? Meat, meat! We are omnivores remember. I think CPD is a result of poor diets (especially seen in the depression years and, as el could tell us, third world countries) in childhood resulting in truly malformed pelvises (is that a word?) and now our big babies (in this country) could well be a result of the hormones (can anyone say human growth hormone boys and girls?) in the meat we eat. Louana
-- johnprov@sympatico.ca (Dr. John Provatopoulos B.Sc. M.D.C.M. F.R.S.C.) wrote:
At Tue, 15 Jan 2008, Joanne Bulley, MD wrote:
> We eat way to much meat. I am a big fan of the Discovery Chanell, well one of the theories why our Human brains got so big is that it happened when we got a taste for meat, the energy and protien available in meat makes all other food sources look like well chicken feed. Walking upright as bipeds narrowed the pelvis but early Australopithecus Momys had no problem pushing out baby, its only when our distant cousins got a taste for meat that cephalopelvic-disproportion reared its ugly head. I thought about this as ate my ten onzes of prime rib on New years eve which I am not sure I have finished digesting. P.S. for all the buding lawyers doesn't this sound like a great class action.
--
Take care, John
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