Womb The inside story of where we all began

Leah Hazard

Book - 2023

Every person on Earth began inside a uterus, but how much do we really understand about the womb? Hazard embarks on a journey in search of answers about the body's most miraculous and contentious organ. She tackles pressing questions, cultural prejudices that have made the uterus so poorly understood for centuries, and takes a fresh look at an organ that brings us pain and pleasure-- and has a larger impact than we ever thought possible. -- adapted from jacket

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Subjects
Genres
Anecdotes
Published
New York, NY : Ecco, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Leah Hazard (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xvi, 316 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 289-308).
ISBN
9780063157620
  • Introduction
  • Uterus
  • Periods
  • Conception
  • Pregnancy
  • Tightenings
  • Labor
  • Loss
  • Cesarean
  • Postpartum
  • Health
  • Menopause
  • Hysterectomy
  • Reprocide
  • Future
  • An Unapologetic Epilogue
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Glossary
  • Credits
Review by Booklist Review

In this homage to the womb, Hazard engagingly and unabashedly shares the fascinating, sometimes gory details of periods, conception, labor, menopause, and hysterectomies. A midwife, writer, podcast host, and mother of two girls, Hazard focuses on the uterus, where eggs are fertilized and babies grow. Her interviews with top experts lend authority to her easy-to-understand explanations of this underappreciated organ, a muscle that is similar in size and power to a clenched fist and the more celebrated human heart. She goes beyond the basics to share little-known facts, such as how a few women are born with two functioning wombs. She makes excellent use of statistics, too. Is it a cause for concern that women historically had just 100 periods in a lifetime because they were constantly pregnant or breastfeeding but now have 350 to 400? Or that a third of U.S. women undergo a hysterectomy by age 60? Hazard ends with a look to the future. Will financially well-off women choose artificial wombs if they're a possibility? In all, Hazard presents a thought-provoking, information-packed celebration of the uterus.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Midwife Hazard (Hard Pushed) delivers a bravura cultural history of the uterus and the politics that surround it. Surveying how gendered ideas and expectations impact uterine health, she traces the history of obstetrics and notes a tendency in such terms as "irritable uterus" and "incompetent cervix" to "conflate a woman and her uterus into one troublesome package." Stories of women navigating medical institutions highlight the frequent disregard that patients often encounter from professionals, as when it took weeks for doctors to take a pregnant woman's complaints about debilitating pain seriously enough to perform a scan that revealed a dangerous abnormality. Hazard passionately argues for abortion access, telling of women in Ireland and Poland who died from sepsis because doctors refused to perform the potentially lifesaving procedure. Whether discussing such antique myths as the "wandering womb" or providing a firsthand account of a uterine transplant, Hazard's eye is keen, her range broad, and her tone scrupulously compassionate. Additionally, this benefits from the author's recognition that people relate to their wombs in myriad ways, as exemplified in her interview with a trans man on how his quality of life improved after a hysterectomy. This is essential reading on the "most miraculous and misunderstood organ in the human body." (Mar.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Hazard (Hard Pushed: A Midwife's Story), a practicing National Health Service (NHS) midwife, fearlessly tackles the myths, history, and science of the uterus in this new book. As she explains periods, conception, labor, menopause, and hysterectomies, Hazard addresses underserved populations, women of color, and people who are transgender, along with the areas where more research is needed--and it is needed in nearly every aspect of women's reproductive health. When issues border on the political, she defers to the World Health Organization and NHS guidelines, keeping her thesis taut throughout. She incorporates the rise of social media as an influencer of women's health, including PeriodTok (part of TikTok), the recent change in the United States' legislative position on abortion, as well as the language that surrounds wombs: an "irritable" uterus, an "incompetent" cervix, and the ever-complicated social history of a "hysteria" diagnosis. To combat the shame surrounding uterine health, Hazard empowers readers with vocabulary and scientific understanding of the uterine microbiome, Braxton-Hicks contractions, fibroids, and endometriosis. In the middle of the book, she compassionately pauses to address all the forms loss can take for a woman and her womb, at all phases of her reproductive journey. VERDICT A revelatory, straightforward, and important work.--Tina Panik

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A celebration of women's reproductive organs. Hazard, a midwife for Britain's National Health Service and host of the podcast What the Midwife Said, offers an informative, thoughtful investigation of "the complexity of birthing bodies," focusing particularly on the uterus: its structure, microbiome, and "how it grows, bleeds, births, and transforms with life's ever-changing tides." Drawing on considerable research, interviews, and her own experience as a midwife and mother, the author offers a comprehensive overview of female anatomy and the problems and challenges that may occur at different stages of life. She explains the development of the uterus and its vital role in conception; the surprisingly rich composition of menstrual tissue; and the process of birth. This includes labor, which may involve induction with a synthetic hormone; delivery, increasingly by elective Cesarean section; and postnatal care. She discusses the unfortunate outcomes of some pregnancies when chromosomal abnormalities, maternal infection, or medical conditions such as high blood pressure or diabetes result in a stillbirth; or when wombs inexplicably "tighten and surge" before full term has been reached, expelling a fetus that is not viable. Hazard looks at many common maladies, such as fibroids and endometriosis, as well as interventions such as hysterectomy and the controversial use of hormones to suppress menstruation. As she traces gynecological and obstetric history, dominated by male physicians and scientists, she debunks terms and assumptions that demean a woman's natural functions: menstruation, for one, often viewed "as embarrassing, gross, and downright dangerous." Similarly, if a woman has trouble conceiving or maintaining a pregnancy, she risks being diagnosed with a "hostile" or "irritable" uterus or an "incompetent cervix." Hazard's investigation has taken her to the forefront of scientific innovation, such as uterine transplants, but she points to inequities in funding for women's health. As she clearly shows, the womb is "linked inextricably to our biological, social, and political destinies." A well-researched and enlightening book of popular science. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.