When Elisabeth Bing became interested in childbirth techniques in the 1950s, women were often heavily medicated, dads were generally nowhere near the delivery room and expectant parents had far less information than many do today.
Bing, the Lamaze International co-founder who popularized what was known as natural childbirth and helped change how women and doctors approached the delivery room, died Friday at 100 in her New York apartment, the organization said Saturday. The cause of her death wasn't immediately known.
Lamaze International says Bing died Friday. The cause of her death isn't immediately known.
Bing became interested in childbirth techniques in the 1950s. At the time, laboring women were often heavily medicated, fathers generally were nowhere near delivery rooms and expectant parents commonly had far less information than many do today.
Bing and the late Marjorie Karmel helped change all that, drawing on methods Dr. Fernand Lamaze had spread in France. The two women founded what's now Lamaze International to teach breathing and relaxation strategies for what became known as natural childbirth.
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