I know this may sound crazy to some...but I dont think I'm making a written out birth plan to take with me to the hospital. I plan to really make decisions as they need to be decided. Anyone else taking this approach? Or am i insane to be thinking this way?
Re: Anyone else NOT making a written out birth plan?
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Yep, this^
My doctor and I are going to hash out what I want to do at my 36 week appointment, and then she has it all on file on her computer and on her pda, both of which she can access at the hospital.
I may ask her to print out a copy for me on the off chance that she can't be at the birth, but I'm not going to make one up separately.
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No written out birth plan for me. I know what I want and so does my doctor. We have discussed in detail what I want during my delivery. Me and my husband will be telling nurses what is ok and what is not.
I've heard that most nurses do not read or care about birth plans and actually roll their eyes when they get one. I wonder if that's true at all. Are there any nurse June mommies out there that could spill the beans??
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I find it hard to believe that nurses and/or doctors would do that, but I've been hearing it and reading it for a while now.
This.
DH asked me if I was making one and my response was "the birth plan is to give me the epidural and get the baby out." How any of this occurs I don't care. I'm pretty easy going and know if I plan there's a good chance it will need to change for one reason or another.
However, if I were doing a natural birth I would seriously consider writing one.
I still don't know if I am. I was thinking of just printing the birth plan checklist from the bump and check it off. Like someone else mentioned, I would hate to write one and not get followed.
For our wedding, I didn't sleep the 2 previous days working on it and other things, and the schedule was not even followed. Just thinking about it, and looking at my huge bags under my eyes in our wedding picture makes me upset.
So, with that said, I might not even do one or just doing the checklist and just add or delete what applies to me.
Me too!
This is how i felt with DD. We had a c-section with her and i plan on going the same route. I think i said in a different post that my only plans are that No visitors until we are moved into our room. And DD is to be the first visitor. When she arrives DH will go to the waiting room to get her and then come back for my parents (or whoever it may be) to come visit. DH is in charge of making sure the nurses know this and my tape allergy (which i should be in my chart anyways) and we figure its easier for him to tell our nurses when we arrive then to give them the written out 'plan' have them read it and then discuss it.
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Same here.
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No eye-rolling at a normal length, normal request birth plan. The eye-rolling only happens when it's three pages, typed, and laminated (I'm not even exaggerating). The running joke is that will land you right in the "back" (aka the OR)...it's strange how often it's true, though. I don't know if people that are that stressed/anal to literally type out every.single.detail of their intended birth are just too tense to progress or what, but that's how the cookie crumbles a lot of the time.
But again, a normal "this is what I would like if possible, realizing it may change, and putting the health of myself and the baby first and foremost" birth plan shouldn't get an eye-roll from any nurse.
Also -- I work at a high-risk, busy hospital that, although not crazy with interventions, is definitely not a birthing center. Those women that come in and immediately start refusing every single thing that is hospital policy and routine...not invasive at all...create a lot of frustration for themselves and the staff as it puts everyone in an awkward situation. It's so much better when you know what hospital policy/your dr's routines are before you go to deliver...just my thoughts.
This, all of my L&D's went well, but one can never tell what's going to happen. I guess some people want to be "kept on track" but I found no problems concentrating on what I wanted and what I didn't want when I was in labor
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Nope, none here. My doc fully supports my decision and I know the basics as does DH. The only thing I have "planned" is how to keep my mom out of the room during delivery lol
yep! One of my clients is a nurse at the hospital I will deliver at. When I mentioned birth plans to her she straight up told me they laugh at them..
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Nope. My doctor's office gave me a birth plan at my first appointment. They also make you sign a contract saying that you will not have a doula. They feel as a practice that a written birth plan and a doula can create a more stressful environment and may also compromise a healthy delivery for both mom and baby.
I really feel that my doctor is an advocate for the patient and that based on the birth plan provided by the doctor, that every attempt will be made to have a natural delivery, but that for a variety of reasons one may end up with a c-section.
Having a birth plan isn't about planning every last detail of the birth and how it must go. It's about making your preferences known so you don't have to make game time decisions about things. Obviously you can't cover everything but there are some things that are very important to people and if they are written down and a choice needs to be made to do that or something else, everyone knows up front what you want.
You can hash things out with your doc ahead of time, sure, but your doc is there for very little of the process. It's mostly the nurses and other staff. And they may not know what you talked to your doctor about. If you have a birth plan, the nurses also know what you want and don't have to ask you.
The birth plan is also not just about labor and delivery. It's about what you want done with your baby after he is born. If you don't want them to give formula or sugar water, if you want skin to skin, if you want rooming in, if you want to delay or skip vaccines or eye gel or whatever. If you don't let them know what you want, they may not ask at all about those things and just do them. You'd never have a choice about them.
My hospital actually makes a short birth plan for you if you arrive without one.
Wow, they won't LET you have a doula? That's kinda ridiculous in my opinion. What business is it of theirs?
I am not. I know who I'm going to contact and when, and my husband is aware. My thought is that when I go into labor, my body and the baby take over. I don't have control over how my body is reacting and what's going on. I know my preferences, my midwife knows my preferences, and I know that things don't always go as planned so I know that i need to keep a flexible mind.
It really isn't something that I need to write down. But some people feel better with it written down. I don't think it makes much of a difference, unless you have really strong wishes or there is a very real potential for complications/issues.