At my hospital, the Ob-Gyns and Midwives deliver in the same floor, with access to the same anesthesiologists and the same NICU. I'm thinking it might be nicer to go with a midwife, because I'd get a little more attention and there'd be less risk of the doctor thinking I need a C-section when I really don't.
Anyone else have (or had) a similar choice? What did you choose and why?
Allie
Re: Ob-Gyn vs Midwife: Which did you go with and why?
Levi 4.21.10
I went with a OB-GYN mainly because she's who most of my friends have used in the past. They all were really happy with her and she delivers at the hospital I prefer. I never considered a midwife and I have no good reason for it. Just never crossed my mind.
DD2 8.22.13
MMC 1.4.17 at 16w
Expecting #3, EDD 1.29.18
I switched from an OB to a midwife at 20 weeks. I'm trying to minimize my chances for getting a c-section as much as possible, which is why I decided to switch. The midwifes and OBs are in the same office, attached to the hospital. All prenatal testing is the same, and because the insurance covers the docs and the hospital, they cover the midwives too.
I'm very happy with the care I've received from my midwife, thus far. Far more personal than seeing my old OB. She gave me no trouble at all when I decided to skip the gestational diabetes testing. When there was the possibility of preterm labor, she had me come right in, and did an ultrasound and fetal monitoring. She is very anti-intervention; doesn't do internals unless there is a medical reason like PTL to do one, and supportive of my Hypnobabies delivery approach. I can't wait to deliver with her.
I should add that I'm well over 35, and pregnant with my first (only). Being older doesn't mean that you can't use a midwife.
We have both at my hospital, but I have to have an OB because I'm high risk and will have a scheduled csection.
A Certified Nurse Midwife option at the hospital is a nice option, since you can have traditional Midwife care, an epidural if you want, and access to emergency care for you or baby if needed. I think it is a really nice option.
Heather
OB. w/my med Hx I knew I would get referred to one anyways!
I really like my OB - he listens to me, only offers internals if I want, and delivers 80-90% of his patients.
If I wasn't high risk, I would prefer a midwife. However, I need to see an MFM (high risk OB) b/c I have high BP and had severe pre-e/HELLP with my first pregnancy.
I did start out my first pregnancy with midwives, and I really liked the care I received. When I did start to develop serious problems with my first pregnancy, they did catch it right away. They continued to provide care until I was able to find an OB I liked--and they helped find one to transfer to. I still go to the midwifery group for my routine gyn stuff.
OB because I actually trust the medical profession and don't care about natural vs. interventions, etc.
It's so cool to read so many different opinions and from so many different states. I still need to find out more information and all this input is valuable too.
I forgot to add, I'm not high-risk, my insurance pays both options, I've only met this OB a few times (he seems nice enough) but they're on rotation so there's no guarantee I'd get him for delivery.
Thank you all and good luck to everyone!
Allie
We wanted a midwife b/c we wanted someone to support our natural birth someone who had time to take care of us and build a relationship of trust with us. Our insurance company (Kaiser) is really big and has lots of midwives, but first we went to see an OB because of some complications (we didn't like her) and then when we went to one of the midwives that worked for the hospital she seemed more overworked than the doctors. I think b/c the midwifes cost less than the doctors so the hospital has them do more. We switched to a different OB and she's attentive and caring, though we still don't often see her for more than 5 minutes a visit.
I think this would definitely be the exception to the general midwifery experience, especially if you are hiring a midwife who has her own practice or works for a birth center instead of a health care manufacturing center like Kaiser, but I thought I would tell you in case you are also in a big insurance entity.