So a friend of mine from high school is pregnant with her 1st baby. She was due on Feb. 25th. She has no plans for induction as she said she wants no medical interference as long as the baby is healthy. My question is at what point overdue does it start to get dangerous? I thought at some point the placenta begins to die and it's not safe for a baby. Does that start happening after 42 weeks? Just wondering b/c she is dead set on not being induced (which is totally fine and her decision alone).
Re: Question about being overdue...
(read it. you know you want to.)
anderson . september 2008
vivian . february 2010
mabel . august 2012
I think 42 weeks is the point at which OBs become very concerned. I know my OB is more conservative and will really start pushing induction at 41 weeks - but will allow a mother to go to 42 if she is really pushing to wait.
That's crazy!
Remember 42 weeks is 42 FULL weeks, not 42 weeks on the dot. It is pretty much what our tickers would call 43 weeks.
This is per my midwife and the doula who runs my ICAN meetings.
As long as they are being monitored and the mother and the baby are healthy, then I personally think they are doing the best thing. The risks of the placenta braking down actually only goes up a minute amount after 42 weeks. And who is to say that she is actually that far along? Estimated due dates are ESTIMATES after all.
Lily was born at 43 weeks- she was healthy and pink (even after 40 hours of active labor) and my placenta was perfect. If I had been induced at 42 weeks I would have most likely ended up with an UNNECESSARY c-section (check out my birth story for all that info).
Statistics are just statistics and IMO most of the medical profession should consider paying a bit more attention to the individual rather than the their overall policies (that are for the most part not based on evidence based research, but only on common practice).
JMO I know it is not the norm on this board.
Oh, and I feel for your friend- I pretty much had to go underground after 41 1/2 weeks because people were being so judgy- telling me and DH that we were bad parents.
I'm not saying you can't have a positive outcome with gestational ages greater than 41 weeks, but evidence-based medicine indicates there is increased risk of stillbirth and other fetal anomalies greater placental age. I'm glad you had a healthy pregnancy, but additional research has shown testing to evaluate the health of the pregnancy beyond 40 weeks does not reduce perinatal M&M. I certainly think you (general "you") have the ability to evaluate the evidence and decide for yourself, as well as choose a provider with whom you can agree. I'm just more conservative with my interpretation of the literature.