I've always wondered this. They did a growth u/s for me at 32 weeks (I know all offices vary on the timing of this), but then after that they just start checking your cervix every week after 35. So as far as I know, I won't know how much he weighs until he is born and that is more than okay with me.
I don't understand what the point is in freaking everyone out telling women their babies are huge. My best friend's doctor even tried to convince her to get a c-sec because her baby was so big at just 36-37 weeks, but he came on his own at 40 weeks and weighed 8lbs 1oz.
If the technology isn't very accurate, why even try to predict the baby's weight at all? I don't get it.

Re: How do you know how much your baby weighs?
The techniques are not totally accurate.
The best way to measure is through the growth ultrasound. I'm not high risk or having any problems, so I'm not having one of these. My doctor manually feels and measures in order to guess the size, I'm guessing this is pretty inaccurate, but at least gives a ballpark estimate. My doctor is saying my baby is big.
I don't think people should worry about it too much. And in most cases, I think it is a bad reason to induce or get a c-section.
I don't get it either, they really aren't accurate in determining that at all....
I have no clue how big mine is, never got a measurement from her anatomy scan and no u/s after that.
Agreed. They even told me during my L & D trip that the measurement can be off by 10 oz... which is a lot when he is on;y measuring 4.5 lbs any way. It is cool to think about whether they are accurate, but I'm not freaking out about it.
well, in my case, I have GD so I get monthly level 2 ultrasounds, which are more specific so I guess maybe more accurate in determining weight? Either way, they want to keep track because I'm at risk for a dangerously large baby.
However, in general agree with you. If it's not accurate telling a woman that she's going to have a huge baby is just- mean.
I don't get it either. And that's coming from someone that ended up being induced for a "big baby." He was 7 lb 8 oz. HUGE, right?
My MW was concerned about my hip structure and DS's estimated size at my 37 week scan (they said he was already 8+ lbs), so she convinced me to go for an induction. I was very favorable already (3-4cm/95%), so I naively went ahead with it. I had an awesome induction experience and DS arrived less than 10 hours from the time I was hooked up.....but still. It was all for nothing, really, as he wasn't anywhere even close to the size they thought he would be (except for his shoulders -- he had massive shoulders!!). I totally missed out on the "am I having contractions? Do we need to go to the hospital yet?" part of the birth experience.
I'm glad that my new OB doesn't do growth scans late in pregnancy, because I have very little faith in them. I'm fortunate that I ended up with an awesome delivery, but many aren't that lucky. I can guarantee that I will NOT be falling for the same thing this time around!
ETA: I was induced at 39w5d, not right after my scan at 37 weeks. That would've been REALLY stupid on my part. :P
I am proud of my big baby! My mom delivered three big babies naturally and without induction back 30+ years ago. I was referencing like cave man days when women had babies without medical assistance but it was more of snarkiness. I think the estimates, although fun, scare people and allow drs to jump the gun with induction and c-section. Things should just happen naturally.... IMO.
I'm not sure why they even bother with these things. I took a class based on the physics of medical imaging, and while yes they can get rough measurements of lengths of things, as those are pretty finite, there is no way to determine the weight of something when you have a sound wave bouncing though at lease 4 layers of human tissue, bouncing off the baby (some being adsorbed by you and baby) and going back to the transducer. U/S is a great 'imaging' tool...not a great 'weight estimation' tool.
I would be much more inclined to believe a dr. feeling around on my belly before I would trust the equipment. Heck, I don't even trust the automatic BP machines, they always register my BP higher than if a real live person takes it. I always disregard those.
I like to have the u/s (I get one every week due to GD) because I see how much he is growing and changing. I do not really freak out with the size estimates, especially now that I see the changes from one week to another. The very first estimate freaked me out but I'm ok with it now.
I wouldn't beg my doctor for an induction or c-section based on a weight estimate on an u/s.