if you're talking about medevial times ... either the midwife reached inside and turned the baby before birth, or the mom died. Sometimes both the mom and the baby died.
FWIW, not all breech babies were delivered via c-section 30 years ago. My DH was breech and delivered via C-section in 1979. My BFF was breech and delivered vaginally in 1981. Some breech positions are considered more favorable than others for vaginal deliveries.
Warning
No formatter is installed for the format bbhtml
Ditto all the answers here. They can often be delivered vaginally, but why risk it? I wouldn't want to risk it for my own health or the baby's, and I'm sure the doctor doesn't want to risk something going horribly wrong and losing a patient and/or their baby or their patient's family suing them into oblivion.
Wife, mom, Ob/Gyn resident Sarah - 12/23/2008 Alex - 9/30/2011
"I say embrace the total geek in yourself and just enjoy it. Life is too short to be cool." - Shirley Manson, Garbage
Some doctors will still deliver a breech baby. I have a friend in WA that had a breech baby vaginally. Her doc said that, since she had had a baby previously, it should be fine. The primary concern, especially for first babies, is that the head can get stuck; you don't have to be a full 10cm for the body to fit through.
"Life isn't about waiting for the storm to be over, it's about learning how to dance in the rain." -Unknown
Wow there is a lot of misinformation in pp here. 'Most' babies do not get stuck, and 'most' babies do not die. It's a somewhat elevated risk, and modern obstetrics is all about risk avoidance. In addition, as at least one pp noted, doctors and midwives both were much more experienced in delivering breech babies. I know several people who were breech babies delivered vaginally, and my mother-in-law had some sort of internal version just 20 years ago with my sister-in-law. That's yet another thing that most OBs do not really learn or practice anymore, yet they are all very very good at performing c/s.
Wow there is a lot of misinformation in pp here. 'Most' babies do not get stuck, and 'most' babies do not die. It's a somewhat elevated risk, and modern obstetrics is all about risk avoidance. In addition, as at least one pp noted, doctors and midwives both were much more experienced in delivering breech babies. I know several people who were breech babies delivered vaginally, and my mother-in-law had some sort of internal version just 20 years ago with my sister-in-law. That's yet another thing that most OBs do not really learn or practice anymore, yet they are all very very good at performing c/s.
Exactly, because they are trained surgeons, not midwives. Most OB's don't try turning babies or delivering breech because they weren't taught to.
TheJohns... for me, it's definitely laziness. i would much rather be stuck all over with needles, risk being paralyzed, undergo major surgery and be cut open, face weeks more recovery time, and be in considerably more pain following delivery. it has absolutely nothing to do with the safety and health of my children. i also agreed to more than 2 months of bedrest because i miss daytime t.v. ummm... yeah.
Re: what happened to breech babies back in the day?
Our birthing instructor told us that back then doctors were more comfortable delivering breech babies vaginally.
Ina May's Guide to Childbirth has a nice discussion about delivering breech babies.
if you're talking about medevial times ... either the midwife reached inside and turned the baby before birth, or the mom died. Sometimes both the mom and the baby died.
Breech babies were delivered vaginally. There are MANY risks to doing it this way. Probably why so many kids died at birth in the "olden" days.
My OB told me that the body comes out fine, but most times the head gets stuck and they have to "cut" the mom to get the baby out.
There ARE OB's in this day and age that can deliver breech babies successfully. I just haven't heard any stories of that happening recently.?
im talking like 30 years ago, when c/s were not done nearly as much as they are now. women didnt die in childbirth all the time then.
30 years ago, c-sections were performed for breech babies. I have a bunch of friends that were delivered via c-section.?
That was a GREAT read.
Sarah - 12/23/2008
Alex - 9/30/2011
"I say embrace the total geek in yourself and just enjoy it. Life is too short to be cool." - Shirley Manson, Garbage
"Life isn't about waiting for the storm to be over, it's about learning how to dance in the rain." -Unknown
Married 3-1-08 | Nathan 11-24-08 | Kaelyn 11-30-10 | Alicia 8-17-13
dude, i sooo agree. WTH is wrong w/ ppl? I think women are getting lazy and they dont want to bother giving birth anymore.
Exactly, because they are trained surgeons, not midwives. Most OB's don't try turning babies or delivering breech because they weren't taught to.
TheJohns... for me, it's definitely laziness. i would much rather be stuck all over with needles, risk being paralyzed, undergo major surgery and be cut open, face weeks more recovery time, and be in considerably more pain following delivery. it has absolutely nothing to do with the safety and health of my children. i also agreed to more than 2 months of bedrest because i miss daytime t.v. ummm... yeah.
My 36 year old husband was breech and born via c/s