I'm due in 2 weeks with my third. With DD1 I was so thirsty during labor& delivery and distinctly remember the nurses and my DH giving me sips of water from the giant hospital water jug/straw. DD2 - diff hospital and different OB and I wasn't allowed any water only a few ice chips in case a c section became necessary (it wasn't either time)
Do all OBs restrict water during a routine (uncomplicated) hopefully vaginal delivery?
Re: H2O during labor?
DS - 7.2006 - C-Section b/c Breech
DS2 - 4.2008 - Successful Vbac
DD - 5.2012 - Successful Vbac
This exactly. I will also be eating (if I feel like it).
I've been told that I'm allowed to eat and drink within reason for as long as I can. Actually, the only way I can avoid an IV is to keep drinking. If I stop being able to hydrate myself, they'll put in the IV. So no, not all OBs are that way.
Married DH 7/30/11
CSC arrived 5/7/12
CHC arrived 6/2/14
Married 1/2/99.
TTC since 4/09.
Diagnosed PCOS. Diagnosed Hypothryoid 11/09.
SHG & SA normal. PCOS Research study started 5/10.
Clomid/Femara cycle #1 - 6/10 = BFN
Clomid/Femara cycle #2 - 7/10 = BFP #1 - Missed miscarriage 9/2/10
11/12 - BFP #2 - 11/22 - m/c
5/1/11 - BFP #3 - Pre-eclampsia, IUGR & bed rest from 32w. DD born via induction 1/4/12.
i just read an article about this & i wish my comprehension was better because now i don't remember!!!!
but i think they are realizing that there isn't a good reason & slowly reintroducing it back into being ok.
def worth exploring.
I've heard it's so that if you do end up with a C-section, you won't have very much in your stomach to throw up if the medicine makes you nauseous.
If ou have something in your stomach and require surgery (remember. C section is major abdominal surgery), you can aspirate the contents of your stomach and develop severe breathing issues or pneumonia. (aspirate = vomit and suck into our lungs)
I chugged water between every contraction for the full 2 hours I pushed. I would guess I drank 2 or 3 liters of water.
There is no reason to restrict water. Some hospitals do it anyway. It's old school and not necessary.
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This is only an issue if you're put under general anesthesia.
That's pretty darn rare in this day and age, first of all. Second of all, your digestions slows way down in labour, so not eating is no guarantee your stomach is empty anyway.
The data does not support withholding water from labouring women.
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Ditto.
Another point is that people go into emergency surgery every single day without the staff knowing when that person last ate. They can pump the stomach if aspiration is a concern.
The NPO rule (short for a latin phrase meaning nothing by os/mouth) is a kickback from when moms were knocked out routinely for births with twilight sleep. Although that intervention is no longer practices, many of the rules associated with it have still stuck in mainstream OB medicine.
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