Anyone using a midwife?
I scheduled my first appointment with a midwife. The cool thing is she works at a hospital so I have the best of both worlds.
Honestly, I've had really bad experience with OB's with my last pregnancy and just recently. I need a "softer less negative" approach since I am PGAL.
So what are you ladies using?
Re: Midwife or OB?
I'm trying to, but spots are limited.
I delivered with a family doctor last time and will do so again if the midwife can't take me. In my mind, OB's are specialists and there's nothing that complicated about a routine pregnancy. My doctor was great last time.
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I'm going to a midwife. I did with my last pregnancy too, but switched providers since I had a bad experience with the previous practice.
I'm hoping for a VBAC and when I spoke to the midwife about it at my annual (before I was pg) she seemed very optimistic.
This is cool how many others are using midwives!
Emma Kate - born 10.16.03 @ 29 weeks, weighed 1lb 13oz and 13.5" long.
TTC #3
We have a nurse midwife and I absolutely love her. My husband is totally comfortable with her too. We went in for a pre-conception consultation before we started trying and he came with me. I went in for my Pap last month and she was so helpful with answering all my questions.
She called me a few days ago after she saw that I scheduled my first appointment for our Little Bean : )
I'm so excited to go through this experience with her!
That is a bit of a hot potato of a question. OBs are going to vary tremendously in their approach to birth, particularly their support for the natural birth process. As surgeons, and dealing with many high-risk patients, they are more likely to view birth as a medical event needing to be managed. OBs are also constrained by very high insurance costs/litigation and hospital procedures. Midwives generally are going to be much more supportive of natural birth than an OB, and will likely allow you to manage your own birth in the way that you would like it, in tandem with their support and experience.
My recommendation would be to learn as much as you can about childbirth and ask yourself how you feel most comfortable birthing. Some people prefer to be in hospitals and feel secure with medical management, trusting their OB's wisdom. Others prefer a more hands-off, intuitive and less medical approach, treating pregnancy not as an illness or medical event, but as simply a natural process that our bodies were made to do.
If you haven't yet seen The Business of Being Born, I would highly recommend it, along with reading books from a variety of perspectives. I really love books by Ina May Gaskin, who is a famous midwife, along with Birthing From Within. I am sure that others can recommend some other books. Best wishes with whatever route you choose.
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Thank you for all that info:
I'm using an OB. Only one hospital in town has nurse midwives, and while they option is appealing, the hospital they are affiliated with is HUGE! The other hospital in town has a reputation for being a better maternity hospital, and this OB was highly recommended by a family member.
I'm considering hiring a doula, though.