I've not had a great experience so far with my physician. She personally is great and got five star reviews, however, I'm her 10:00, not her patient (if that makes sense). If she's not on-call the day I deliver, I'll get the MD who is. I'm nervous that they won't listen to my wishes or respect that my body knows what it's doing and try to intervene. I watched The Business of Being Born last night and now I'm really thinking of switching providers. I'm 33w1d. Would you?
Re: Would you change providers this late?
TFMC 08.02.13 at 19+ weeks. Everyday I grieve for my little Olive.
I would consider switching providers at 33 weeks if there was a really strong reason for it. From what you described, I wouldn't switch under those circumstances or for those reasons.
I think that your better approach at this stage is to talk with your provider about the documentary and some of the concerns that it raised for you. Have you met with the other providers in the practice group? See if you can get your next appointments with them and have the same conversation with them. Like PP said, it's an extremely biased documentary, though really informative, and most OB practices have the same on-call policy that you're describing. My DD was delivered by a staff surgeon at the hospital who had nothing to do with my OB practice, and I met that morning. That's the way it often goes.
There are several other providers, meaning 6, and I'm currently doing my work on them and their practices as well. The whole point of the patient/provider experience is feeling taken care of and heard. A policy my company touts (I work for the hospital I'm delivering at), yet it remains to be seen.
TFMC 08.02.13 at 19+ weeks. Everyday I grieve for my little Olive.
I chose to use midwives with both of my pregnancies and births (differet groups- both hospital based). In both cases I will deliver with the on call MW and they do their best to make sure that each patient meets all of the MWs in the practice before they deliver. I actually think that this model has some advantages as the on call person often is there for a 24 hour shift and isn't watching the clock thinking that they want to get home for dinner or to do whatever else.
Midwives are different, and if I were having a midwife birth, I would probably feel differently.
I will try to find a compromise at the moment if need be (i.e. what will happen if we give lo 10 more minutes to do it in his own before considering other options?). And at the end of the day, i'll have time after lo arrives to find a doc I really love.
Don't switch now. Go with the flow. Give up some control and you won't be disappointed!
I could totally be wrong, but don't the OB's just come in for the glory moment? I would be more concerned with your hospital and their policies on birth and what not. Also, be nice to nurses. This is the only advice I've gotten, I'm bringing Baked by Melissa and Dunkin Donuts because I"m a kiss ass.
Would you benefit having someone in the room with you that has your birth plan? Whether that be your husband, other family members or midwife (or even a doula if you go that way)...choose someone you know will be stern but polite. At the end of the day it comes down to your and the baby's health so as PP said, you have to be ready to 'go with the flow.'
**Take my advice with a grain of salt, I've yet to have the pleasure of birth
This isn't my first birth and I know what I want this time around. My MD also became standoffish once I told her my plans. Her NP leaves something to be desired. It wasn't a big deal to be an ob transfer to a midwife since it's under the same facility.
Married to my love on 06-02-2007
Mikah Lucille born 03-02-2011
Baby Girl Zooey due October 2014
TFMC 08.02.13 at 19+ weeks. Everyday I grieve for my little Olive.
Have you considered hiring a doula who can be your advocate during baby's birth?
Have you worked out a detailed birth plan to discuss with your doctor and bring to the hospital?
Our new practice has midwives and doctors. We chose to go with a midwife because in our practice, the doctor is in the hallway during the birth (in case everything goes wrong), and the midwife will provide more emotional support than the doctor can.
In general though- switching doctors wasn't a huge deal to us. Getting our records faxed over, etc was sort of a pain- but in general we are pretty relaxed about these types of things.
Me: 32, DH: 34 / TTC since February 2011 / SA: all normal, HSG: all clear! / on Lovenox for anticardiolipid antibodies
4 IUIs with Clomid, Letrozole, and Menopur. All BFN.
9/12: lap / hysteroscopy: found and removed mild endometriosis, cervical polyp, and 2 para-tubular cysts
5/13 IVF #1: Follistim, Menopur, Ganirelix, 10R/4M/4F, ET of 2, 5 cell and 4 cell, no frosties = BFN
12/13 IVF #2 = November / December 2013. Microdose Lupron Protocol: 15R/6M/6F, Froze all 6 due to high E2 and P4
FET 1: Jan 22, 2014 of one 4AB blast and one 3BB blast (3 blasts on ice!)
BFP on HPT 4dp5dt, Beta #1 9dp5dt: 310, Beta #2 11dp5dt: 899
First u/s on 2/17/14: TWINS!!!!! both w/HBs of 114 at 6w3d, HBs 150 and 152 at 7w5d
5/27/2014: Team purple!!!! EDD 10/10/2014 /
Baby Boy 4lbs 1oz, 17 inches
Baby Girl 3lbs 5oz, 16 inches
I am sure someone has already mentioned that nursing staff from your OB's office wont even be with you in L&D. It is a completely different set of nurses. Those nurses are hired by the hospital so they will try to follow the hospital's standard procedures.