i am (like many of you) 21 weeks into my pregnancy. I am a FTM and have been going to an ob/gyn group that a friend recommend to me. I am very torn and I think I want to switch to a midwifery group that is associated with the same hospital/system… I am tired of having a clinical pregnancy and want something and someone who is more interested in me and my son as a whole and not as just another body walking through the door.
Do any of you ladies have any experience switching to a midwife halfway through or have a preference one way or another?
Re: Anyone using a midwife?
My Ovulation Chart
Love the two midwives I see - one or the other will be at the birth the entire time and I am totally cool with that. Otherwise our OBs I would have had a 1 in 6 chance of getting the 1 OB that I really liked -but honestly they are there so short that it wasnt the big deal breaker.
I really love my midwives though. Just something is different, and they always make sure my 2 girls are helping out at appts with things which is really fun for them!
I've had one midwife-attended hospital birth, one midwife-attended freestanding birth-center birth, one homebirth and planning a second homebirth.
My appointments are at my midwife's house (she'll come to my house later in pregnancy) and it's an hour long appointment. We get weight, urine, BP and baby checked out within maybe 10 minutes. The rest of the time we just talk. She wants to know what's going on in our lives and she tells me a lot about herself. She has student midwives and one of them has come over from England and I adore her. It isn't about getting me out of there as fast as possible.
They remain a professional air while still being more personable than any of the OBs I've had. I've done the hospital birth scene and the only way I'd have a hospital birth again is if something is wrong.
OB: takes blood pressure, listens to baby on doppler, furrows brow, puts doppler down and says "well I guess you're getting an ultrasound today." Throws me in room with ultrasound, looks at baby, furrows brow, puts me on NST, leaves for 20 minutes, comes back and says "Well, the baby looks great, but your blood pressure is up, so we're going to have you come in twice a week from now on and also you could die or your baby could die at any point so we really need you to call if you have any of these symptoms (lists laundry list of things) also, I need to take your blood pressure again to see if it's come down." (literally that is exactly what she said) Takes blood pressure again, furrows brow, prescribes blood pressure medication, leaves the room before I can ask any questions.
Midwife: "Ok so we see you had some issues with your blood pressure in your first pregnancy, let's work on a plan to prevent that from being an issue this time." (Long talk about exercise and nutrition and how to keep my anxiety under control without medication so that doesn't affect my blood pressure with plenty of time for me to ask my 9,000,000 questions.)
Also, I felt that OBs were always trying to prescribe me something (zofran, anxiety meds, blood pressure meds, further testing etc.) while the midwives are all about DOING something (changing diet, activity level, drink more water etc.) and that makes more sense to me.
Good luck on your journey!
I'm a FTM but have had the same experiences as some of the pps with not being informed, treated well or feeling rushed at my OB-GYN (my first pap was a HORRIBLE experience, etc). My friends have loved their midwives and I knew that's the route I wanted to go. At first I was on a waiting list but thankfully got a spot fairly quickly. The midwives at my clinic work in pairs, you meet both of them throughout your pregnancy. They switch off being on call, and one of the two will be at my birth. I'm really happy so far, they always schedule an hour per appointment and I never feel rushed. They really take time with you, get to know you, and answer questions thoroughly. Mine even asked if there are any cultural differences I was concerned about in raising a child (my DH was born in the Philippines). I've only met one of them so far but I meet the other this month.
My options are either home or hospital birth, as birthing centres/suites are rare and there are none in my area. I feel more comfortable at the hospital in case anything goes wrong, but it's nice to know that my midwife won't push for any medical interventions that aren't necessary.
I agree with pps... Do whatever you can to make yourself comfortable with the birth process. If you feel you want to switch, and there's a way, do it. Birth is such a special and personal thing that you deserve to be as at ease as possible.
Good luck to all of you still searching! It will work out no matter how things go.