Obgyn vs. Midwife
Hospital vs Homebirth
What are your thoughts and plans on Pitocin induction, epidurals, homebirths, water births and or c-sections???
I have a month left and things are starting to get real for me. Reality is starting to set in....
How do you feel?
Re: Thoughts on birth: Pitocin, Epidural, c-section, Home birth?
I'm pretty against pitocin and inductions unless they're medically necessary. Same with any other interventions.
I think home births and water births are really amazing, and I wish I could have one (Although I do enjoy the help from nurses in the hospital after delivery, and the meals).
I'm pretty excited for it all right now
It sucked. Went with an OB and hospital this time....sI'd like to hold out for an epidural butf if its as bad as last time... I want the epidural as soon as I walk in!
Would love a homebirth but can't afford it, so we will once again be in the hospital with an OB. I will be doing everything in my power so I don't have to be induced or have an epidural, but this is my 3rd so I'm aware of that point and if I reach it well then an epi may happen. I will also avoiding a csection at all cost.
Married 03/18/10
DS #2 Born 05/19/11
DS #3 Due 07/26/15
To prevent more tearing, I'm
Scheduled for a C Section July 6. Which I was fine with until I stared googling images of it. Now I've decided to just keep the baby inside and not deliver EVER. Is that an option?
I'm giving birth at the hospital via c section due to placenta previa. Not sure what week yet as baby is being monitored closely for slow growth, baby looks great but is small for gestational age. I'm scared to death of a c section and never imagined this would be out method of delivery however I'm willing to do whatever for our little nugget and so ready for him or her to be here already! I'm a FTM so any c section advise and relief of spinal fears is appreciated! Best wishes ladies!!
Oh, and I'm having a repeat csection. My first labor I picked a hospital,OB and an epidural. Ended up with a non-emergency csection after 30 hours of labor and "failure to progress".
Is that like the "underwater dolphin birth" mentioned in the Simalac commercial?
Maybe teleportation would be a good alternative?
Yes. Sign me up for teleportation birth.
Is that like the "underwater dolphin birth" mentioned in the Simalac commercial?
Is that like having a dolphin doula? That's all I can think of when you say underwater dolphin birth. lol
Oh and don't google that shit!
2nd. Gas & air, 12 hour labour, 3rd degree tear, no stitches (I refused as the 1st time they stitched me up too far
Nurse - midwife. Nurse with graduate level training. Can prescribe any medication an OB can legally. Delivers in hospitals, birth centers, and home. Can't do surgery, so regardless of setting would need an OB for a c-section. Regulated by the board of nursing in all 50 states
Lay midwife. No formal college training, most training may be from an apprenticeship. Some are certified (certified professional midwives ). Only deliver at a birth center or home. Legally not able to write prescriptions. Can not perform surgery. Some states regulate, some do not