Sentences with phrase «ob said»

The OB said, «I only do C - sections.
I got my hormone levels tested and my OB said they look great.
So when my OB said my due date was March 12, I knew that our daughter would arrive on the 11th.
I've started having this pain since week 22 my OB said it was normal and to drink Tylenol to relieve the pain it helps a little.
After all the talking / paperwork signing, the OB said to the midwife, «You grab the baby's bottom, I will grab the head, and we will slowly turn her around!»
Dr. Fischbein Gloria Lemay My OB Said What?!? Navelgazing Midwife Science & Sensibility Dr. Freeze at Stand and Deliver Peaceful Parenting The Unnecessarean.com
Is it possible that the OB said, «I can't care for you if you're planning a homebirth» and that the CPM said, «ayes, the insurance companies make him say that,» implying that it's not a serious requirement when really it is.
The OB said he is not supposed to know that we are considering homebirth as an option, and that if he did know, he would have to discontinue giving care to my wife in the meantime.
I was in a discussion on My OB Said What?
I've been arguing for a couple fays now on a post on my Ob said what.
Apparently they are hiding their identities because they don't want it known that a nationally prominent childbirth educator is behind «My OB Said What?»
At the appointment when my OB said he didn't think the odds were in my favour and we agreed to book the prelabour CS my husband was visibly relieved (as was my OB).
My OB said its just the baby moving in tight quarters.
No one «monopolized or manipulated» my experience either; my OB said, «Here's what's going on, and here are your options.
But the water birth center kicked her out at 32 weeks when their staff OB said «HELL NO».
The hospital staff, all the way to my OB, were happy to oblige my preferences as long as there was no medical reason not to (for example, I preferred stitches to staples; OB said I was the first person who ever expressed a preference — and he had been practicing for 30 years).
OB said he had no reason to keep me in the hospital, an LC wouldn't be available overnight, and it was a great way for the hospital to make more money.
We became even more excited at my first prenatal visit when my OB said he completely supported my plan for an all - natural VBAC.
My OB said that some times when SHE is CALLED to the ER, patients have already been there up to 6 hours!
Therefore, my OB said that C sections were my only option.
We have been trying with no sucess and my Ob said he will not help with anything until I stop breastfeeding, which I really do not want to do but also want to become pregnant very badly.
I was Catholic... had 9 babies and 2 miscarriages, in 10 years; eventually, my OB said that I must ovulate more than once a month; he and his wife had the same situation.
My OB says there is nothing he can do to help because I am still nursing.
My OB says she will respect that choice, as long as I accept that it will reduce my family size (I do!)
When the OBs say, «you can not physically give birth vaginally» and the labouring mother just says, «yes I can» it puts everyone in a bind because they can save her life and that of the fetus but she denies the danger.
I can't understand an OB saying anything other than «it's your choice».
1) The OB says he will drop your wife as a patient if she's considering homebirth because he will be responsible for any negative outcome and he can't take that responsibility.
When your OB says «bag intact» it means your water hasn't broken.

Not exact matches

«The world's greatest sporting event is always a showcase for cutting edge technology, and we're thrilled to partner with Samsung and OBS to bring our viewers even closer to compelling Olympic action with virtual reality,» NBC Olympics president Gary Zenkel said in a statement.
The hormone is part of what drives desire, fantasy, and thoughts about sex, and even helps provide the energy for sex in women, says Linda Bradley, MD, vice chair and ob - gyn for the Women's Health Institute at the Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland.
Dr. Anne Mielnik, director of the Gianna Center, said she has spoken to many women with similar experiences: «their OB / GYN or Family Doctor actually laughed at them, verbally mocked them, or did not take them seriously when they have shared their desire to have a large family, to use NFP, to be faithful to their Catholic beliefs, or to be abstinent until marriage.
I don't remember much of what he said, but I remember my OB laughed so hard I worried she'd drop the scissors as she passed them to Dan to cut the cord, and I remember being the happiest I've ever been when that little boy's body was placed on my chest, all startled and slimy and mine.
I want to say I even remember OB mentioning that he needs to learn to trust Watson more after one of the games.
The particular doctor who was interviewed from the research team said CA does WAY too many c - sections and that that, combined with an increasingly obese population (which I guess is something that makes OBs want to do c - sections?)
And when the OB is saying that the baby must come out or will be harmed... how can you expect the parent to make a decision other than surgery?
Having said that, I'm lucky that I'll be delivering in a small local hospital with a midwife, and the OB won't appear unless there is a problem so the situation here is a bit different.
All I am saying is the the majority of OB's, family docs, RN's, and midwives that I work with do their job well and with a loving heart.
Doctors could not figure out what caused it, but said I would have been treated many hours sooner if I had an OB already attending me at the time.
We called L&D ahead, they said they would be waiting for us, but still took almost 2 hours for an OB to come to the ER — at a VERY good, but busy, SF Bay Area hospital.
I remember my pre-kids OB / GYN frowning at me six years ago and saying, «I don't recommend home birth for any of my patients.»
I was devastated,» says Jennifer Gunter, ob - gyn and author of The Preemie Primer.
Too bad I spent my entire pregnancy basically lacking in prenatal care because at the time the OBs just weren't willing to say, SERIOUSLY YOU WILL KILL YOUR BABY.
Though it does lend credence to the idea that the reason that natural birth zealots love to say OBs never see a natural birth is because a birth can't be natural in a hospital.
Oh, just in case it comes in useful later on, say if we end up with a VBAC, contrary to the plan we agreed with our OB
And please tell what are the «serious implications» of OBs controlling (I'd say guiding and advising, since patients are free to ignore advice without penalty, but happy to adopt your words for this conversation) and intervening in pregnancy and childbirth?
«During the first trimester, hCG levels double every two to three days and peek around week 10,» says Allison Hill, M.D., a private practice OB - GYN in Los Angeles.
She'd seen a couple of doctors about it (her OB, and their family doctor) and no one had told her the link between c - sections and early supply issues, and no one told her how to help it either - they just said «keep trying, and supplement with formula»!!
«It can improve oxygen delivery to their lungs,» says Jennifer Gunter, ob - gyn and author of The Preemie Primer.
Sunny Gault: I think the biggest hang up my OB had was when I said the blue curtain is dropped.
Dr. Nick Capetanakis: I think the best thing to do is just have a conversation with your OB and talk to him or her and say you know, if I need to have a C - section or am having a planned C - section, «What are some of the things we can do to make this more experience about me and bonding?».
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