Sentences with phrase «c sections where»

This is only for c sections where there is no time for an epidural or spinal.

Not exact matches

501 (c)(3) is most appropriate for many community organizations, and (except where indicated otherwise) it will be used interchangeably with the term tax - exempt for the remainder of this section.
Carolyn McConnell of Rock the Cradle — The Politics of Motherhood agrees and points out the results of a 2005 survey where one quarter of the women polled «reported feeling pressured by a medical professional to have a C - section
I can see where a c - section would be necessary.
If insurance companies want to force mothers to birth in hospitals where many women are coerced into c - sections, they need to at least stand behind their decision by giving these women the regular - rate coverage they deserve!
I will be admited to that private room where I will receive check ups from the nurses, give birth and stay for 24 hrs after birth if everything goes fine and I do not need a c - section or anything.
More, we were living in Rhode Island where the C - section rate is of the highest in the country.
Then in cases where labor has not begun and there is a danger to the baby remaining in utero, you are all for going straight to a c - section, right?
I am attempting a VBAC with my current pregnancy, but have accepted the possibility of another C - section with another doctor, in another practice, in an environment where I am treated like a person and not a walking womb.
(Or, like we did, keep it on the first floor where you'll all be sleeping until your partner's C - section heals enough for her to climb the stairs.)
And for a bit of nostalgia, anybody remember the thread on MDC a couple of years ago where the midwife covered the poster's vagina with warm towels to help her cope with her mother's c - section in some weird ritual in the woods?
I think that had I not started in a birth center I would always wonder if I really needed a c - section, but because of where I started I know that it really was the only way.
There have been more than one instance where a woman wanting a VBAC showed up at the hospital with a crowning baby and was given a c - section without her consent.
For high risk women or complications where interventions and / or a c - section is warranted there is no doubt that OBs save lives.
I am planning a home birth so if I do end up in hospital its because I absolutely have to be there or its an emergency situation where a C - section is called for I going to be meeting those people pretty much for the first time [laughs] and I don't know what they are, how receptive they would to something like this, so you know there are certain things you think might be easier to ask for verses asking of all of this things, perhaps you know, maybe it doesn't have to be all or nothing but I don't know are there certain things that you think might be good for me to ask for in lieu of asking for everything.
I had a c - section with my son, so my milk didn't come in for a number of days, and I had that whole first week of panic that a lot of moms have where you need them to be fed something, and you're trying to breastfeed, and I would have loved to have someone to talk to like these mentors.
I've had my last 3 babies at home with a midwife, and I can tell you that where I live in Florida it would've cost over $ 9,000 - 11,000 for the OB visits and a hospital birth (not including an epidural, another $ 1200 - 1500 or it were C - section that would've been thousands more).
In the cases where the baby's head is too big, the baby gets stressed during contractions, or a second twin flips breach, an emergency C - section does happen.
We, as a society, need to think about where we draw the line, because we, as a society, through our punishments and incentives, determine how high the C - section rate should be.
So where is the evidence that halving our C - section rate would be safe?
Ina May Gaskin's C - section statistics over 40 years: 1.7 % American hospital C - section statistics: 32 % not including routine episiotomy and so on... Oh yes, I know who I would trust for my child's birth... And if the price of an intact body and a peaceful birth was «gentle stimulation» I would accept it with no hesitation... Of course I live in France where obstetric violence is the norm and home birth nearly considered as criminal by the establishment, but where puritanism is long gone (thank God)... You may remove this post as you did for my previous one... It's OK we've got lots of you this side of the Atlantic telling us what's good or bad for us and we trust them less and less.
HE had to call an ambulance and she was transferred to a rural hospital (we live in DC, but the birthing center was out in the middle of nowhere, maryland) where she had an emergency c - section.
I wonder how they measure things in countries where C - section is not considered a morbidity but rather a reasonable, viable choice e.g. Italy, China, Brazil.
The roll out of woman - centered caesareans is simple and reproducable and thus scalling up of this intervention in all the maternity hospitals where c - sections happen, in the main should be very achievable.
«Choosing how and where to labor, and refusing unnecessary C - sections, must be every woman's birth right,» she says.
It's the last paragraph before the conclusion, I believe, where the oh BTW maybe vaginal vs c - section delivery impacts lifelong health gets kind of sandwiched in there.
Here's where it gets really silly: Those very low - risk women were unlikely to wind up with c - sections in the first place.
I am not a medical professional, so please correct me if I am wrong, but we do understand how much of an important role that stress hormones play in labour — the way medical professionals do talk about birth in terms of risk without paying attention to emotions (I am getting this from a somewhat flippant comment earlier on this thread where the author says the would like to see 100 % c - section rate) does exacerbate the problem.
The C - section rate with twins is extremely high here in Costa Rica where we live — around 98 %.
thanks for posting this.I wish it could make its way into the cinemas in my home country Turkey, where c - section rates reach up to % 80.
It takes a long time to heal and recover from a c - section where most women can be up and going on with life within hours of having birthed their babies.
Proponents of birthing as a non-medical event sometimes show natural birth pictures and natural birth videos where laboring women are strapped onto a special labor table or undergo procedures they don't really want like an unnecessary c - section or induction.
There are statistics that suggest C - sections are unnecessary, so this is where it's important that you trust your doctor.
I live in the states, in NJ, where c - sections and formula feeding is quite routine and normal.
And with a C - section baby, there's a process that's being explored now and there's a lot of research being done on this where about an hour before the surgical procedure, gauze is inserted into the mother's vagina and left there for about an hour and then that gauze is taken out just before the C - section is performed and kept in a sterile safe place.
The matter is subject to a lot of study in Brazil, where over 50 % of babies are born via C section.
Isn't it true that the c - section rate is pretty high in countries like Brazil, where maternal request c - sections are high?
But for those of us who either opt to or are left in a situation where having a c - section is the safest way to give birth for us, despite being broadly left out of the Awesome Birth Story Club, have no shortage of equally amazing moments before, during, and after giving birth.
At the hospital where I had my son, I think the rate of c - section following attempted vaginal birth for first - time mothers was 10 %.
Well, looking at the 10 steps I failed at: — # 6 nothing other than breast milk (gave hungry baby formula b / c I was too tired and drugged up to nurse more than 5 minutes)-- # 7 rooming in (being tired and drugged up I actually wanted to sleep)-- # 9 no pacifiers (I would rather baby have the SIDS prevention and soothing that comes from sucking)-- # 4 initiate breastfeeding within 30 minutes of birth (that C - section thing where they sliced my guts open interfered with that timing)-- # 10 I was referred to the support group but sure as hell didn't go (because I deemed healing at home from my surgery more important than being browbeaten about how I was feeding my baby)c I was too tired and drugged up to nurse more than 5 minutes)-- # 7 rooming in (being tired and drugged up I actually wanted to sleep)-- # 9 no pacifiers (I would rather baby have the SIDS prevention and soothing that comes from sucking)-- # 4 initiate breastfeeding within 30 minutes of birth (that C - section thing where they sliced my guts open interfered with that timing)-- # 10 I was referred to the support group but sure as hell didn't go (because I deemed healing at home from my surgery more important than being browbeaten about how I was feeding my baby)C - section thing where they sliced my guts open interfered with that timing)-- # 10 I was referred to the support group but sure as hell didn't go (because I deemed healing at home from my surgery more important than being browbeaten about how I was feeding my baby).
Did you see the episodes of Grey's Anatomy where the mothers» refusal of interventions cost one baby brain function and another an emergency c - section.
A forceps delivery is only appropriate in a birthing center or hospital where a C - section can be done, if needed.
In addition, the nurses at the hospital where I had my emergency c - section told me the story of one woman who fell asleep in a chair holding her newborn and dropped the baby, leading to brain damage (hello, scare tactics, anyone?!).
If the event ever arose where mom would need a C - section, there is an increased risk of vomiting from the anesthetic, which can cause aspiration (basically mom choking on her own vomit).
The hospital where I gave birth to the Bear also has one of the higher c - section rates in our area at 44.8 %.
Another option for breastfeeding after a c - section is side - lying, where you and baby both lay on your side and face each other.
Heather blogs at A Mama's Blog, where she has written other posts on C - sections, VBACs, breastfeeding, pregnancy, and birth issues, as well as her two boys.
There is also research showing that moms who planned to give birth at home (regardless of where they actually had their babies) ended up with fewer interventions, such as episiotomies and c - sections, compared with a group of equally low - risk women who had planned hospital deliveries.
I knew I wanted an epidural from the moment I got pregnant and I was really happy with my emergency c - section, where she chose a birthing center and was upset when her birth plan didn't go according to plan and also had to have an emergency c - section.
And so there were a lot of things going on, I had my baby, he was healthy, considering he was early, he had a good weight, his scores were good, but they still whisked him right away to the NICU, and they finished my C - section operation, and I remember being wheeled in a completely separate area, they took my baby to the NICU, and I just remember sitting alone,»cause my husband had gone with the baby, and a while had past and nurses had come in to check on me, but it kind of got to the point where I had to ask to see my baby.
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