Sentences with phrase «get obs»

If you can't get OBS to record or stream a specific game, you can try Display Capture mode instead.
I VERY seldom get OBs as long as I take my herbal supplements sand don't stress myself.
Some are left to their own devices while others actually «get lucky» and get an OB who will schedule them for an induction at 36, 37 weeks.
2 weeks later, I hemmorhaged again, but not as severely, and it took about 2 hours to get an OB, again.
http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2013/9/18/in-republic-of-congoarevolutioninmaternalhealth.html Once again demonstrating that the happy, unafraid «tribes» the NCB reference are a myth and in fact women in less developed countries would be thrilled to get some OB tech that could save their lives.
The CNM at the hospital said several times she didn't want me to change my mind since I had already gone so far, and «repositioning could fix it» despite my husband and I asking her to get our ob.

Not exact matches

«Some women with shorter intervals between periods (for example 21 days between each period) experience ovulation (the 24 - hour window when the egg is available for the sperm to fertilize) on day seven or eight, so they are prone to getting pregnant at the end of a long period,» explains Sherry Ross, MD, OB / GYN and women's health expert and author of She - ology.
And that, kiddees, is why Catholics can't use contraceptives, get bl / owj / obs or mastu.rbate.
After implementing the machines at their breweries and tap rooms, OB decided it was time to get other breweries involved, making Crowler machines available for purchase by other beer makers.
I was watching The Baby Story yesterday and the OB was yelling «GET ANGRY!»
Talking to an understanding OB to get their advice would be a great first step, too — although they will ALWAYS advise you to stay in the hospital, they might give you some insight about how the local system is set up.
Personally I'd * prefer * women to have a train midwife / ob attending, but I don't get to make decisions for all women.
Make an appointment with your primary health care provider or OB / GYN to schedule a complete physical and get up to date with routine exams.
People are getting confused, unassisted birth refers to a birth not attended by a trained midwife or OB.
-- and the expected wait time to see an OB / get an OR when the ER is very busy.
A doula who thought OBs were money - hungry control freaks, eager to get home for supper... or the proverbial golf game.
I had prepared so much for the birth, read everything I could get my hands on including an OB text book, took a childbirth education class, and practiced Bradley method relaxation for weeks at home with The Piano Man.
If you are over 35 and wants to conceive, pay a visit to your OB - Gyn for a health checkup to make sure your chances of getting pregnant are optimized.
while being coerced to push even though I wanted to breath the babies down, I didn't get to see them at all for 15 hours after they were born because the hospital staff didn't get their act together, not because it was medically necessary, etc., so much so that the head of OB (my office doc) later admitted they had me on suicide watch because what happened was so different than my birth plan... I wasn't stuck on exact details, especially because twins throw a loop in all of it, but it was nothing like I had hoped for, at all.
Having such an obvious obstetric risk factor means giving birth in a nasty hospital with machines and interventions and eebil nurses and OBs who will cut you open so they can get home to dinner.
If a designated OB - emergency vehicle has to travel long distances or through heavy traffic to get to a patient in the US, it will arrive too late, no matter how well equipped it is.
I've heard stories where a male OB was pressing on a woman's stomach to get the baby or placenta out leaving her bruised.
If it does not pass after several days, it is a good idea for the new mother to get in touch with her OB / GYN's office for an appointment to discuss her postpartum health and symptoms.
You probably don't realize that OBs in America only get to bill private insurance a global package fee for the whole pregnancy.
You may see a high - risk pregnancy doctor, or your ob - gyn may get advice from one to ensure you get the best possible care.
The paper Homebirth and the Future Child by OB - GYN Lachlan de Crespigny, and Oxford Philosophy Professor Julian Savulescu is deservedly getting widespread attention in the mainstream media.
Ob / Gyn Dr. Nita Landry explains that babies may not get enough to eat for two reasons — the mother isn't producing enough milk, or the baby isn't latching and nursing well.
I would definitely recommend talking to your OB — I had terrible anxiety with my first and got help and it was a whole new world.
The hospital staff and particularly the OB on call was amazing — supportive of our choices and desire to continue laboring and trying creative solutions to get me to progress.
- Molly, an OB from Michigan who found us online for her daughter - in - law, who was not getting enough help
And I would imagine if someone is doing more of a standard prenatal care, you know, through a hospital or something, this would be something that their OB talks to them about, or gives them a handout, or something like that where they can get more information.
So I contacted the lactation consultant in my OB Joanne's office and we actually went in for a consultation when he was about 10 months old which they had the little baby weighing scale and everything and we were like, well I'm not concerned he is not getting enough but I'm mostly concerned why I'm bleeding.
«Parents who get a preemie parent buddy cope better, even if it's just a short conversation once a week,» says Jennifer Gunter, ob - gyn and author of The Preemie Primer.
But if you're paying out of pocket for everything, often by paying up front you can get between 10 % and 30 % discount if you pay in cash for the OB / GYN or CNM and the hospital itself.
We had an appointment with an OB at Kaiser that evening but we were thinking we could try to get in earlier so that I could get some back relief.
Most OBs get paid by I durance companies and when you factor in the cost of malpractice I surance, student loans and the cost of doing business, you would see it's not nearly as much as you think.
Thank goodness my mother decided to bring me in when she did; I arrived at the hospital, got out of the car, my water broke dramatically in the hallway of the OB and they checked me and I was complete and having a baby then and there.
It also is a good example of why being «an expert in normal birth» can not ever compare to the well rounded, science based education and training an OB / GYN receives and the care that one will get from said OB.
Our OB's could get babies out in 10 minutes or less if needed.
With my daughter, born in a hospital with a midwife, we used the vacuum to get her out and by that time, there was the OB, the resident, my midwife and 2 - 3 nurses.
At this appointment, your baby is very tiny, so your ob - gyn will do a transvaginal test to get a better picture.
I was getting at, if she had delivered in the hospital, the fetal HR pattern would most likely have been category II or worse, III, and the OB would have expedited the delivery with an episiotomy and vacuum and any resuscitation may only have been done in the L&D room in front of momma in the neonatal bassinet.
Now don't get me wrong, I love my OB.
If those two things don't work, try getting in touch with your OB / midwife / lactation consultant / community health nurse.
Needless to say, I was told by my OB that I would need fertility drugs when I would want to get pregnant.
In my time reading VBAC boards, there was a recurring theme of women being told their OBs didn't want to do VBACs, after which they got sucked into the woo just because they were desperate for a birth attendant to tell them VBAC was an option.
And yet we are supposed to believe that OBs are getting all bent out of shape about the 1 % of birthing business they are losing to homebirth midwives?
You skewed my words regarding «managing» my birth... the whole point of the midwife is to alert the mother of the possibility of a problem, just like an OB so then a proper course of action can be taken... I was merely saying that they don't think of birth as a medical emergency from the beginning, requiring things that are unnecessary, like constant monitoring because it's easier than intermittent monitoring, or restricting maternal intake because the doctor could get puked on, or have fecal matter excreted during delivery is selfish (and yes, I know, the mother could aspirate, but the rate of that is low too... and I'm not saying they need to eat a steak dinner... but denying a drink of water, or a popsicle during a long labor is just ridiculous, as is rushing a natural process for convenience sake.)
Then you hop onto the forum and share that you are having a hospital NCB with a nice OB and everyone says you will just get a CS and you can not have a real NCB anywhere but home.
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