The midwife said at this point, «Another bald baby it looks like».
Not exact matches
David
said the
midwives and Doula's looked a little worried
at that
point.
@dionna - code - name - mama: Well, when I was having recurrent yeast infections (this was back when I was using antibiotics for acne, and I had a yeast infection every two weeks for a year — ugh), the nurse -
midwife at my OBGYN's office made a big
point of
saying I needed to wash my undies (she assumed, correctly
at the time, no cloth pads or family cloth) in vinegar to kill the yeast — that just washing them normally wouldn't necessarily do it.
You
say «it is the
midwife's job and responsibility to KNOW when to transfer if necessary, or to transfer care to an OB if there is need
at some
point in the pregnancy,» and that is exactly right.
To refute this obvious mistruth, she is
pointing out what the science actually
says — that the perinatal mortality rate for low risk women cared for by
midwives, whether
at home or
at hospital, is higher than the perinatal mortality rate for high risk women cared for by obstetricians in the hospital.
The assistant
midwife and my friend were looking
at the placenta later, and that
midwife pointed out the few calcification spots in there and
said that it wasn't a «bad» placenta, but it was definitely done and time for the baby to have been born.