Sentences with phrase «midwives say»

But midwives say women are not encouraged by their doctors to explore alternatives such as birthing centers, where low - risk women can give deliver naturally, balancing technology with a home - like environment.
Some doctor's and midwives say to start with alcohol and only go to hydrogen peroxide if you need something more drying.
I think education and intelligence in and of itself will make the majority of university educated midwives say, ok fine but I don't want to have the homebirth disaster on my conscience.
You know that midwives say babies know how to be born.
Most doctors and midwives say that the added rest and relaxation are alone beneficial.
The books and my midwife all said it wasn't time to panic yet and so I waited (not - so) patiently for my next ultrasound appointment, this deviation from my expected script sent me reeling.
I've had numerous people tell me their doctor or midwife said light drinking was fine.
I remember the midwife saying, «Look your baby has opened his eyes,» and thinking that I was a lot more concerned about what the man with the big scissors was doing!
My lovely midwife said she really needed to transfer me to hospital, and I agreed because I knew I couldn't feel any progress.
I tried to express milk but nothing came out and the midwives said I needed to feed him before they would let us go.
as my midwife said, all babies need is arms for warmth and comfort, and breasts for food.
Midwife said c - section and I went along with that no problem.
The midwife said: «It was not her fault that this [charting of the monitoring she seems to claim she did] did not occur, as she did not have anybody else working with her.»
One young dad at Working With Men says, «When I showed them our birth plan and said I was going to be there, the midwife said, «I expect you'd rather be with your mates.»»
My baby is almost 3 weeks and I had to start with formula top ups from about a week in — my midwife said he'd lost too much weight and if we didn't top up with formula he'd have to be hospitalised.
My midwives said they would start an iv if I wanted, but they felt that I could rebound if I followed their regime.
After all, «breast is best,» or so everyone from my mother to my midwife said.
My husband asked if we should be getting ready to transport to the hospital; my midwives said there was no time.
In our one - on - one and community care sessions, there were so many things my midwives said about labor and delivery that, thankfully, turned out to be true (as hard as they were to believe, especially at the time).
My midwife said to just wet the nipples with your own milk after each nursing session.
You are going to have to deliver her without it,» the midwife said to me to my horror, mere minutes after we finally made it to a delivery room.
It's that I have read commentary in the past from Dutch midwives saying something along the lines of that Dutch women don't want interventions and are proud not to need them and that homebirth is part of the national identity for Dutch women.
Sadly, regular readers of this blog are all too familiar with the trope of «the midwife said the heartrate was fine until the baby was born without a heartbeat.»
I hated the class where we went over what to do in the event of infant loss (let's just say I got a bit emotional and had to bury my wet face in Andy's shirt for awhile), but like my midwife said, it's good to talk about it.
Pretty soon, I was close and my midwife said she could see the baby's head.
The plus side is that my midwives said that the next time I have a baby it should go really quickly and be much easier.
I've had midwives claim they weren't at a birth when another midwife says they were.
The midwife said she works with X hospital and she assumed the midwife meant something that made sense.
My midwife said, «move to wherever feels right.»
Dr Amy reported a couple here last year I particularly remember the one where the midwife said» at least she had a lovely birth» before she died!
My midwife said she was concerned about it so she gave me special exercises to do and told me to get a belly binder.
Oddly, the midwife said, «Hop up on the table», and of course I couldn't do that.
That could explain instances of limp, unresponsive babies in home birth deliveries when the midwife says the heart tones were «fine.»
Luckily when I explained my worries, my midwife said a home birth would be fine for me.
But her midwife said she wouldn't «do» twins.
My midwife says that the most common times their breastfeeding mothers get pregnant is between 9 & 18 months.
Before I knew it, the midwife said that I would probably feel the urge to push soon.
When I arrived at the hospital with my first pregnancy, my midwife said, «Is it going to change your mind about an epidural depending on how far along you are?»
The Royal College of Midwives said the study was further evidence of the safety and benefits of home birth.
Soon after getting in, my midwife said that «we are going to have a baby soon.»
My midwife says swaddling cloths are the only way to get your baby to sleep through the night, so I'll have you to thank for that!
The midwife said at this point, «Another bald baby it looks like».
The hospital midwife said «Okay, now, Bonnie, I need you to push this baby out fast, okay?»
Even my midwife said four hourly was the norm.
I think my milk came in at about day 4 after delivery — just about the time my midwife said it would.
If the midwife said that it was safe for you to skip it, then she was misinforming you.
But because they have those letters after their names and there's such a push to glorify midwives» expertise in «birth» over and above doctors, you see a contradiction when a doctor says «you need this» and a midwife says «you don't need this.»
Finally about 8:30, the midwife said, «I can break your water and you'll go quicker but maybe more painful.
All I remember was the midwife saying, «Excuse me?»
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