Sentences with phrase «probably be in the hospital»

If you have an uncomplicated c - section, you'll probably be in the hospital for two to four days.
Recovery from the surgery can take longer than a vaginal delivery and you will probably be in the hospital for a day or longer.
You'll probably be in the hospital for about four days to don't be afraid to ask your caregiver for medication to relieve the itchiness and pain.
A fatty liver is reversible in all but the most serious cases, and basically, if your's wasn't reversible, you'd probably be in the hospital right now.

Not exact matches

If you are an RN in a hospital, you are probably not an ordained member of the clergy, but you perform spiritual work at your workplace.
If not, their contacts with the hospital staff will probably be frustratingly brief and totally inadequate to give them the amount of help needed in handling their own crisis and in relating constructively with their patient.
We both work in a hospital, and if everyone ate like this we'd probably be out of jobs.
You probably would to be chief of surgery in a hospital, but for Tenley now this is an individual approach to happiness and a useful life.
I was really paranoid about supplementing and pacifiers — probably justifiably so, based on the amount of formula that was in this hospital.
I was stuck at 9 cm for about 8 hours, and I'm sure that had we been in the hospital there would have been lots of intervention to speed up the process, and they probably would have pushed for a c - section.
There are VERY few complications that will kill a mother or baby in less time than it takes to get to the hospital, and those types of complications will probably kill you no matter where you are, before anyone even knows something is wrong.
If you had a routine delivery you probably will be in the hospital for about 24 - 48 hours, sometimes shorter.
If you have children, it is probably your first instinct to KNOW that they must be in a car seat from the time they leave the hospital until they are old enough to move to a booster seat, and then to simply buckling up in a seat belt.
Homebirth midwives, since they aren't under any legal requirement to keep complete records [or any records at all, really] in the US, would probably fudge or omit such extreme outcomes except that most of these cases wind up in hospitals and can't be hidden.
She'll probably be reminded that babies die in the hospital, too, and that any unpleasantness she or her baby are experiencing in the hospital are BECAUSE it's the hospital.
It's not a happy time to give up the dream home birth, move ever so slowly while in heavy labor, and to transfer to an unfamiliar provider in an environment you probably distrust (otherwise you would have chosen the hospital to begin with).
But the plus side is that in the hospital they would have taken my son away (and probably stuck a bottle in his mouth) and wheeled me off.
I am having a c - section so I will be in the hospital for 3 days probably.
If you live in a metropolitan area, you probably have several hospitals to choose from; but if you live in a rural area, you probably have fewer options but still need to verify that your closest medical center is prepared for your babies» delivery.
Bradley Method class is a wonderful and empowering class whether you have your baby at home, a birth center, or a hospital so it's probably the best step to saving money in the whole process.
Yes I loved my cloth pads sooo much after having Brian I started in the hospital as well and the nurses were amazed and probably thought I was crazy but they were so comfortable I did not bleed much because of health issues but I would still recommend them to every mom.
The nullip numbers are identical for home and hospital, reassuring me that the midwives are probably not systematically underestimating blood loss in the home setting.
Training the nurses, and making pain relief easily available are probably the two most important things hospitals can do to help new mothers, at least in NYC, where formula has not been put in bassinets or given to mothers who want to nurse (at least officially) for quite some time.
If she'd gone to a CNM or OB and had induction in the hospital somewhere around 41 weeks, she'd probably have had a less comfortable labor and delivery, not felt that her care provider was her BFF — and had a baby without brain damage.
Homebirth couples must take extra responsibility in these areas since medical back - up is not readily available as it is for those birthing in the hospital» So yeah, she will catch the baby but the PARENTS are responsible for any bad outcome, probably because they didn't do prenatal yoga or didn't eat enough kale
One could speculate about differences in skill levels — the hospital midwife probably sees more deliveries, and more complicated ones, for example — but the training and registration requirements are the same.
They did not do a comparison to in hospital birth, probably because the perinatal death rate was 1.6 / 1000.
However, while swaddling is highly recommended — in fact, every time you were handed your baby in the hospital, he was probably neatly swaddled in a receiving blanket — if it's not done properly, it can be dangerous.
I stay home with my kids right now, and I homeschool, but when they are grown I will probably go back to school, and obstetrics is a field I've considered just so that maybe I can make a bit of a good difference, and give women the best of both worlds (like a water birth, in a hospital with a doula or midwife with an OB on staff or back up in case something went wrong.)
OBs in areas where homebirth is popular probably make more money when the disasters arrive in the hospital.
Yeah, but I'm saying it pushes people into risky HBACs who would probably stay in the hospital system otherwise.
«People who may have both tree allergies and grass allergies are probably going be doubly impacted, because both of those things are going to be blooming at the same time,» said pediatrician Dr. Lolita McDavid, who is employed at University Hospitals Rainbow Babies & Children's Hospital in Cleveland, Ohio.
If she is only attending a few births and all low risk births she may be certified in many things but doesn't get to run drills (hospitals run shoulder dystocia drills) and probably has never used to skills in real life.
In hospital, your child will probably be given a large dose of inactivated charcoal to prevent his stomach absorbing the poison.
In the hospital he did not want to latch on, and although he has now probably once a day, I still am not able to breastfeed yet.
Since mom will probably remain in the hospital while the doctor is trying to start the labor, it can seem like she is there much longer than women who naturally go into labor.
Studies show that colic tends to appear in babies at around two weeks old, so if it seems like you brought a happy baby home from the hospital and now that same baby has morphed into an unhappy baby, you're probably right.
After our daughter born she was unable to latch the entire time we were in the hospital and we were bluntly told she had an underdeveloped jaw and should probably look at formula.
I've worked in spaces were moms have asked me to bring out oils particularly in hospital and it's really kind of fun when the providers walk through the door, they walk - in and they've been in the hospital environment and it just smells hospital and then they walk - in into your room and sudden, «oh, hey that smells really good» you know when you get the orange oil because moms have some fatigue and probably at that point of mommas fatigue, most in the rooms are fatigued so you get out any other citrus oils kind of enliven the room and the providers walk - in and they kind of, «whoa, that smells really good».
We have NICU nurses who are saying things along the lines of, «Well, if moms were less strict about their birth plan, if they compromised a little bit more, if they didn't have to have everything their way, then we'd probably have healthier births in the hospital
Had the mom in Carr's case been in a hospital, Moritz said, doctors probably would have performed a C - section to take out the baby, or, if the head was stuck while trying to deliver vaginally, special forceps could have been used to pull the baby.
As a last resort, if everything else has failed in keeping baby inside her as long as possible, she will probably be admitted to the hospital as a precautionary measure.
If I was trying to decide whether to have a hospital versus a home birth I would probably just set this article to the side because it doesn't have enough information in it.
If I were delivering in the hospital they would already know what was going on, which would save at least 15 - 20 minutes by eliminating both the transportation and the evaluation / explanation parts of the process, and I would probably already have an epidural so all they would have to do to operate is up the dose a notch.
So, until the last 24, 48 hours in the hospital her feeds that she had when I wasn't there, the feeds that all were done by NG Tube and those were probably two feeds a day.
In Canada, where women do not pay for medical care associated with pregnancy and delivery, the difference between home births and hospital births is probably not contaminated by socioeconomic status.
Abbi — I don't know if there are any hospitals in my city (Toronto, Canada) that still have a nursery on the postpartum ward, but rooming - in is certainly the most common policy here, and although probably there are some mothers who would prefer a nursery, full rooming - in is accepted as the norm.
Now Dr. Newman would probably say that dehydration can be avoided by putting the baby skin - to - skin on the mother from birth and having the two stay together in the hospital, even after a complicated birth.
Danielle, thanks for laying it all out there, but can you explain why you compared the intrapartum fetal mortality rate for the Birth Center study, which had no twins, a handful of surprise breeches (most of which were probably transported to the hospital as soon as they were discovered) and another handful of VBACs because all of these are disallowed in accredited birth centers per AABC's & CABC's rules (I read the study)... and compared it to MANA's intrapartum rate for the group that contained a load of VBACs, breeches and twins that comprised nearly 10 % of the total sample?
«When you skip meals, you're setting yourself up for a poor eating pattern for the day, as you'll probably be hungrier later on,» says Jaclyn London, RD, senior clinical dietitian at The Mount Sinai Hospital in New York.
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