The thought of something going horribly
wrong during delivery can give anyone a panic attack.
As far as the safety issue, one of my midwives taught neonatal resusitation to doctors, and if something had gone
wrong during delivery I was ten minutes from the hospital where with a warning phone call they would be ready for my emergency just as quickly as if I had been in their birthing center.
«if something had gone
wrong during delivery I was ten minutes from the hospital where with a warning phone call they would be ready for my emergency just as quickly as if I had been in their birthing center.»
Birth injuries are generally caused by something that went
wrong during the delivery of the child.
Not exact matches
It turns out that my daughter was head down but facing the
wrong way
during delivery, and normal methods for adjusting her were too high risk for our situation.
This removes the potential for needing to be transferred to a hospital should something go
wrong during a home birth or birth center
delivery.
On the other hand, if you want the option of getting an epidural, or you're very anxious about something going
wrong during labor and
delivery and don't want to chance having to transfer to a hospital, you'll want to be in a hospital from the get - go.
So much can change and / or go
wrong during labor and
delivery and it is best to come mentally prepared just in case.
Birth injuries occur
during difficult
deliveries in which something goes
wrong — whether the child is in a breech position, is too large to move through the birth canal or suffers some other distress.
The simple fact that something
wrong occurred
during the labor and
delivery process is not by itself an compensable event.