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Pregnancy

Carrying maternity notes in late pregnancy - necessary?

30 replies

Plateofcrumbs · 18/07/2014 18:51

Quick advice needed!

I'm 3 days off due date, going out for dinner etc tonight about an hour away from home, 1.5 hrs away from our hospital (but close to other hospitals)

Would you take your maternity notes with you? I really don't want to be bothered lugging them about. Worst case scenario and I suddenly go into rapid labour and end up at a different hospital without my notes, what happens?

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WineSpider · 18/07/2014 18:55

I would take them with you, but then I'm a just in case kind of person.

Are you driving? Could you at least keep them in the car?

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Secretsquirrel13 · 18/07/2014 18:57

No if everything has been straightforward and norm. Yes if you have had any ongoing problems.

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shushpenfold · 18/07/2014 18:58

Take with you....I did and needed them! Keep them in the car.

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Plateofcrumbs · 18/07/2014 18:58

Nope I'm not driving, will be on public transport in London.

I might take a photo on my phone of the birth plan notes my consultant has written and leave it at that.

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PotatoPolly · 18/07/2014 18:59

I would definitely take them, no doubt about it! It's not like taking a suitcase or something, it's a4 notes. Hospitals don't keep electronic records- everything is in your handheld notes. I remember at antenatal classes, the MW told us she would send DH or someone else home to get them!

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MoominKoalaAndMiniMoom · 18/07/2014 19:00

Can't it just stay in the car? Mine stayed in the car alongside my hospital bag from about 35 weeks onwards. Came in handy when we rushed in with pre-eclampsia symptoms at 37 weeks and they said 'righto, you're not leaving hospital, we're inducing you tomorrow' Grin

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MoominKoalaAndMiniMoom · 18/07/2014 19:04

Ah x-post, just seen you're not in car.

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Plateofcrumbs · 18/07/2014 20:32

I relented and brought the notes after I remembered DH will have a bag with him so I can pop them in there . As much as anything else I was worried about losing them!

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MrsGiraffe12 · 18/07/2014 21:05

I've taken mine everywhere with me since 24 weeks but I'm having a high risk pregnancy x

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squizita · 18/07/2014 21:54

I have carried mine everywhere since I got them: I was firmly instructed to do so.
But like MrsGiraffe I am a high risk pregnancy with various specific medical needs.

I can quite easily 'roll' mine and pop them into the bottom of a small-but-not-tiny handbag.

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Missingcaffeine · 18/07/2014 23:17

Of course they would still see you, but I've read stories on here of mums being given a really hard time about not having their notes - not the best way to start out your labour.

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whereisshe · 18/07/2014 23:21

I never carried mine, and I was still working until 38 weeks, in London 1.5 hrs from home. But then it was a low risk pregnancy...

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FishRabbit · 18/07/2014 23:26

Definitely take them. They're really useful... Eg If they take your blood pressure, they can look through and see that that bp is normal for you.

Plus, you know you're low risk but they don't know that, you could have all kinds of information in your past, like crazy medical conditions or have had 98 miscarriages etc etc. Plus, if you take them, they'll be a bit annoying but nothing will happen. If you leave them you will definitely go into labour.

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ohdearitshappeningtome · 18/07/2014 23:29

You need to take them! If you end up in another hospital they need to know your blood results from booking bloods, ie blood group and medical conditions that cannot be confirmed just by word of mouth!

I think it's pretty irresponsible to travel that far without them

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catsofa · 18/07/2014 23:40

Sorry to potentially hijack the thread but I'm so confused about why all the info isn't on normal medical records, so that wherever you end up they just punch your NHS number into a computer and it shows it all like it does with every other kind of medical info.

Surely loads of people must lose them or their dog eats them or they forget to take them when they go out for a meal etc.

Am I missing something? I must be!

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TheLastThneed · 18/07/2014 23:47

I've always wondered the same catsofa.

I was worried about losing mine, so I didn't carry them with me.

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ohdearitshappeningtome · 19/07/2014 00:12

You can put ina. Number and your results come up.... At the hospital your booked at, it's not
Nationwide :-(

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catsofa · 19/07/2014 00:27

Why on earth isn't it nationwide? That's insane. The Jobcentre can do it, and surely it would save lives in the NHS? BONKERS.

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ohdearitshappeningtome · 19/07/2014 00:30

Because the
Nhs is on it's
Knees! :>( sad but true

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Bellyrub1980 · 19/07/2014 01:52

The NHS has about 50 different computer systems, none of them talk to each other and none of them work very well. Believe me, a centralised nationwide computer system would be amazing but for some reason is considered too costly and too labour intensive to be worth it at the moment. Infact, we may see a move towards hand held notes for more and more patients with different health conditions.

I think the NHS should strike a deal with Apple or Microsoft and get the whole thing sorted out, but I'm living in a dream land!

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whereisshe · 19/07/2014 08:58

The NHS already tried to implement a national system. It didn't go so well.

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Missingcaffeine · 19/07/2014 13:17

They abandoned the joining up of NHS computer systems following the financial crisis, as it was going to cost mega money to implement nationally, and they realised the money was no longer there. Getting the legal and security aspects of joining it all up is so expensive. GP's operate as private businesses and our NHS system has moved to a more business like model, so they all have different systems that they are paying for and usually sign up to a software contract for many years that they don't want to break due to financial implications and having to retrain staff. This is one of the downsides of a model that is more like the private sector - it can end up less joined up.

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weebairn · 19/07/2014 13:37

I took my notes with me after 30 weeks or so if I was going more than a few hours from home or staying overnight. Otherwise, no. But everything was entirely straightforward so there wasn't really anything significant in them. If I'd had complications or a medical condition, I'd have probably kept them on me.

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Frizz1986 · 19/07/2014 16:36

I always took my notes if i was going anywhere far just in case. Near the end when i went out without the car i used an app on my phone which takes photos and turns them into pdfs. Meant we had really clear images of the whole thing.

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Hobby2014 · 19/07/2014 16:43

Apparently if you go into labour/hospital without your notes they have to treat you as high risk so no MLU, strapped up to machines etc.
You should take them, even if you're low risk. X

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