Are your children’s vaccines up to date?

Set a reminder

Please or to access all these features

Childbirth

Share experiences and get support around labour, birth and recovery.

Can someone help me with this?

7 replies

TribbleWithoutaCause · 23/11/2012 16:24

Ok, I've had to transfer care due to a house move. I was being treated as low risk, but the MWs at my new place of care are stating that I may need to be high risk due to a pph.

I had a forceps delivery with an episiotomy, then due to my iron count was given a transfusion three days post delivery. Now, apart from that there were no other issues.

For the sake of my mental health I don't really want to be in a consultant unit. I had horrendous post natel depression and trauma last time, and wish to stick with my original plan of going to an MLU. Is there anything I should be looking at with reference to the above? My pregnancy has been very boring this time round (thank goodness).

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
fryingpanalley · 23/11/2012 16:30

How far along are you? I was high risk but wanted to give birth in an MLU and simply got the consultant to agree to that at my 36 week appointment. I asked him to explain the risks of not being in a MLU, we agreed I understood them and that was it. (In the end I gave birth in triage so all the fighting was for nothing!)

MyLastDuchess · 23/11/2012 16:32

I am not in the UK so keep that in mind but ...

I had a serious PPH after the birth of DC1 and as a result I am now classed as medium risk here in the Netherlands. This means that they really want me to be in hospital to give birth (as opposed to a birthing centre), although I will have midwives helping me rather than doctors.

Would getting a doula be an option for you? I was very traumatised by my first experience and for me that has been the best way of trying to take back some control (am now 40+6 so expecting baby any time now).

Jojoba1986 · 23/11/2012 16:37

Be firm with them. Let them explain all the risks & then tell them calmly & assertively that you understand the potential risks but you are not prepared to go to a consultant-led unit. Maybe insist that what you really want is a homebirth but you're willing to compromise with a midwife-led unit! Grin

Where you give birth is ultimately your choice, their job is to explain the benefits/potential risks of each possibility & support you in your choice.

TribbleWithoutaCause · 23/11/2012 16:40

I've got a doula, and I think I'm going to have to see the consultant.

I'm just scared that they'll start using it as a way to ramp up the interventions. I really don't want this, I feel like it'll be a one way ticket back to pnd.

OP posts:
TribbleWithoutaCause · 23/11/2012 16:41

Oh I'm twenty six weeks. Smile

OP posts:
TribbleWithoutaCause · 23/11/2012 16:41

Ooooo that's good Jojo.

OP posts:
brettgirl2 · 24/11/2012 17:55

I really wouldnt panic for now. Go and see the consultant and see what they think. Seeing a consultant doesnt alter your risk level, it is just another opinion. I ended up consultant led with dd2 but stayed low risk and had a home birth.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread