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Childbirth

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

Is the post natal ward the fifth circle of hell?

130 replies

Fluffygreenslippers · 11/09/2022 19:09

Because everyone I’ve spoken to has received shocking care, if you can even call it that. Following on from my other thread about labour I thought I was share my experience of the post natal ward. I hope that’s okay. It’s very long!

So after the delivery I was wheeled to the recovery ward to recover. The recovery ward was actually lovely. There was no one there except one nurse. It would have been a great time for me to finally sleep except someone decide it was time to clatter a bucket around outside.

I was pretty much in shock. I suddenly had a baby. A nurse came in and showed us things. I don’t remember, I was too tired to do anything. I still had the cannula in my arm which was extremely painful, my whole hand and wrist had swollen up from the constant iv. I still have staining now from iv leakage.

I had an idea that once I was up and about I could go home. So I fought to stand up and walk around, even though I felt like I had been hit by a train. I was in the recovery ward all day although thinking back it only felt like an hour? Anyway as the day wore on they wheeled me into the post natal ward.

As I was wheeled in, a pig faced woman with her boyfriend glared at me. Like really scowled, like I had farted on her birthday cake or something. The boyfriend gawped at me. I was exhausted and baffled. It was 8pm and DH was told he had to leave. He wasn’t allowed to stay with me. I broke down in tears. I have never felt such despair as I did in that moment. A nice nurse asked me why I was crying. She reassured me that the staff were there to help and not to worry. Ha! DH left.

The day staff left and the night staff came. The scowling woman in the bed opposite started groaning and crying out, saying she was in pain. She did this at regular intervals. I found out later she had a uterus infection. I don’t know where her baby was.

A couple of hours passed. The baby and I looked at each other. He did a poo. I had never changed a nappy in my life. Perhaps one of the nurses could just show me..? I went to have a look for the nice nurse. Oh silly me she had left. The night staff were all sitting in the office and looked at me like I had two heads when I peered in. I managed to change a nappy, and feed him. I later found out the nappy was backwards.

An assistant came to check the babies temperature. She said it was too low. I was suddenly terrified that somehow they would take him away from me.

The baby started crying. The huffing woman opposite started shouting at me saying she wasn’t going to listen to THAT all night. She started an angry call to her boyfriend, complaining about her pain and the noise my baby was making. I felt flustered and embarrassed and was trying not to cry. Let me tell you I am a gobby cow usually. In usual circumstances I would have offered to knock her out. But I’d lost three litres of blood. There were thirty stitches in my vagina. I could barely walk. I felt scared and vulnerable. None of the midwives were around.
The woman started aggressively chomping bbq flavoured crisps. I was so tired. I hadn’t slept since Tuesday night & it was now Friday. I lay down and finally started to go to sleep when the woman opposite started snoring and grunting like a pig. Then I heard music which gradually got louder. Had the woman got a radio on? The baby cried again, the woman woke up and started shouting at me again.

I picked up the baby and staggered to the nurses station. The door was shut. I knocked. No one answered so I opened it anyway. They all glared at me. THEY were playing the radio. Playing a loud radio! At 12am! On a post natal ward! I told them that I wanted to be moved. They argued with me saying they couldn’t move people wherever they wanted. I insisted, tears streaming down my face. One nurse agreed to help me.

I was moved into another room. It was freezing cold. I realised that all the windows were open! I went around shutting them but some I couldn’t reach. I asked a nurse if she could shut them and she just looked at me and walked away. During the night a woman who had had a c section asked if a nurse might pick up the baby for her. The nurse said do it yourself. Another loudly gossiped about her 50th birthday plans. It was 4am at this point. I managed to sleep for 45 minutes. The nurse then came and banged an empty plate on my tray waking me up. An hour later breakfast was served which was brown bread toast. I opened my mouth to tell her I was celiac but she had already fucked off.

At this point I text my husband. I had left him alone all night as I knew he was sleeping but I told him to come get me. I was leaving and if they didn’t let me go I would call the police.

Finally the day staff came, and the ward manager came to talk to me. She said I could go home. Unfortunately I had to have a transfusion and the baby various tests.

We finally escaped at 6pm on Saturday. I had been admitted at 12pm on Wednesday. During that time I had slept approximately 2 hours and eaten nothing.

What was your experience of the post natal ward?

OP posts:
SwordToFlamethrower · 06/04/2024 23:43

I had an amazing time on the post natal ward in 2021.

All the staff were wonderful and caring. There was a tongue tie specialist who saw every baby, regardless and dealt with any cases immediately, no waiting.

I loved the bed that could sit you up. After the difficult birth I had, it meant I didn't have to strain myself to sit up.

I stayed in for 3 days and I was a bit tearful having to leave. I lived all the midwives and nurses so much. They were attentive and caring.

I sent them a thank you card afterwards. I think about them a lot.

MartinLewisIsAmazing · 07/04/2024 00:05

Yeah, my experience was pretty rubbish too - it was boiling hot for some reason, DS was placed out of reach when I'd had stitches, and the BFing help was beyond laughable.

I was kept in for days, but I think I've blocked most of it out TBH. I'd just leave now I think.

We need to do better - women are so vulnerable when they've just given birth.

Librarybooker · 07/04/2024 00:05

My experience was pretty awful. After a terrible Delivery Ward experience involving a delayed emergency general anaesthetic delivery - prior to which they messed up the records and narrowly missed giving me the wrong blood and failed to give me pre op meds - I was in a post op Delivery Ward area for a day. I begged to see my baby and they finally brought him up from NICU.

Finally on the prem baby ward, I was in need of help with very nasty wound and general unwellness. No help, had to cry to get help. Had to cry to get guidance on expressing milk.

2 further indignities and instances of being treated like a problem. The anaesthetist broke my tooth with the mouthpiece. I had to go out of the ward for emergency dentistry. I was made to feel this was a problem. Baby was very early, we hadn’t bought anything. After I’d been discharged and baby was in SCBU, I missed a morning visit to make preparations for baby’s return home. Nurse taking care of DC told me off. What were we supposed to do, be unprepared for baby’s return??!

Basilthymerosemary · 07/04/2024 00:13

I'm so sorry you had what sounds an awful time. But I do think it's dependent on the hospital.

I couldn't fault mine, although admittedly I had a private room. But the midwives were wonderful and actually they dressed and changed by baby for me as I was so nervous doing it. My husband was also allowed to stay- although once past a certain time he wouldn't have been allowed to leave anyhow.

IrisM22 · 07/04/2024 00:36

How do you chomp crisps aggressively?

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