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Women's health

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Question for a midwife/physio/gynae or someone knowledgeable!

3 replies

pambeasly · 05/11/2022 18:45

Keen to know what the 'best practice' of care is when a pregnant women comes to you with symptoms of a prolapse.

It's pretty easy to self diagnose a prolapse, which is what I did during my second trimester. Explained it to my midwife who said I wasn't to worry and it's normal to feel a bulge/laxity (I could feel my stool and needed to splint). She said things move when pregnant. She didn't look.
I wasn't convinced and demanded to be referred to physio, reluctantly she agreed, and to my surprise the physio wouldn't look and said the exact same thing. She added it would be highly unlikely to prolapse during pregnancy. I trusted and accepted I was wrong.

Fast forward post natal, It's been confirmed I had grade 2/3 posterior wall prolapse.

I feel as though I should have been checked pre birth and offered some kind of pelvic floor therapy programme, advice to keep off my feet to help it not get worse (I nursed working on my feet until the day I went into labour!) even a pessary to help with symptoms and keep things held up whilst the weight of the baby was there.

I feel the severity of it now could have been prevented as it was only very mild to begin with (I had no symptoms, just could feel the prolapse with fingers) - now I have horrific symptoms that I affect me daily... on the waiting list for a gynae.

Did I receive the right care? Obviously my hospital says I did, but I can't help but feel I didn't. My GP was shocked, but maybe he was just being supportive.

OP posts:
PritiPatelsMaker · 06/11/2022 19:20

I don't have experience or training but so sorry that this has happened to you @pambeasly.

Hopefully someone will be along soon Flowers

User0ne · 06/11/2022 19:34

Why do you think that best practice/the acceptable standard of care would be different in pregnancy?0

pambeasly · 06/11/2022 20:08

@User0ne because in medicine there is almost always different protocols and considerations to take when treating a pregnant patient. I have them in my line of work and I work on the other end, far away from all the action - the head!

OP posts:
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