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Expectant and Postpartum Moms
Reply to "Best hospital to deliver in DC area"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Can we please stop the fear mongering about the Sibley NICU? This happens constantly. I’ve discussed this with my OB and he said that[b] literally only about once every two to three years is there a case where a baby needs to be transferred from Sibley’s nursery to Georgetown. It’s extremely rare.[/b] Also, the neonatologists who work at Sibley also work at Georgetown. So the staff are the same. Let’s not pretend that a higher grade NICU means you will automatically get better care—in many cases then you are talking about teaching hospitals (which have their own issues because you’ve got a bunch of med students and residents cluttering up the environment), hospitals who have Baby Friendly designations, and/or hospitals with issues with nursing staff (ie like being constantly understaffed or using traveling nurses who may or may not be familiar with the hospital rules and protocols). Bad things happen at all hospitals, and being in a higher level NICU or a level one trauma center or at an academic medical center does not mean you are guaranteed the best care. My good friends mom, a retired nurse, would intentionally never go to teaching hospitals for her own care because she had seen so many issues from her time as a staff nurse with students and residents. If you look up infection rates, readmission rates, patient satisfaction scores, and Leapfrog rates for some of these hospitals you’ll find the true picture is far more complex than boiling down which hospital is best simply by a measure like C section rate or NICU level. [/quote] Yes, because anyone who is known to be high-risk isn't going to deliver at Sibley. It's only the rare cases where someone is thought to be normal risk and then the baby is born with something very seriously wrong would a transfer need to happen. But that doesn't mean that Sibley could handle all the deliveries that happen at Georgetown.[/quote] Actually plenty of high risk women deliver at Sibley. Being AMA alone makes someone technically high risk. Do you really think Foxhall, CWC, Bloom, etc. only deliver low risk patients? Regardless of your opinion, Sibley still remains the busiest labor and delivery unit in the entire city. What I find interesting is this idea that somehow moms who want a good experience (ie “cushy,” which gets thrown out like an insult) when delivering (which really means they want basic things like to be treated with respect, have a calm environment, have a nursery to send their baby too if they want to rest, nurses who are professional, not to have to give birth in triage because the hospital is overcrowded, not wanting residents learning how to do things on them, etc) get absolutely blasted on these boards. As though giving birth women should only want the best for our babies and be fully willing to sacrifice all our own wants, desires, and needs at the expense of pursuing the “best” possible NICU (as though that even guarantees anything). Yes, Georgetown handles the most critically ill and premature babies. And yes someone who is giving birth at 28 weeks should absolutely be giving birth there. But that’s not 99 percent of births. If Sibley delivers roughly 300 babies per year and lets say one of those is transferred to Georgetown every 2 years, that’s roughly a .01 chance. It’s highly, highly unlikely for the vast majority of patients. I would love to know why people are so anti-Sibley and continue to fear monger about it’s special care nursery. Especially when so many moms jump in on threads like this to say how great their care was. I suspect it’s largely because doulas don’t feel welcomed there and have an ax to grind, or other moms feel like they slummed it at other hospitals and put up with crappy postpartum care, the chaotic environment of a zillion residents and staff rounding, forced rooming in and breastfeeding, etc. and resent that any mother could have possibly had a better experience. [/quote] Lady, I think you are insane. All the hospitals are fine, being close to your house is important and helpful especially if your spouse will be juggling other kids/pets. [/quote]
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