Anonymous wrote:I got Fentanyl after an exhausting night of labor; it was amazing! I instantly felt calm and okay. Unfortunately, the nurse administered before she did a cervical check and found out I was 10 cm dilated. My OB was mad about it. They to bring in a team of “drug” nurses (?) that specifically treat babies in these circumstances. But my DS started crying as soon as came out and the nurses laughed and said “okay guess we’re not needed here” and left without looking at him. I have no idea why or what happened. Baby was fine, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read the article. It says right there that fentanyl is often administered for labor pains. I've heard women say they were offered it.
Right, the article says it. But of the many mom friends I’ve had that I’ve discussed labor (natural, epidural, c-section), I’ve never heard anyone mention being given an opioid shot, so I was wondering if it really is that common.
Interesting that another poster mentioned there is fentanyl in an epidural. I did not know that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read the article. It says right there that fentanyl is often administered for labor pains. I've heard women say they were offered it.
Right, the article says it. But of the many mom friends I’ve had that I’ve discussed labor (natural, epidural, c-section), I’ve never heard anyone mention being given an opioid shot, so I was wondering if it really is that common.
Interesting that another poster mentioned there is fentanyl in an epidural. I did not know that.
Anonymous wrote:I read the article. It says right there that fentanyl is often administered for labor pains. I've heard women say they were offered it.
Anonymous wrote:Fentanyl is frequently included in the drug mix for epidurals.
Some of what the family is saying seems questionable, such as this:
“Her mother asked what she was giving her and she (the nurse) said, ‘I gave her 100 milliliters of fentanyl ,’ ” said Mariah Borgna, a family member of De La Rosa. Borgna said that’s how the family found out the dosage and the name of the pain medication that was administered.
100 milliliters is an insane about, no one would ever give anyone remotely that amount. A 2 milliliter (liquid) dose would typical contain only 50-100 MICROgrams of actual fentanyl.
The whole story seems screwy. She's being given pain meds for labor pains, but she's about to be discharged? Huh? Then transferred back to a room after an emergency C to save the baby, covered in blood? I understand this family is grieving an din shock, but nothing about the story makes any sense.
“Her mother asked what she was giving her and she (the nurse) said, ‘I gave her 100 milliliters of fentanyl ,’ ” said Mariah Borgna, a family member of De La Rosa. Borgna said that’s how the family found out the dosage and the name of the pain medication that was administered.