Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Saw one of the obs in Bethesda. She knows the name of my children and treats me like I am a real human. She delivered by first baby with forceps after the midwife had me push for 5 hours. I followed up with her and never looked back. During COVID-19, I have emailed her and she let me know what days she is in the office. So continuity has not been an issue.
It pisses me off to read how often the GW midwives let women push for hours and hours on end. I’m a former patient of theirs who wrecked my pelvic floor under their care because they had me push for hours with no discussion of the potential consequences. I guess apparently anal and urinary incontinence, fistula, severe tears, and prolapse don’t matter to them as much as avoiding a dreaded C section. As a potential patient you should be aware that they will let you push for many more hours than any responsible provider would ever allow.
Except I pushed for 6.5 hours with my second and have zero problems. No pelvic floor damage, I didn't even require a single stitch for tearing. Sometimes babies are malpositioned but that doesn't mean you can't deliver vaginally without consequences. I understand you want to blame someone, but perpetuating fear based maternal care isn't the way to go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Saw one of the obs in Bethesda. She knows the name of my children and treats me like I am a real human. She delivered by first baby with forceps after the midwife had me push for 5 hours. I followed up with her and never looked back. During COVID-19, I have emailed her and she let me know what days she is in the office. So continuity has not been an issue.
It pisses me off to read how often the GW midwives let women push for hours and hours on end. I’m a former patient of theirs who wrecked my pelvic floor under their care because they had me push for hours with no discussion of the potential consequences. I guess apparently anal and urinary incontinence, fistula, severe tears, and prolapse don’t matter to them as much as avoiding a dreaded C section. As a potential patient you should be aware that they will let you push for many more hours than any responsible provider would ever allow.
Honestly, I would rather push longer than deal with a c-section recovery. It’s just so much harder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Saw one of the obs in Bethesda. She knows the name of my children and treats me like I am a real human. She delivered by first baby with forceps after the midwife had me push for 5 hours. I followed up with her and never looked back. During COVID-19, I have emailed her and she let me know what days she is in the office. So continuity has not been an issue.
It pisses me off to read how often the GW midwives let women push for hours and hours on end. I’m a former patient of theirs who wrecked my pelvic floor under their care because they had me push for hours with no discussion of the potential consequences. I guess apparently anal and urinary incontinence, fistula, severe tears, and prolapse don’t matter to them as much as avoiding a dreaded C section. As a potential patient you should be aware that they will let you push for many more hours than any responsible provider would ever allow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Saw one of the obs in Bethesda. She knows the name of my children and treats me like I am a real human. She delivered by first baby with forceps after the midwife had me push for 5 hours. I followed up with her and never looked back. During COVID-19, I have emailed her and she let me know what days she is in the office. So continuity has not been an issue.
It pisses me off to read how often the GW midwives let women push for hours and hours on end. I’m a former patient of theirs who wrecked my pelvic floor under their care because they had me push for hours with no discussion of the potential consequences. I guess apparently anal and urinary incontinence, fistula, severe tears, and prolapse don’t matter to them as much as avoiding a dreaded C section. As a potential patient you should be aware that they will let you push for many more hours than any responsible provider would ever allow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Saw one of the obs in Bethesda. She knows the name of my children and treats me like I am a real human. She delivered by first baby with forceps after the midwife had me push for 5 hours. I followed up with her and never looked back. During COVID-19, I have emailed her and she let me know what days she is in the office. So continuity has not been an issue.
I'd rather keep pushing and trying different positions than have a forcep delivery, my God.
Anonymous wrote:Saw one of the obs in Bethesda. She knows the name of my children and treats me like I am a real human. She delivered by first baby with forceps after the midwife had me push for 5 hours. I followed up with her and never looked back. During COVID-19, I have emailed her and she let me know what days she is in the office. So continuity has not been an issue.
Anonymous wrote:Saw one of the obs in Bethesda. She knows the name of my children and treats me like I am a real human. She delivered by first baby with forceps after the midwife had me push for 5 hours. I followed up with her and never looked back. During COVID-19, I have emailed her and she let me know what days she is in the office. So continuity has not been an issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Obs are superior to the midwives. Give them a shot, I promise you will want to switch.
With the new covid protocols you end up seeing a different OB in every visit, so not sure how much I'll gain then. But yeah, so far they haven't lived up to our expectations after the "meet the midwives" event and everything we've read so far regarding the midwifery model of care.
Can you be more specific about how they aren't meeting your expectations?
Visits tend to be short, most of the times the midwife we see hasn’t even read our chart before we start, some of the questions we have aren’t answered and we have to ask again in our next visit, we tend to be prepared and our questions might not be the most common ones but still some of them answer random things instead of saying “I don’t know, I’ll look it up and get back to you”. We need some extra monitoring and every time we have to be on top of our situation and report precisely the results from ultrasounds, otherwise they don’t seem like they would know. This pattern has been more common with the midwives that are fellows so far, and we understand they are continuing their training and GW is a teaching hospital, but that’s no excuse for not knowing your clients.
Maybe this is usual or maybe we were expecting more care and continuity from their part (as is advertised as the key in the midwifery model of care), maybe this is just a consequence of the pandemic and how it has affected the way they work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Obs are superior to the midwives. Give them a shot, I promise you will want to switch.
With the new covid protocols you end up seeing a different OB in every visit, so not sure how much I'll gain then. But yeah, so far they haven't lived up to our expectations after the "meet the midwives" event and everything we've read so far regarding the midwifery model of care.
Can you be more specific about how they aren't meeting your expectations?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Obs are superior to the midwives. Give them a shot, I promise you will want to switch.
With the new covid protocols you end up seeing a different OB in every visit, so not sure how much I'll gain then. But yeah, so far they haven't lived up to our expectations after the "meet the midwives" event and everything we've read so far regarding the midwifery model of care.
Anonymous wrote:The Obs are superior to the midwives. Give them a shot, I promise you will want to switch.