Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone have experiences inducing prior to due date just for convenience? My doctor surprisingly was like, we can schedule you for an induction if you want anytime. (I'm 38w2 today). I have a very favorable cervix, 2-3 cm dilated already. I guess it never occurred to me to induce unless I was reaching 41 weeks.
A) does anyone have experience inducing for nonmedical reasons, what was your experience? and
B) is there risk or some negatives associated with it if you do?
What is the reason you are thinking about inducing? I have friends who were induced b/c of health concerns and some had decent experiences - others not.
For my 3rd child, I had discussed a scheduled induction as my previous labor was very quick (50 minutes from 1st sign of labor to baby born). We decided against it which was fine. Labor for child 3 was almost twice as long as it was for child #2.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here are the known risks of induction:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK53624/
In sum --
uterine hyperstimulation, failed induction, umbilical cord prolapse and uterine rupture. (rupture is rare and happens mostly with prior cs)
This article has a lot of good, unbiased info on later inductions (may not apply to earlier ones):
https://evidencebasedbirth.com/evidence-on-inducing-labor-for-going-past-your-due-date/
It's also important to be aware that induction is a medical procedure (vs spontaneous labor) and with any procedure comes the need for increased monitoring, so make sure you're ok with that before signing on.
The problem with this viewpoint is that you're assuming the alternative to induction is a natural, intervention-free labor. That's not necessarily the case. The alternative to induction might end up being a c-section, or an operative birth (vaccuum or forceps). So it's not necessarily true that forgoing induction at 39 weeks = fewer interventions. The well-designed studies on induction at term don't look at induction at term v natural labor; they look at induction at term v expectant management (i.e., waiting until overdue). A lot of those pregnancies that are allowed to go overdue end up in c-sections or inductions because they develop a medical indication for intervention that might not have been present at 39-40 weeks. Here is one recent study that, for women 35+, found no difference in c-section rates between induction at 39 weeks and expectant management: http://contemporaryobgyn.modernmedicine.com/contemporary-obgyn/news/labor-induction-vs-expectant-management-women-over-35. Other studies have found that induction at term actually REDUCES c-section rates:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3905733/
Anonymous wrote:ACOG recommendations are to avoid induction before 39 weeks.
I had spontaneous labor at 38+2 and found that my baby was very lethargic until closer to 40 weeks. She was 100% fine, just required more effort to get her to wake up to eat and gain weight.
Anonymous wrote:Here are the known risks of induction:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK53624/
In sum --
uterine hyperstimulation, failed induction, umbilical cord prolapse and uterine rupture. (rupture is rare and happens mostly with prior cs)
This article has a lot of good, unbiased info on later inductions (may not apply to earlier ones):
https://evidencebasedbirth.com/evidence-on-inducing-labor-for-going-past-your-due-date/
It's also important to be aware that induction is a medical procedure (vs spontaneous labor) and with any procedure comes the need for increased monitoring, so make sure you're ok with that before signing on.
Anonymous wrote:Here are the known risks of induction:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK53624/
In sum --
uterine hyperstimulation, failed induction, umbilical cord prolapse and uterine rupture. (rupture is rare and happens mostly with prior cs)
This article has a lot of good, unbiased info on later inductions (may not apply to earlier ones):
https://evidencebasedbirth.com/evidence-on-inducing-labor-for-going-past-your-due-date/
It's also important to be aware that induction is a medical procedure (vs spontaneous labor) and with any procedure comes the need for increased monitoring, so make sure you're ok with that before signing on.