Anonymous wrote:Question - with a typical private OB practice that delivers at Sibley, if a woman goes into preterm labor would she still go to Sibley? I'm just curious because I have Kaiser and am preregistered at Sibley, but when I was having contractions at 28 weeks they sent me to WHC for evaluation for preterm labor (thankfully it was just a scare), because obviously if it was preterm labor Sibley would not be equipped to deal with that.
Anonymous wrote:At 27 weeks it’s getting later in your pregnancy so switching practices is probably becoming less of an option, if not an impossibility. What are your concerns specifically?
WHC and GW are very similar urban teaching hospitals with similar patient demographics, facilities, and same level NICUs. I believe both are level 1 trauma centers. Main reason that is good is in case you need a blood transfusion or your delivery goes terribly—they are best prepared to care for you. Both have hospital based midwife practices that have positively influenced OB practices. At WHC they offer nitrous for pain relief in labor. At GW they do not. GW has more liberal policies for eating and drinking in labor than WHC. They use and teach forceps at GW, and are in of a very small number of teaching hospitals still doing that (forceps come with greater risks to the mother than vacuum and many hospitals favor vacuum over them for operative delivery). I am not sure about forceps use at WHC. The facilities at both are not cushy. There will be a broad range of women on the flooor in labor and delivery and postpartum—different races, ethnicities, income levels.
Sibley is a community non-teaching hospital known for a more cushy experience, a higher c section rate (largely due to patient demographics), and more older/affluent/whiter clientele. They redid their rooms a few years ago and they are supposed to be very nice. People joke about their smoothie cart. They have a lower grade NICU and are not a level 1 trauma center. They are not a teaching hospital so residents and student will not be involved in your care. Search past posts for specifics—plenty of feedback on all places.
General feeling on DCUM is that Sibley offers a cushier experience but the downside is that they may not be fully able to care for you or your baby in the event that things go very, very badly during your birth. Though that is very very unlikely, it’s not impossible.
This doula also offers a helpful overview to all hospitals.
http://www.tarabetholson.com/hospitals
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Question - with a typical private OB practice that delivers at Sibley, if a woman goes into preterm labor would she still go to Sibley? I'm just curious because I have Kaiser and am preregistered at Sibley, but when I was having contractions at 28 weeks they sent me to WHC for evaluation for preterm labor (thankfully it was just a scare), because obviously if it was preterm labor Sibley would not be equipped to deal with that.
I don’t know the answer to your question, but this example illustrates my previous point about why some women might prefer to only deliver at a major academic medical center.
Anonymous wrote:Are there statistics available comparing the outcomes and frequencies of medical interventions in birth between the 3 hospitals?
My conversations with other families make me think that Sibley is more likely to add all manners of interventions in births that would have been a lot less eventful and a lot less traumatic elsewhere.
Anonymous wrote:Question - with a typical private OB practice that delivers at Sibley, if a woman goes into preterm labor would she still go to Sibley? I'm just curious because I have Kaiser and am preregistered at Sibley, but when I was having contractions at 28 weeks they sent me to WHC for evaluation for preterm labor (thankfully it was just a scare), because obviously if it was preterm labor Sibley would not be equipped to deal with that.
Anonymous wrote:Are there statistics available comparing the outcomes and frequencies of medical interventions in birth between the 3 hospitals?
My conversations with other families make me think that Sibley is more likely to add all manners of interventions in births that would have been a lot less eventful and a lot less traumatic elsewhere.
Anonymous wrote:Are there statistics available comparing the outcomes and frequencies of medical interventions in birth between the 3 hospitals?
My conversations with other families make me think that Sibley is more likely to add all manners of interventions in births that would have been a lot less eventful and a lot less traumatic elsewhere.