Anonymous wrote:No one told me I was "not allowed" to eat during my labor. I did eat, and I would have looked in their eyes as i ate the munchies I brought along.
Anonymous wrote:I'm flinching at the word "allowed." Supposedly strong women fighting for the right to own your own body. Just take your food with you to the hospital and if you are hungry eat it! That is what my DH and I did. And yes -- I munched on a turkey sandwich while in labor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For me it wasn’t just the nurses, but the sheer volume of people and none of them coordinate.
-the nurses who do vitals
-the residents
-the actual docs
-the janitor/people emptying trash
-the person who would take my blood (not the same as the nurses)
-the pharmacy people
-the pediatrician
-the people in charge of the paperwork/birth certificate
-the lactation consultant
-I’m probably forgetting a few
It was so horrible. I still cannot fathom why things are set up this way.
-the chaplain
-the photographer
-the cafeteria menu lady
OMG the cafeteria menu lady is so spot on.
Haha that was the one interruption I appreciated, it only happened during daylight hours and I was so hungry!
We just had a menu and I had to call down. Btw, premade sandwiches should be available for those of us moms who deliver after dinner hours and are starving. You know, because they don't let you eat for days while in labor.
Anonymous wrote:
We just had a menu and I had to call down. Btw, premade sandwiches should be available for those of us moms who deliver after dinner hours and are starving. You know, because they don't let you eat for days while in labor.
Anonymous wrote:I work as a nurse. We wake people up multiple times in the night to check their vital signs, give meds, and draw blood. Those post-surgery patients are not getting a restful night of sleep.