Anonymous wrote:Push your baby out while you are on your hands and knees. There is much less pressure on the sacrum and tail bone in this position, and much lower likelihood that it will dislocate. If your doctor does not know how to deliver a baby this way, perhaps you could find a hospital-based midwife to help you out. Also, "breathing" the baby out is far more effective than forcefully bearing down as the baby is crowning. Of course we have no idea how your last two deliveries worked out, but if they were not like this, then perhaps you still have something new you could try.
I would do the vaginal birth because it is better for the baby. Baby's born by c/s statistically have a tougher time breathing and have a greater chance of asthma as they get older. Or, if you decide you want a c/s, wait until you spontaneously start labor so your baby at least has the benefit of labor hormones, and then go in to get the c/s.
Anonymous wrote:It is called the "Coccyx' bone and generally breaks when baby is very large. Happened to a friends of mine whose son had a birth weight of almost 13 lbs. This is a no brainer--go for c-section. Broken brones take longer to heal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is called the "Coccyx' bone and generally breaks when baby is very large. Happened to a friends of mine whose son had a birth weight of almost 13 lbs. This is a no brainer--go for c-section. Broken brones take longer to heal.
Broken bones may take longer to heal, but c-sections have more significant risks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is called the "Coccyx' bone and generally breaks when baby is very large. Happened to a friends of mine whose son had a birth weight of almost 13 lbs. This is a no brainer--go for c-section. Broken brones take longer to heal.
Thanks, you're a real scholar.
Broken bones may take longer to heal, but c-sections have more significant risks. "No brainer" - was that you referring to yourself?
Anonymous wrote:It is called the "Coccyx' bone and generally breaks when baby is very large. Happened to a friends of mine whose son had a birth weight of almost 13 lbs. This is a no brainer--go for c-section. Broken brones take longer to heal.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks to everyone who replied to this thread. I'm opting for the C-section. I tried to keep an open mind until very late in this pregnancy... thinking that MAYBE, if I went into labor early, and if the baby were measuring really small (both very unlikely given my history) that I MIGHT try to do it vaginally. I got a 36 week sonogram because I actually haven't gained as much weight as usual, and I feel "small" by comparison to my other two. I know the sonograms are notoriously inaccurate, but this baby was measuring close to 7 pounds at 36 weeks, and had a larger than average head (very consistent with my other two kids with giant noggins). That kind of sealed the deal for me. I'm scheduled for mid-August... so if you can wait that long (and I remember to post), I will be happy to tell you what I think of my decision post-baby.
One thing that I think differs,... it appears that some people who break their tailbone must not break it as badly as I have broken mine... and have more of a modest 5-6 week recovery. For me, both times, it has been excruciatingly painful for about a month, followed by 2-3 more months of significant discomfort. I couldn't sit straight for close to 4 months. By comparison, a few weeks of feeling bad from a C-section sounds like cake.
So, ultimately, I think its an individual decision. But I'll be happy to post my personal experience when its all over.