Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does your pediatrician say?
We haven’t had a visit with our Peditrician yet. We have one scheduled in a few weeks. Our midwife is highly trained and experienced and has provided our postnatal care so far.
What?! Your baby is 4 weeks and hasn't seen the ped?
This is within the scope of practice for CNM's.
I had a baby with a midwife, and the attending pediatrician saw my baby in the hospital and scheduled a visit for us the next day. What OP is talking about is not normal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does your pediatrician say?
We haven’t had a visit with our Peditrician yet. We have one scheduled in a few weeks. Our midwife is highly trained and experienced and has provided our postnatal care so far.
Oh my god, you sound nuts. Are you also anti-vax? Get your child to a REAL doctor ASAP.
Nope. All three kids got vitamin k shot at birth and my two oldest are up to date on vaccines.
Having midwife care postpartum is normal in my state. I went to the Peditrician once I had a concern.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does your pediatrician say?
We haven’t had a visit with our Peditrician yet. We have one scheduled in a few weeks. Our midwife is highly trained and experienced and has provided our postnatal care so far.
Oh my god, you sound nuts. Are you also anti-vax? Get your child to a REAL doctor ASAP.
Glad you're getting help.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes it’s possible. NIPT is not 100% and it is possible to get diagnosed at birth.
I would get to a pediatrician ASAP as they will be able to assess and order genetic testing to confirm.
Can I just request a blood test? She had a heal prick at birth that checked for PKU, cystic fibrosis and a few others but not DS. Our other children had more extensive labs drawn at their 6 week peditrician appointment but not sure if they test for Down syndrome specifically.
Would I need to request that directly?
That blood test/here prick test should have been done w/n 24 hrs Op!!
I CAnt believe your midwife didn't tell you to do that sooner (or at least get your baby to an actual pediatrician).
You can't wait on that. I'm betting there might be something on that blood panel your baby is positive for (metabolism deficiency is my guess).
- Signed Mom whose newborn came back positive for one of the metabolic tests/heel prick and so grateful it was discovered right away.
We did have a healprick at birth. This does not test for Down syndrome.
I am not neglecting my child. I was seeing a medical professional.
I had an appointment this morning and baby is fine. Just had different features than her siblings. I am going to be treated for PPA.
Thanks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does your pediatrician say?
We haven’t had a visit with our Peditrician yet. We have one scheduled in a few weeks. Our midwife is highly trained and experienced and has provided our postnatal care so far.
What?! Your baby is 4 weeks and hasn't seen the ped?
This is within the scope of practice for CNM's.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does your pediatrician say?
We haven’t had a visit with our Peditrician yet. We have one scheduled in a few weeks. Our midwife is highly trained and experienced and has provided our postnatal care so far.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does your pediatrician say?
We haven’t had a visit with our Peditrician yet. We have one scheduled in a few weeks. Our midwife is highly trained and experienced and has provided our postnatal care so far.
What?! Your baby is 4 weeks and hasn't seen the ped?
This is within the scope of practice for CNM's.
No, no. A highly trained and experienced CNM will require a newborn to see a pediatrician or even a pediatric nurse practitioner within two weeks of birth. Most to many within 3-5 days. She has a PP mother showing concerning symptoms a month after delivery. This isn't good.
Technically the first 28 days are within the scope of practice for a CNM, and only to the extent things progress normally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does your pediatrician say?
We haven’t had a visit with our Peditrician yet. We have one scheduled in a few weeks. Our midwife is highly trained and experienced and has provided our postnatal care so far.
What?! Your baby is 4 weeks and hasn't seen the ped?
This is within the scope of practice for CNM's.
No, no. A highly trained and experienced CNM will require a newborn to see a pediatrician or even a pediatric nurse practitioner within two weeks of birth. Most to many within 3-5 days. She has a PP mother showing concerning symptoms a month after delivery. This isn't good.