Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We planned on starting to TTC #2 this month. We are undecided still on what to do.
I think in 8 weeks when you would have a first appt, many areas will be relaxing social distancing. Not full on but easing in. That may lead to more cases and it may not. I believe after 8 wks then you go again at 12 right? So 3 months from now. So that’s not a lot of contact during this time where we start to navigate a path back to a new normal. I say all this as someone who believes we aren’t going back to an old normal. That we are in this for 6-18 months. By the time we would need more frequent prenatal care, we would know more about what measures need to be taken in our new normal. It’s quite possible that hospitals will be in a better place then they have been the last month, even if we have a second or third wave. We will know more. But absolutely, there will still be risks.
For those that recommend waiting, I’d be curious to know how long you recommend waiting for. When do you think it would be safe again? A full 12-18 months from now?
I would argue it'll be more risky in the next coming months. As pressure mounts to get people back to work they won't be giving any thought to high risk groups.
As for the poster saying there is no increased risk, you willing to bet your life and your unborn child's life know that? Check out the Mom in Baltimore forced to get a c section at 36 weeks and cannot see her baby for 4 weeks. Ask her how she's doing.
Probably stressed but still thankful to have the damn kid vs waiting indefinitely. And all the women that are having healthy pregnancies and deliveries will be glad they have theirs too
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We planned on starting to TTC #2 this month. We are undecided still on what to do.
I think in 8 weeks when you would have a first appt, many areas will be relaxing social distancing. Not full on but easing in. That may lead to more cases and it may not. I believe after 8 wks then you go again at 12 right? So 3 months from now. So that’s not a lot of contact during this time where we start to navigate a path back to a new normal. I say all this as someone who believes we aren’t going back to an old normal. That we are in this for 6-18 months. By the time we would need more frequent prenatal care, we would know more about what measures need to be taken in our new normal. It’s quite possible that hospitals will be in a better place then they have been the last month, even if we have a second or third wave. We will know more. But absolutely, there will still be risks.
For those that recommend waiting, I’d be curious to know how long you recommend waiting for. When do you think it would be safe again? A full 12-18 months from now?
I would argue it'll be more risky in the next coming months. As pressure mounts to get people back to work they won't be giving any thought to high risk groups.
As for the poster saying there is no increased risk, you willing to bet your life and your unborn child's life know that? Check out the Mom in Baltimore forced to get a c section at 36 weeks and cannot see her baby for 4 weeks. Ask her how she's doing.
Anonymous wrote:We planned on starting to TTC #2 this month. We are undecided still on what to do.
I think in 8 weeks when you would have a first appt, many areas will be relaxing social distancing. Not full on but easing in. That may lead to more cases and it may not. I believe after 8 wks then you go again at 12 right? So 3 months from now. So that’s not a lot of contact during this time where we start to navigate a path back to a new normal. I say all this as someone who believes we aren’t going back to an old normal. That we are in this for 6-18 months. By the time we would need more frequent prenatal care, we would know more about what measures need to be taken in our new normal. It’s quite possible that hospitals will be in a better place then they have been the last month, even if we have a second or third wave. We will know more. But absolutely, there will still be risks.
For those that recommend waiting, I’d be curious to know how long you recommend waiting for. When do you think it would be safe again? A full 12-18 months from now?
Anonymous wrote:We planned on starting to TTC #2 this month. We are undecided still on what to do.
I think in 8 weeks when you would have a first appt, many areas will be relaxing social distancing. Not full on but easing in. That may lead to more cases and it may not. I believe after 8 wks then you go again at 12 right? So 3 months from now. So that’s not a lot of contact during this time where we start to navigate a path back to a new normal. I say all this as someone who believes we aren’t going back to an old normal. That we are in this for 6-18 months. By the time we would need more frequent prenatal care, we would know more about what measures need to be taken in our new normal. It’s quite possible that hospitals will be in a better place then they have been the last month, even if we have a second or third wave. We will know more. But absolutely, there will still be risks.
For those that recommend waiting, I’d be curious to know how long you recommend waiting for. When do you think it would be safe again? A full 12-18 months from now?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread needs to die. It’s filled with trolls.
A troll isn’t anyone who says something that you don’t want to hear.
Agreed.
I replied with my perspective as a pregnant woman who is due in a few weeks. Likely not the info OP wanted to hear, but I'm definitely not a troll.
Also, I'm AMA and dealt with infertility, so I get some of the sensitivity to delaying conception any longer than necessary.
If you’re pregnant why are you on the TTC forum?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread needs to die. It’s filled with trolls.
A troll isn’t anyone who says something that you don’t want to hear.
Agreed.
I replied with my perspective as a pregnant woman who is due in a few weeks. Likely not the info OP wanted to hear, but I'm definitely not a troll.
Also, I'm AMA and dealt with infertility, so I get some of the sensitivity to delaying conception any longer than necessary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread needs to die. It’s filled with trolls.
A troll isn’t anyone who says something that you don’t want to hear.
Agreed.
I replied with my perspective as a pregnant woman who is due in a few weeks. Likely not the info OP wanted to hear, but I'm definitely not a troll.
Also, I'm AMA and dealt with infertility, so I get some of the sensitivity to delaying conception any longer than necessary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread needs to die. It’s filled with trolls.
A troll isn’t anyone who says something that you don’t want to hear.
Anonymous wrote:This thread needs to die. It’s filled with trolls.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow with the fear mongering. To those saying no one should do it — are you reading something I’m not? Care to share a link with us? Because from what I’m reading there is a risk for sure but it is not nearly as bad as you’re making it out to be.
Most of what I’ve read says that COVID positive women who have given birth generally don’t pass it on to the child. The worst case scenarios I’ve read (very severe cases) still resulted in live births and were complicated by other factors — mothers with health problems like obesity, giving birth in the worst-hit hospitals in the Bronx. (Specifically referring to the NYT article which is probably where you’re getting your worst case scenario from)
Of course there are risks, and in a perfect world everyone should wait. But anyone over 35 and/or with fertility issues needs to balance the need to wait up to possibly 18 months before this is over with their own fertility and timeline. Let’s all discuss calmly, shall we?
Have you ever had a respiratory illness while far long in pregnancy? It's very taxing on the body. From personal experience, my temperature approached 104F my resting heart rate was 130 while the baby's was at 160. There are no allowable drugs you can take. They even warn against taking inhalers, etc. I cannot imagine fighting off COVID 19 while pregnant.