Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An hour away, 37, first pregnancy. No.
+1
Also, what kind of NICU facilities does a birthing center have? Please choose a hospital.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An hour away, 37, first pregnancy. No.
+1
Also, what kind of NICU facilities does a birthing center have? Please choose a hospital.
Anonymous wrote:DW did a natural birth, in a hospital. I'm glad we were there. She had an issue during childbirth and might have died from bleeding out if the doctors weren't there.
Anonymous wrote:So for what it’s worth I think all of the posters saying it’s only about the baby and you have no right to preferences once you become a mother are way off track/ have a lot of internalized misogyny to deal with.
But.
They call it a “golden hour” in trauma medicine for a reason. What about staying in a hotel in order to be able to use a birth center attached to a hospital or within a very reasonable transfer time (personally I don’t think I’d stretch that time more than 10-15 minutes)
Anonymous wrote:An hour away, 37, first pregnancy. No.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like a previous poster, I do believe that you have the ultimate right to make this choice as it is your body involved in delivering the baby. I equally believe that it would be the wrong choice to move forward with this birthing center. And I believe that your husband could and should hold you accountable for your choice. Regardless of whether or not something actually goes wrong. Birth is simply not about you. It is about the baby. That you would risk your child’s well-being and life in this way is something that, as a spouse, would make me furious. I am being more direct than some other posters, but I believe that a decision to do this in her situation is selfish, regardless of what your husband thinks. If the two of you agreed together to do this I would think that you were together being selfish as it is the baby who pays the price , even if this price is losing its mother while being born. having a child is not about your experience and your comfort and your desires. And the sooner you become comfortable with us the better. And if you don’t, be well prepared for judgment and decision making by your spouse, family and child.
On the birth not being about mom, I disagree and believe it’s one of the reasons maternal mortality is the highest of the developed world here in the US. My sister and several friends would have died during delivery if they hadn’t been in a hospital. Their babies might have made it but they’d be dead. An hour is too far away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fwiw, a good birthing center will have all kinds of procedures to deal with neonatal resuscitation and maternal hemorrhage. But a good birth center will know when to transfer a mother to a nearby hospital!
Query whether a good birthing center would choose a location one hour from a hospital.
Anonymous wrote:
Those pre-birth measurements are notoriously wrong.
Anonymous wrote:One mom had a third degree tear
Anonymous wrote: I think once the head is out, you can't do a C-section anyway
Anonymous wrote:Like a previous poster, I do believe that you have the ultimate right to make this choice as it is your body involved in delivering the baby. I equally believe that it would be the wrong choice to move forward with this birthing center. And I believe that your husband could and should hold you accountable for your choice. Regardless of whether or not something actually goes wrong. Birth is simply not about you. It is about the baby. That you would risk your child’s well-being and life in this way is something that, as a spouse, would make me furious. I am being more direct than some other posters, but I believe that a decision to do this in her situation is selfish, regardless of what your husband thinks. If the two of you agreed together to do this I would think that you were together being selfish as it is the baby who pays the price , even if this price is losing its mother while being born. having a child is not about your experience and your comfort and your desires. And the sooner you become comfortable with us the better. And if you don’t, be well prepared for judgment and decision making by your spouse, family and child.