thread: How did you forumlate your birth plan?

  1. #1
    Registered User

    May 2006
    Igglepiggle Land
    2,742

    How did you forumlate your birth plan?

    I've hired an awesome doula in hope she will help me achieve my VBA2C .

    I've just received an email from her which has lots (I mean lots as in 10 pages, single line spacing) of options from sights, smells, photos, sounds, pain relief, before, during and post birth - everything and OMG - there are soooo many options .

    Yup, this is baby number 3 for me - yet I've never been in labour nor formed a birth plan before - so this is a first for me.

    My question - how did you know what to put in your birth plan first time around? How will I know what I want to smell, listen to, how I would like the lights etc in a situation I've never been in before. I have no doubt my doula will help me, and she has said so, but I'm just really curious how you all did it??

  2. #2
    Enchanted Guest

    My first birth plan was very focused on music, dim lights, heat packs, water and calm. I had a wide selection of music, songs that made me feel good and relaxed me. (You know the ones that really touch you and transform you), I had my heat packs which had helped me in early labour and as for smells I took oils that I had been burning throughout my pregnancy (so they were a familiar scent when in hospital). I just went with what made me feel good.

  3. #3
    Registered User

    Jul 2009
    2,251

    Mine is focused on a calm and quiet birthing environment, similar to Enchanted. Soft lighting and music, aromatherapy oils, heat and massage for pain relief etc. That I have the freedom to choose my labour and birthing positions, I don't want to be on my back.
    I have also made it clear that I want no interventions, epesiotomy, drugs etc without consent.
    I have put in I want Immediate skin/skin contact after birth, that hubby is to cut the cord (after it's fin pulsating) and that I want time to get to know and breastfeed my baby before measurements etc to be taken.
    I have put in that baby is not to receive any injections without consent.
    My main focus has been on what I think will be best for me, for baby and that nothing is to be done to us without consent and without time to discuss it first. I don't want them cutting me because they think it's best, I would prefer to tear naturally etc etc.
    Just think about the things that are important to you, mine is only a page of dot points.

  4. #4
    Registered User

    May 2006
    Igglepiggle Land
    2,742

    See, music is a massive part of me - and the music that gives me the best vibes is my 'bouncy' doof doof group fitness music. It gives me energy and reminds me of all the times I've worked really hard and made it thru a hard class when at times I thought I would just not make it (which I guess links in quite well with labour)....

    The songs that touch me make me emotional - and I don't want to be in tears with touchy feely music - I'd feel weakened which may not be all that helpful...IYKWIM?

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Oct 2008
    Victoria
    4,601

    I remember having great trouble actually sitting down and writing my birth plan, it was difficult to decide what was important to us and put it into words.
    So my birth plan ended up being very brief!
    I was adamant I didn't want drugs so stated that I was not to be offered any, if I wanted gas I would ask for it.
    I stated that I wanted DH to cut the cord and weigh the baby after the first breastfeed. Also for placenta to be birthed naturally.
    I asked for someone to take photos of the three of us together.
    I stated I was hoping for an active birth and wished to be left to labour as naturally as I could.
    I requested any interventions be discussed with myself and DH (was more concerned with being cut than anything else and would've preferred to tear naturally if I had the option)

    In hindsight - was not offered drugs and got through without any.
    DH did get to cut the cord and weigh DS and although the midwives let me try I had to have a managed 3rd stage. After everything I'd been through I really didn't care!
    No one took pictures of us but I guess they were busy.
    I should've had more detail about labour as I was basically left the whole time. Even though the midwife was always in the room she was very hands off and didn't offer any suggestions for the entire 12 hours I was in there. Next time I'll write more!
    I almost had suction which was explained at length to us at the time.

    Although I didn't mention music or lights, there was soft music playing and the lights were lovely and dim in the room when we arrived.

    Good luck! I think in the end birth plans can really depend on who is reading them and in the heat of the moment they can get forgotten about. But if you're having a doula I'm sure she'll be very familiar with yours when the big day arrives!

  6. #6
    Registered User

    Oct 2006
    Adelaide
    726

    I would think about what you like when you're not in labour - what helps you relax? If you like a certain type of music that gets you in the groove, go with that.

    I wasn't sure about the smells thing either. Apparently that can change while you're in labour anyway, so it might be best just to go with what the doula brings on the day and say a yes or no to it at the time.

    You sound like you have a good base plan to start with. I would look at each statement and decide - yes, I definitely want this and it's high on my priority list. No, I really don't want this at all. Or, this sounds good - I may need to look into it and discuss these things with your doula.

    Good luck!

  7. #7

    Apr 2009
    Melbourne
    1,069

    Hi,

    I'm guessing this is a hospital birth? The reason I ask is that I think a Birth Plan (or "Preferences") depends on the birthing environment. A homebirth Plan would look different to a VBAC in a hospital Plan.

    Tips I was given for my Birth Preferences:

    Don't tell the MWs or Ob how to suck eggs. This is where the birthing environment is important. Telling a Birth Centre that you don't want an epidural is like telling the MWs to suck eggs - they already know that if you're in a BC, and by writing it in your BP you're just wasting space, and time. I wrote in my BP that I didn't want any visitors during labour - the BC thought I was telling them how to suck eggs because they wouldn't have allowed any visitors in anyway (but they'd never met my mother...)

    Keep your BP to one or two pages. No more. My Doula emailed me a 10-page document as a draft BP, but it was to give me an idea of what I might like to include - everything else was deleted. You think the MWs/Ob have time to read more than 2 pages? They don't, especially if you're in established labour while they're reading it.

    I also don't see why music/aromatherapy/lighting should be in your BP. The MWs don't care what the place smells like when you're birthing. Your Doula, and your DH might care though - I would have thought these are things you can talk about with them beforehand. And maybe you could have a "Labour Plan" for the Doula, and the BP for the hospital? Keep all the medical/birth choice stuff for the BP, and all the atmosphere stuff for the Doula/your DH. If your MWs are too busy reading about what essential oils you want burning in the room, they might miss the bits about episiotomies, pain-relief, etc, that you want/don't want.

    ALSO, remember that at the hospital it's often expected that you consent until you tell them otherwise. For example, it's almost "expected" that you'll be given a VE upon arrival at the hospital - so if you don't want it, state it in your BP. Make them justify to you why it should be. A big one for me was that I didn't want to be offered pain relief - I knew what was available, I didn't need it offered every 5 minutes (which would have made me feel like I was failing).

    You can see my BP in the "Share your Birth Intentions" thread, which for some reason I can't link back to.

    GL.

  8. #8
    Enchanted Guest

    I forgot to mention that my 2nd birth plan was based on Calmbirth. So I was still able to have all of what I had the first time but just some gentler methods, like the lighting, use of words ie. a contraction was referred to as a wave and pain was referred to as pressure. Would you look into something like that? It kept me very focused and relaxed.

  9. #9
    BellyBelly Life Subscriber

    Jan 2006
    11,633

    I think the first step is figuring out what's normal for your caregiver and birth place. (because they do tend to just do things unless you tell them otherwise)
    So, like Persephone has suggested, maybe they do VEs automatically. Are you comfortable with that?
    Then you can figure out which bits you're ok with (and under what circumstances) and which you're not, and what may or may not be negotiable.

  10. #10
    Registered User

    Jun 2005
    USA
    3,991

    Yep- what they do as standard is good to know. If you agree with it then no point putting it in the birth plan. If you strongly object then that needs to be very clear in your birth plan.

    I have a very simple birth plan for home just to remind everyone my key words to relax during crowning etc. but everything else I trust they know what I want so I haven't written it all. I then have a transfer hospital birth plan that states some of my preferences and what I do NOT consent to and is very simple- no real discussion of a labour environment as I figure I'll only be going in in a medical emergency anyway.

  11. #11
    Platinum Member. Love a friend xxx

    Mar 2008
    Perth, WA
    1,225

    Write a draft of everything you could possibly want...then delete half of it.

    One page is good. I used the heading of Labour, Birth and Post Birth.

    Re pain relief, I jsut said "If I want any pain relief, I'll ask" instead of writing no to this, yes to that, maybe to so-and-so.

    I took a radio...my hospital won't let you plug things into the electricty so whatever you take has to be battery operated.

    Not sure re asking midwives re what to say and etc as I was pretty much left to my own devices (no mw in the room) until things got life threatening.

    If I was having a home birth I reckon your plan could be MUCH more detailed, as it's your environment!

  12. #12
    Registered User

    Jul 2006
    Logan
    2,991

    I read others birth plans on BB and formulated my own from there. I also read "A thinking woman's guide to better birth" this armed me with information about procedures and alternatives. My midwife was well impressed with the knowledge I had gained from this book and she was confident in my birth plan and choices. If you want to borrow the book please let me know hun.

  13. #13
    Registered User

    Mar 2008
    North Northcote
    8,065

    my birth plan was a detailed 2 pages. i did include an overall philosophy that i wanted to achieve (ie a calm, loving environment), and how that was to be basically acheived. but seriously this was like a sentence. as a PP mentioned you discuss the details with your immediate support people (doula, partner etc).

    for the really really important stuff that you need hospital staff to listen to the best advice i was given was to write in RED. it attracts the attention to the stuff that is really important ITMS. so for me it was the info on VEs, and offer of drugs etc. also, because we were a planned homebirth and that transfer would only be in emergency it was important to place a section in red if the outcome of the birth was of a baby born still. this was something important for me as only a few months prior it hit close to home with a friend and i needed staff to be aware of our needs through that time too.

    i think it is also really important that a birth plan is not just for your careproviders, it is also a good focus tool for you! i found it really helpful to really think about not only what i wanted to achieve but also the best way to support that goal ITMS.

    goodluck with your journey, exciting times ahead! (oh and for aromatherapy i LOVED LOVED LOVED chilled washers with lavender oil on my neck and forehead lol!).

  14. #14
    ♥ BellyBelly's Creator ♥
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    Feb 2003
    Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, Australia
    8,982

    There is an article on the main site with a downloadable/editable template for you to play with

    Birth Plans - Is It Worth Writing A Birth Plan?
    Kelly xx

    Creator of BellyBelly.com.au, doula, writer and mother of three amazing children
    Author of Want To Be A Doula? Everything You Need To Know
    In 2015 I went Around The World + Kids!
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