This is a really interesting thread Liz. I just got my notes from the hospital this week, so have been doing some reading
Public Hospital
Private Patient
Own OB
Public MW's
33 weeks 4 days
With DD it was such a quick labour, we got to Women's Assessment and went into an assessment room, then within minutes straight up to L & D, they didn't check bubs at that point, just based on my ctx being 3 min, once we got up there we were trying to get settled, then my OB came in, checked dialation and I was 7-8cm, they checks DD HB with a doppler, the first checks they did on us were @ 10:00pm, I was admitted at the hospital about 15min earlier, there were 3 checks on the HR, the first being 125BPM and the last being 90BPM and I know that at that point they did lose the HR, it was at that point that an episiotomy was done as there were two tears one large and bub still wasn't getting out, and due to the loss of HR, I believe that the EPI was critical. She was born @ 10:37pm, 37min after getting to L and D.
I got offered gas but nothing else, and I didn't want something in my mouth so refused, and seeing as I was 7-8cm on arrival and things were progressing very quickly, I believe nothing else was offered as there wouldn't be time for it to work. I do remember being offered gas at least twice during the labour.
Did you have a monitor on your belly the whole time? Perhaps you can ask if they use the doppler at specific intervals instead?
How fast was have your labours been, maybe that will also dictate a bit how the monitoring may need to happen.
Do you know the reason of Kyla's early arrival? I would guess perhaps that an ARM would be done to progress a labour that was not progressing and/or bub was getting more distressed. But if everthing was going along relatively well, then I can't see why it would be necessary.
Seeing as I progressed very quickly and we have a family history of it, which may end up being diagnosed with me in the coming weeks as an incompetent cervix, we know that I will progress very quickly when labour does start, but we are hoping that with the cervical suture, it will prevent the cervix from shortening and thinning earlier. Getting me to full term.
It may be worth speaking with your Dr to do a check on it during your pregnancy, to make sure that it isn't a reason for your early delivery.
Sorry I have probably written more questions than given answers, but I am slo really interested in where this thread goes
Bookmarks