Check out spinning babies - its a great website. Spend lots of time on all fours or on your front with cushions. Avoid reclining or lying on your back. Do pelvic rocking on your all fours. All these things can encourage baby to turn. Also when labour starts you should put your head/chest on the ground and butt in the air while on your knees... My current baby is persistently posterior and then midwife said this position should encourage him to turn when I am in labour, seeing as he is not keen on turning before!
My DS was posterior and I didn't have an anagonising back pain in labour - I had no drugs at all and progressed quite quickly for a first timer. I would have thought that just because your little one is posterior doesn't mean you have to have a CS... but I'm not a VBAC expert...


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