I think there's variation b/w hospitals, however, if you educate yourself (on which hospitals will support your wishes), and have a great support team (i.e, partner, a doula or a private midwife) in hospital - you probably stand the best chance of having the type of birth you want (of course, not counting any real emergency).
I went public with my first son, went overdue, was induced and ended up having a c/s. I tried for a VBAC (public again in Melb). I had to fight some of the Dr's who thought an 18 month gap wasn't long enough b/w kids to try VBAC. We had a doula with us second time around which was fantastic. She could advocate for my wishes when I couldn't talk and was a great support to both myself and my husband. I think the staff can sometimes pressure the partners into making decisions that you may not want.
They couldn't induce me and I went overdue. They broke my waters to see if I could get into labour and gave a strict timeframe (looking back, doomed to fail with the stress I was feeling). Another c/s.
Third time around, it's hard to find many public hospitals or private obs who support VBA2C. There are some, but I've had to do my research and I'm switching providers at 16 weeks to private. A great Dr who I'd met public also works private and I really trust her. Birthing centres which are more pro-active/calmbirth/no intervention, but won't take you on if you've had a caesar or are 'high risk' for other reasons. Some hospitals have birthing pools, however their policies differ on whether these are to be used for labour and/or birth and not sure if they're keen on VBAC'ers using them. I'm asking for cordless monitoring this time around to at least use the shower. Will have a birth plan with my wishes and will again ask that we be given time to consider any intervention suggested. They were pretty good about this with my previous two experiences.


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