thread: Waiting times at antenatal clinics

  1. #1
    Registered User

    Aug 2009
    in the victorian bush.
    286

    Waiting times at antenatal clinics

    Hi,

    Just got back from seeing my ob after having to wait 2hr 45min to get in. Is this normal, is anyone else out there experiencing these kinds of waiting times.

    I am going to the Ballarat Base Hospital which is a public hospital and fully understand the strain on public hospitals due to under staffing etc but really 2hr and 45mins is a bit silly.

  2. #2
    BellyBelly Life Subscriber

    Jun 2008
    In snuggle land
    4,499

    I imagine public hospitals are under resourced, so that may be an issue.

    I had an appt with an OB/Gyn today (private). It was originally on 1st Sept, but had to be moved, cos he was at a birth that went longer than expected. My attitude is I'd rather be with an OB/Gyn that will attend the birth, rather than leave a labouring woman. He was on time today.

    I think it's the nature of OB's work - if woman goes into labour, then that's that. Maybe next time, call ahead to see if they are running on time. That's what I do now.

  3. #3

    Oct 2008
    2,880

    I've gone public and they actually tell me on my letters that I may have as much as a 2 hour wait (but I haven't had that yet).

    I don't mind though, I take a book and just use it as chill time!

    It does kind of suck though but I guess it's public.

  4. #4
    BellyBelly Life Subscriber

    May 2005
    in the national capital
    1,682

    Hi Lisaandshaun

    I have to agree with Tashybabe. In the end Ballarat Base Hospital while large is still a regional hospital and it is more than likely that there was only one Ob there (I happen to know this as one of my cousins is an Ob there) and I would much prefer to wait and have then deal with a woman who needed assistance than to say "opps - sorry - have to go - I have a patient waiting for a checkup" They would not have made you wait on purpose.

    And I have a friend who has just had her private Ob move her appointment for the 5th time in two weeks because he has been at births every time. In the end she said "give me a call when he is back and I will be in 10 minutes after that" - and she waited 4 hours for the call. Unfortunately it is just the nature of the system - you can't know when bubs are going to turn up and you don't know who will need assistance.

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Sep 2007
    Adelaide
    220

    I agree with Tash. Ring and see if they are on time. I usually do this.

    And I make appointments early in the day. You can't avoid the Dr being called away to a birth, but I figure then there are less people waiting before me.

  6. #6
    Registered User

    Feb 2008
    Near the Snowies!
    2,975

    I went public and waiting times were mostly pretty reasonable (within 30 mins of my appointment time). There was one day, when we had to go to the doctor's clinic (most other appointments we saw a midwife) and we waited for 2 hours past our appointment time...they were running 2 hours behind schedule...by the time we saw the doctor DF was just about ready to kill someone! Other than that it was pretty good though, so I don't know if they had an emergency or just an unusually busy day.

  7. #7
    Registered User

    Dec 2007
    Taking a ride on my grdonkey :D
    2,716

    My record was 4 hours and 25mins waiting for antenatal clinic! I would have given up and gone home but I was nearly a week overdue and desperate to get bub out so I sat there and waited (even though I knew DH would crack because I wasn't there to pick him up from work and he didn't have keys to get into the house).
    I was told when I booked all my appts at 35 wks (I went through my GP until then) that they were so busy with pregnant women they were deliberately double-booking appts because antenatal clinic was only one day a week and there just weren't enough hours in the day to see all the women they needed to see. So generally if you were given a 1pm appt, you knew you would be twiddling your thumbs until around 3pm, then get a three-minute check (blood pressure, weight and fundal height) and then they'd boot you out so they could get the next appt underway.

    That's why I stuck with my GP until she kicked me out. I don't believe women who are going public should even be at the hospital until 36 weeks unless it's a moderate- to high-risk pregnancy - if you go to your GP you get the exact same service, on time, and you can go bulk-billing (which I did with both kids) and it eases the burden on the hospitals when the area is experiencing a baby boom.
    Just ETA: FWIW, the people I saw at the hospital for both my pregnancies were not Obs, just a doctor - you see an Ob once before you give birth if you're lucky, so I had no worries about staying with my GP, she was just as qualified and experienced as the random doctors I saw at the hospital
    Last edited by Glamourcide; September 18th, 2009 at 07:43 AM.

  8. #8
    Registered User

    Oct 2006
    Sydney
    4,081

    I think its pretty common to have to wait for an OB at a public hospital. The midwife clinic tends to be much quicker cause they seem to have more MWs rostered on. I was spewing that when I did GP shared care for my pg with Phoebe that my hospital appts were with the OB. Stupid. I should've been seeing the MWs. I often had to wait 2 hours + for the OB, only to have them do exactly the same as the MW would have done.

  9. #9
    Registered User

    Apr 2008
    4,427

    I found the midwife antenatal appointments were always on time but if I ahd to wait for an OB it would be about 40min wait

  10. #10
    Registered User

    Mar 2004
    1,547

    I would rather go to the hospital for my appointments than a GP - I would rather be seen by a midwife than a doctor, and at my local medical centre the waiting times are often longer than those at the antenatal clinic anyway! So far in this pregnancy the longest wait I have had was about 30 mins, and that is because I was booked to see an OB (you have to see one at least once during the pregnancy even if you are low risk, don't know why though, the one I saw didn't do anything a midwife couldn't have done). They have the clinic open 5 days a week, all day too - they have to because it is such a busy maternity hospital.

  11. #11

    Jul 2009
    Out North, Vic
    8,538

    I found with DD my OB appts were always atleast an hour wait past my appt time the most i waited was 2hrs15min.
    The midwives clinics were also very busy and was nothing to wait over an hour each time.

    This time round they have put me at their Panch clinic as the Mercy clinic is FULL yep thats right no room at the midwives appts AT ALL for me on the day i go.
    BUT in saying that it works perfectly as i take DD with me and there we only wait 15min for the midwife... YAY
    I had an appt with the OB and made it as early as possible and only waited about 30min.

    It is hard with public and at the moment we must be going through another baby boom, just my luck as with DD there were 23 births in my hosp the day she was born!

    GL with it all and i hope you don't have to wait that long all the time.