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thread: Posterior babies - it can be done

  1. #1
    BellyBelly Professional Support Panel

    Nov 2005
    QLD
    3,068

    Posterior babies - it can be done

    OK girls this post is to help reduce your concerns about giving birth to a posterior baby.
    I was working night shift last night when a woman came to the hospital 1am in labour. This was her second baby and after feeling her tummy I could tell that the baby was posterior (direct OP). At 1:15am she decided that she would get under the shower to help with the pain. At 1:30am she said that she needed to push and wanted to get on the bed. At 1:38am she gave birth to a healthy baby boy, had a couple of grazes but no stitches. Baby was breastfeeding 20 mins later.
    So just to reassure you all you can give birth to a posterior baby, yes sometimes the labour can be a little more painful but you can do it.

  2. #2
    BellyBelly Member

    Jan 2006
    Melb, Vic
    1,212

    OMG Im sooooo jealous! I had a posterior bub too, but that labour didnt end so pleasantly

    Keep up with the positive birth stories

  3. #3
    BellyBelly Member

    Mar 2007
    Perth
    2,088

    I had a posterior baby too, and while the labour wasnt too good, its all worth it in the end isnt it. Cant believe she birthed bub so quickly, well done!!!

  4. #4
    BellyBelly Member

    Jul 2006
    1,069

    How brilliant!! Thanks for sharing Alan.

    I had a posterior bub too, and I think I was very lucky too. No intervention needed, just lots of determination managed to do the trick for me! Plus I'm tiny!- so I would definitely agree that it can be done

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Dec 2005
    5,951

    Both my girls were posterior, and I birthed both of them on my back, without any tears or medical intervention. It can definitely be done.

  6. #6
    Registered User

    Dec 2005
    In Bankworld with Barbara
    14,222

    Hi Alan, I just tweaked the thread title a bit - I hope you don't mind?

    I have had 2 OP babies during labour and yep, it sure isn't the easiest way to birth LOL. But defiantely doable if you are given the time to do it. And mine weren't small babies either.

  7. #7
    BellyBelly Professional Support Panel

    Nov 2005
    QLD
    3,068

    Tweak all you want, I don't mind

  8. #8
    SugarDust Guest

    With my 2nd ds he was posteriour and i didn't even know it! I walked around all day before he was born in pain each time i had a contraction and when i finally got to the hospi at 630pm he was still posteriour and i couldn't sit in a wheel chair properly! he was posteriour right up until my waters broke which is when he must of turned around. he was born just under 1hr after my waters broke!

  9. #9
    Registered User

    Jul 2007
    Melbourne
    3,660

    I do have a question - while my mids were fantastic during labour they never really told me much (screw them, and thank goodness for BB, I say) but I assume they would have told me if he was posterior? I know he was born anterior, but I'm sure he didn't turn until about five minutes before he was born (I could be wrong obviously) I had Sterile Water Injections for backpain and for forty minutes I walked around as if I wasn't in labour anymore - I could barely feel the contractions anymore. Does that mean that the labour was posterior or not?

    After my waters broke I could no longer sit, or lay down, even being on all fours was painful, I laboured the last seven hours standing up. I'm just curious.

  10. #10
    Registered User
    Add ~clover~ on Facebook

    Sep 2007
    travelling
    9,557

    Both of my younger 2 were posterior. Both labours were extremely painful in my back. With DS I was put over a bean bag & that relieved the pain instantly.
    Unfortunately he was distressed to, so I had to turn over to be monitored. But it helped. Both labours were drug free! Well I demanded pethidine with DS, but it didn't kick in til after he was born.
    I rocked on an exercise ball for 2 - 3 hours to turn DD2 around!

  11. #11
    Registered User

    May 2004
    Shepparton
    4,871

    My younger brother was a posterior baby... Mum said labour was all in her back. I suppose what made it worse was that she had to labour on her back in stirups... poor women!! So I think we are much better off now-a-days and can active births

  12. #12
    Registered User

    Dec 2005
    5,951

    Ash - posterior labour is generally back labour, and you will know it. With both my labours, each contraction was all in my back, and I honestly thought my back was going to break. Both my girls turned as their heads crowned. I didn't realise this, the midwife told me as it was happening (as I was pushing mind you!).
    With Nina, it was only that I asked that the midwife told me she was posterior. With Emily, the midwife told me as soon as I got to hospital, and she encouraged me to be in certain positions to try and turn her around. None of which worked mind you.

  13. #13
    Registered User

    Mar 2008
    59

    Does anyone know if you are more likely to have another posterior baby if you've had one already? Shape of the pelvis or something. It seems there are a few of you out there who have had more than one...

    My DD was posterior and labour was not that bad at all....until the med staff decided I wasn't progressing (oh that's why the contractions weren't that bad!) and put in the syntocin...OUCH..the back pain was SOOOO bad...then I couldn't stand it any longer and went for pethidine and epidural....24 hours later DD was yanked out with forceps...my pelvic floor is kaput! Poor DDs head was a massive cone!

  14. #14
    Registered User
    Add fionas on Facebook

    Apr 2007
    Recently treechanged to Woodend, VIC
    3,473

    I didn't even know until my ob told me after DD was born that she'd been posterior - the pain level was about what I expected but it was the length of the labour, not the pain, that was the killer.

    When people ask me if I had drugs, I say, "yes, after two and a half days with barely any sleep, the epidural looked like a mighty fine idea."

    I'm surprised at the quickness of some of the posterior babies on here - I thought they were notoriously slow. As I said, the pain wasn't any worse than I'd expected, just the fact that it went on ... and on ... and on.

  15. #15
    BellyBelly Member

    Oct 2007
    Ever so slowly going crazy...
    2,268

    I too have birthed 2 posterior babies, drug free!!

    One with an episiotomy and forcepts, (4hrs) and one naturally (2.5hrs). I was young with my first posterior, and wish I had BB back then!!

    Thanks for that Alan, I love hearing about it!!!

  16. #16
    Registered User
    Add Marlene on Facebook

    Jul 2007
    Dapto, Illawarra...NSW
    2,009

    My first 3 babies were not posterior, but my 4th was and I knew nothing about it! I hadn't even read up on it as I just expected this labour to be like the rest, LOL, quick and easy.
    I had pre-labour for 16 hours (I had never experienced pre-labour before, my other 3 labours were only 4 to 6 hours from 1st contraction), I then went to the hospital where they told me my baby was posterior and i was NOT dilated after 16 hours!!. I didn't really know what that meant (and they didn't really explain it too well) but anyway, they gave me a stretch and sweep and four hours later my little man was born, the second stage of labour (pushing) only lasted 9 minutes and Jack was straight on the boob and fed for an hour, he didn't even get weighed or cleaned up untill after he was fed, it was beautiful.

  17. #17
    Registered User
    Add ~clover~ on Facebook

    Sep 2007
    travelling
    9,557

    With my first posterior I had alot of pre labour, but i'm not too sure if it was prelabour. If it was then it only took about 3 hours to dialate 7 cm, but another 4 - 5 hours to go the last 3 cm.

    With my 2nd it was 5 hours hard & fast.

  18. #18
    Registered User

    Jul 2007
    Melbourne
    867

    I have a friend who gave birth to her 10lb posterior bub in 3 hours. No pain relief(other than a bit of gas), no stitches, no worries!!!
    I had 2 posterior bubs not so happy to come out but lets not get into that.
    The moral of the story is posterior labours are not always horror stories so don't be afraid, it can and does happen every day...

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