I have a client at the moment going through this (cant you tell LOL) but she has a low placenta 6-7mm from the os! So you have a better chance!!!
Placenta Praevia and Low-Lying Placenta: UK Midwifery Archives
https://www.bellybelly.com.au/pregna...acenta-praevia
http://www.jkeates.freeserve.co.uk/Placenta.pdf (pages 9-10)
Attachment and Implantation
http://egret.psychol.cam.ac.uk/physi...physiology.pdf
Also from the web:
Grade 1 (minor) is when the placenta is mainly in the upper part of the uterus, but some of it extends into the lower part. If you have a grade 1 or 2 Placenta Praevia, a vaginal delivery may sometimes be possible. However, with grades 3 and 4, a Caesarean section is necessary. The Caesarean section will be planned for a time when the baby is mature, usually at about 38 weeks, hopefully before you go into labour.
Figure 1. Low lying placenta, Grade 1.
The only certain way to prevent this inevitable haemorrhage in labour is by antenatal diagnosis and elective delivery by Caesarean section. However, minor grades of placenta praevia can often safely have a vaginal delivery.



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but at the end of the day I know there is nothing I can do about it and I just have to wait and see. The scary thing was being warned about bleeding. I thought the sonographers and doctors were being overly cautious about bleeding but then I didn't understand the implications of it until I read about 
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