Magpie
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Oct 27, 2007
- Messages
- 10,615
I LOVED my midwives!
I had both my children at home, with my midwives attending. They were fantastic. They made tea, they let me do my own thing, and they even did my laundry for me afterward! I appreciated being able to take a shower right after and then get into my own bed with the baby. I didn't have to worry about procedures or rules or follow anyone else's schedule.
Independent Midwives in my province are fully certified and trained. They don't work with or under an OB, though they will stay with a patient if she has to be transferred to an OB's care due to risk factors. But if that happens, it's the OB who delivers, not the midwife. She becomes basically a doula in that situation. Midwives can deliver either at the hospital birthing unit or at home, depending on what the mother wants. If it's a homebirth, they bring their own equipment including a vacuum extractor if the baby gets stuck. They can sew up tears, and administer pain killers - pretty much everything short of giving you a nerve block, and honestly the idea of anyone sticking a big ol' needle into my spine scares me a LOT more than labour. They provide all pre-natal and post-natal care up to... I think it was 6 weeks after, and then we transferred back to my doctor for baby care.
I know it's supposed to be a big right of passage and all, but I didn't find that labour hurt all that much. It was hard work, but it wasn't like walking around on a broken leg or anything. It was a healthy hurt, if that makes any sense. Maybe I'm just lucky.
If I was having another low-risk, uncomplicated pregnancy, I'd do exactly the same thing again. No question!
I had both my children at home, with my midwives attending. They were fantastic. They made tea, they let me do my own thing, and they even did my laundry for me afterward! I appreciated being able to take a shower right after and then get into my own bed with the baby. I didn't have to worry about procedures or rules or follow anyone else's schedule.
Independent Midwives in my province are fully certified and trained. They don't work with or under an OB, though they will stay with a patient if she has to be transferred to an OB's care due to risk factors. But if that happens, it's the OB who delivers, not the midwife. She becomes basically a doula in that situation. Midwives can deliver either at the hospital birthing unit or at home, depending on what the mother wants. If it's a homebirth, they bring their own equipment including a vacuum extractor if the baby gets stuck. They can sew up tears, and administer pain killers - pretty much everything short of giving you a nerve block, and honestly the idea of anyone sticking a big ol' needle into my spine scares me a LOT more than labour. They provide all pre-natal and post-natal care up to... I think it was 6 weeks after, and then we transferred back to my doctor for baby care.
I know it's supposed to be a big right of passage and all, but I didn't find that labour hurt all that much. It was hard work, but it wasn't like walking around on a broken leg or anything. It was a healthy hurt, if that makes any sense. Maybe I'm just lucky.
If I was having another low-risk, uncomplicated pregnancy, I'd do exactly the same thing again. No question!

I am so grateful I was being watched due to weird numbers from my prenatal blood screening. The Amnio came back fine but the blood work said something would go wrong, and it did... just not with the baby with the placenta, I was very lucky.
