Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Hi,


I don't know of any London private mws to rec, however, two of my children were born in London, and the after midwifery care was good. With my first child, we had the midwife pretty much every day for at least two weeks (they just seemed to know I wasn't quite ready to not have the security of knowing someone in the know would come each day), and also, they will only stop coming when your baby has reached a gd weight etc.

Also, a health visitor will visit you, at some point in the first few days.

I believe MWs have to oome for ten days, although that may not be every day. This may have now changed.

And again for breastfeeding, there is a lot of support out there. From breastfeeding cafes, to drop ins, to someone, a bf counsellor, who came to my house with no charge. I would suggest you ask your own mws, your gp, and of course, on here, as to what is available when and where on what days, but there my own experiences have been v positive of what is available for free.

I hope this helps!

Also as summermum said there is no set number of midwife visits on the nhs. If you're struggling they will come more frequently and keep you on their books for longer. I was seen by an nhs midwife until 28 days after birth as I was having a few problems.

I had fanastic independent midwives for all my births/antenatal and postnatal. Their support for me with my recent breastfeeding difficulties was just amazing... daily visits in the run up to Xmas, some of which were for 2-3 hours.


http://www.independentmidwives-southeast.co.uk/

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • So have you never been in a house where the gas hob was turned on but not ignited?  You get a smell of gas,  You do not get an explosion when you light the flame.   You have to have a very high concentration of methane (over 4.4%)  for this to happen, the smell of the gas would be obvious half way down the street.  They add mercaptans to natural gas to give it that smell at very low concentrations.   Gas explosions happen once in a blue moon, in places like residential homes in the basements where, if unchecked, a leak can get up to explosive concentrations.   Back to my original comment about Bunsen burners.  You'd got 30 kids in a classroom but no explosions.   The establishment of Corgi (now Gas Safe) and the compulsory annual testing of boilers and cookers was mainly due to the relatively high number of deaths from carbon monoxide poisoning from faulty appliances and blocked flues in rented properties. I don't expect the OP to test it themselves, I would, but that his my decision.  But you may get Natural Grid to do this free of charge if you ask nicely. I thought the video was hilarious.  The guy shouts don't do this yourself, call in help.    
    • Tom Noonan, just 74 https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/21/movies/tom-noonan-dead.html  https://variety.com/2026/film/reviews/remembering-tom-noonan-in-manhunter-michael-mann-1236668730/
    • Or maybe let @malumbu come round and test it for you, thus potentially getting two birds with one stone 🤣
    • Have you ever considered your own motivations?
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...