Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Saffron Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Ok for an interesting summary article with

> links/citations to primary sources, see

> scienceandsensibility.org 'Birth by Numbers' for a

> short and interesting talk on the effects of birth

> culture and cascade of interventions. xx


Link here: http://www.scienceandsensibility.org/birth-by-the-numbers-releases-new-video-myth-and-reality-concerning-us-cesareans/

xx

I had a walking or mobile epidural which meant I could still move around and that I didn't need a catheter in my bladder. This was nearly 4 years ago and I remember the anaesthetist saying to the midwives that this was now best practice and the midwives seeming unaware. May be worth enquiring about?


And big congratulations to klh!!

Hmmmm, all epidurals given for pain relief in labour are low dose (used to be called 'mobile') epidurals. It is standard practise and certainly all the midwives I've met have been aware of it. The name was changed from 'mobile' to 'low dose' as women's expectations for being able to walk around with an epidural were too high. Each epidural works on each women in a slightly different way - it doesn't necessarily have anything to do with skill of the anaesthetist either - we all metabolise medications in different ways, our bodies have individual responses. There are a very small number of women for whom the epidural works in the way you describe EmilyPie, and I have encountered one woman (in the last 3 years) for whom a urinary catheter was not needed after epidural- a similar situation to you. The large majority of women I've attended with epidurals have not maintained mobility and have definitely needed, and had catheterisation. I know that EmilyPie's description is epidural at it's best, and this is how an epidural CAN work, and I am aware that I'm only describing my observations, not evidence based anything, but I would be cautious. In practice I've only it seen them work this way very rarely indeed.

I wanted as natural an experience with my first as possible but when it came to it the pain was nothing like I imagined. I wished then I'd put epidural on my birth plan instead of birth pool and gas and air! I'd say best to plan for it then change your mind if you wish, rather than the other way around as I was told I cdnt have an epidural (during the night) and given pethidine (apparently only pain relief they could give me) which was awful.


I'd say its pot luck but generally the midwives at Kings are lovely.

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

    • I'm a bit of an architecture geek and I must confess I find it one of the most gimmicky ugly redesigns I've seen in a while. I'm always open to quirky but this is just not nice in any way shape or form.
    • "A user named Daniel added: "Give your staff time off you ghouls." Surrey business hopscotchshoeboutique chimed in with: "I really think for one day of the year the staff should have a day off."" https://uk.news.yahoo.com/gails-bakery-reveals-controversial-christmas-135155096.html
    • Another recommendation for Niko. Great communication, top guy, and super reliable and skilled - all at a fair price. Takes a lot of care in what he does and talks you through everything. 
    • Some foxes are very tame. The foxes that live near the electricity sub-station thing on the corner of Calton and Woodwarde will happily walk up to you/passed you. They are some of the best looking foxes around so clearly being well-fed - glorious coats and bushy tails but interested in humans and keen to engage/be fed rather than being scared.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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