Jump to content

Recommended Posts

My waters broke this morning, went to the MAU at Kings and all is well so am back home monitoring temp and hoping to go into labour naturally. Apparently 1 in 10 women experience this and labour should start within 24 hrs. I'd really rather not be induced but if nothing's happened by Thursday I'll have to be. I don't know whether to sit back and wait or try all those things they recommend to get labour moving (except sex, I know that's off) and just wondered if it had happened to anyone else out there? I know they induce when you're late but didn't realise they did it when waters broke before everything else started.
Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/7123-waters-breaking-38-weeks/
Share on other sites

Hi Yorkie,

my waters broke in the morning and I too did the (bloody hours long!) stint in MAU and went home. For me, my contractions started slowly and then worked up fairly quickly in the evening so I was in established labour by 9pmish and baby was born 8am next day. I didn't do anything to hurry the process, was too busy t hinking about whether my bag was packed etc! Sorry, not all that useful but didn't want to read and not post, know too well that weird waiting feeling!


B

Thanks for replying Belle, I spent the afternoon writing my birth plan and phoning a friend with a long list of things to buy in Mothercare. Even though they tell you not to leave everything to the last minute of course we have! Feeling a bit calmer now, have had some twinges in last hour or so, here's hoping nature will take over. Off to have a lie-down - might be my last one for a long time...

Happened to me at 37 weeks, I was planning a homebirth so at least didn't have to go to MAU for swab etc. I spent 3 days pacing, kneeling, cleaning stairs, eating hot curry, having acupuncture and walking miles. Nothing happened. In the end I got a call from Kings in the evening to say I had group B strep so had to go that evening to be induced. After all I'd done I was absolutely knackered! 30 exhausting hours later my baby was born.

My advice is to do what Sillywoman says but do rest. And if you end up being induced have an epidural.

Good Luck!

my waters broke at 36+2 and I had to stay in the hospital until they finally induced me three days later. I was dreading the induction but it was fine in the end, from the first little contraction to birth it was 4 hours (By which time I had asked for an epidural but was told I was already too far along...)

Good luck :))

Hello,

I'm Yorkie's partner. We had a beautiful baby girl called Rosalind at 8.26 yesterday morning. She was 6lb 12oz. The contractions started on Monday evening and by midnight were getting stronger and more frequent. Advised to go in by King's at 5am yesterday she was examined when we got there and was told she was fully dilated! So straight through to the birthing suite and an hour and a quarter of actual pushing and she was born. The two midwives, Clemmie and Rachel, were absolutely fantastic. Mother and baby fine both fine but being kept in for 48 hours as baby on antibiotics as precaution due to waters breaking before labour started. The last 48 hours has been the most amazing two days of my life!


John

yes, congratulations! The antibiotics are not nice, my little boy needed them as well and his tiny feet looked like pin cushions! And I felt like a horrible mother wheeling him towards those massive (not really) needles at midnight...

But better to be sure there is no infection, and over soon enough.

congrats again, and love the name!

Hi everyone,

Just wanted to say thanks for your advice and good wishes last week. It really didn't take that long for things to get rolling and the labour was really good. We had a horrible scare when Group Strep B was belatedly discovered on Wednesday, especially as I'd delivered before they could get the full course of anti-biotics into me, but baby R was cleared on Friday morning.


We're now home from hospital, safe and well. Getting used to being parents of a newborn, blimey!

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

    • The lack of affordable housing is down to Thatcher's promoting sale of council properties. When I was working, I had to deal with many families/older folk/ disabled folk in inferior housing. The worst ones were ex council properties purchased by their tenants  with a very high discount who then sold on for a profit. The new owners frequently rented out at exorbitant prices and failed to maintain the properties. I remember a gentleman who needed to be visited by a district nurse daily becoming very upset as he rented a room in an ex council flat and shared kitchen and bathroom with 6 other people  (it was a 3 bed flat) the landlord did not allow visitors to the flat and this gut was frightened he would be evicted if the nurse visited daily. Unfortunately, the guy was re admitted to hospital and ended up in a care home as he could not receive medical help at home.   Private developers  are not keen on providing a larger percentage of 'social housing' as it dents their profits. Also a social rent is still around £200 plus a week
    • Hello, I was wondering if others have had experience of roof repairs and guarantees. A while back, we had a water leak come through in our top floor room.  A roofer came and went out on the roof to take a look - they said it was to do with a leak near the chimney.   They did some rendering around the chimney and this cost £1800 plus £750 for scaffolding (so £2,550 total).  They said the work came with a 10 year guarantee. About a year later, there was another leak on the same wall, which looked exactly the same size and colour as the previous leak. But it was about 2 metres away from it, on the other side of a window.  I contacted the roofer about this new leak, thinking it would be covered by the guarantee. However, he said the new leak was due to a different and unrelated problem, and so was not covered by the guarantee. This new leak, he said, was due to holes in the felt underneath the tiles. He said there are holes in the felt all over the roof (so if this was the cause, I expect the first leak may have been caused by that too - but he didn't mention the holes in the felt for the first repair). It feels like the 10-year guarantee doesn't mean much at all.  I realise that the guarantee couldn't cover all future problems with the roof, but where do you draw the line with what's reasonable?  Is it that a leak is only covered if an identical leak happens in exactly the same place?  There were no terms and conditions with the guarantee, which I didn't question at the time.  
    • I always like Redemptions coffee though I've not visted for awhile..Romeo Jones was always my 1st choice for takeout Coffee Redemption 2nd. What IS with all these independent Yoga and Pilates Studios? Theres one on London Rd in Forest Hill (Mind) thats recently opened and then theres the Pilates place thats opened on North X Road. I looked at the prices of the one on NorthX road and was frankly shocked at how expensive it is, The FH one is slightly less.  Made me decide to stick with classes in The local authority gym
    • Dulwich Village update: The old DVillage location is (again?) under offer. The storefront next to the new grocer is going to open as a yoga and pilates studio...the name of which I've forgotten. 🤦‍♂️  Megan's is starting to push its takeaway coffee and cannibalise some of Redemption Coffee's market share. Is Megan's struggling? It's quite a big restaurant they have and rent cant be cheap. The reinventing of the Megan's branch on Lordship Lane as Ollie's seems to have stalled. And Redemption is looking a bit tired these days...
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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