answers 0:Does she go in labor, or do doctors typically give her a cesarean? i keep hearing this situation, but the fact that they have to ask if the baby is okay, makes me think that they can't 'feel' that they've lost it. that doesn't make sense to me, so i wanted to ask.thank you.answers 1:do you mean like it died or it was delivered and is just not in mama anymore. i had a c-section and was awake till the moment my hubby showed her to me then I passed out for 2hrs 3 days of labor and only 2 hrs of sleep sad any way when I woke up my first questions was is my baby ok and when is she going to come out I got really weird looks but I was so dead tired that I couldn't remember the past 24hrs I still only remember bits and pieces. Its kinda hard to tell if you got the drugs your still numb a few hours after the surgery so if you pass out or are just to exh! austed you dont remember a whole lot or even feel your body the way you normally would...answers 2:In general, if the mom isn't at some kind of risk that makes it critical to get the deceased baby out quickly, they prefer to induce labor. C-sections are primarily to benefit the health of the *infant*, and when that's not an issue anymore, they'd rather minimize the risk to the mother. Sometimes this is done while the woman is under so-called "twilight sedation"... which is basically what you get when you have to have dental surgery. It's not full unconsciousness but you don't really remember or feel aware of what's going on. Other times it's done while awake.Your body is able to expel a baby without a lot of intentional effort on your part. The contractions are powerful enough that "pushing" just tends to speed things up. Women used to deliver while fully unconscious back in the Victorian era, so it's totally possible. And yes, there's no internal awareness of whethe! r your kid is alive or dead when they aren't moving. This can! be very unsettling in late pregnancy: sometimes the baby tends to sit still for longer periods as it gets closer to its due date since there's less room for it to move....
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment