T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
746.1 | Trust your instincts | CIVIC::WINBERG | | Thu Mar 03 1988 11:29 | 0 |
746.2 | don't put up with that | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Thu Mar 03 1988 12:50 | 4 |
| Get another doctor.
--bonnie
|
746.3 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Thu Mar 03 1988 14:55 | 8 |
| I'm under the impression that there are three reasons for trying
to have a baby sooner rather than later: (1) fertility decreases with
age, (2) the rate of some birth defects increases (Some of the birth
defects are detectable in utero, such as mongolism.), and (3) if you find
that you have a particular fertility problem, obviously the more time
you have to try to correct it, the better. I don't know how the exact
numbers associated with either #1 or #2.
|
746.4 | It's your decision | MERCY::FROMENT | | Thu Mar 03 1988 16:32 | 6 |
| Does your doctor suspect you may have a problem having a baby?
I'd ask him to be sure that's not the reason he's pushing you.
Otherwise, I think the first and foremost reason to have a child
is that the child is WANTED by both parents and will be loved and
well-cared for. It's really your business and no one else's.
|
746.5 | | JENEVR::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Thu Mar 03 1988 17:19 | 4 |
| Re: .0
I have the impression that having the FIRST child when over forty
is more significant than having A child when over forty.
|
746.6 | more on over forty | DANUBE::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Thu Mar 03 1988 22:02 | 12 |
| Chelsea is right...a woman who has already had several healthy
children and no problems in childbirth is far less of a risk than
a 40 year old prima para...or on the other hand...I had one pregnancy
at age 25. If I were to become pregnant now at 43 I would also be
a high risk pregnancy because of 1. the time since I was pregnant
before, 2. the fact that my previous pregnancy ended in a C section
because I failed to go into normal labor.
All of which really means, find a doctor that you trust and abide
by his/her advice.
Bonnie Jeanne
|
746.7 | primary care physician | BPOV09::GROSSE | | Fri Mar 04 1988 08:51 | 19 |
| RE.4
I asked the doctor the same question regarding if he thought that
I would have problem having children etc. He told me he had no reason
to believe that I would have any problem it was simply the age factor.
I have discussed with him that I am aware of the "risks" and am
planning on having a baby in two years and it is not sensible to
have one any sooner due to when my fiance and I have planned to
get married etc. But he still harps on me. I realize that I should
get another doctor ans I intend to but I am on the Tufts medical
plan at present and he is my primary care physician and I am stuck
with him for now it seems to me according to the way the plan operates
and until there is another opportunity from DEC to sign up for another
plan which seems to ony happen the first of each year.
I have been trying to contact Tufts to find out if I can change
primary care physicians but I keep getting refered to different
people and so far I still don't have an answer. To tell you the
truth I've had this doctor since I was 25 and he was harping on
me about getting going on having a baby even then!!!
|
746.8 | I'm fuming, and it's not even me we're talking about... | CHEFS::MANSFIELD | | Fri Mar 04 1988 10:00 | 6 |
| That makes me mad ! What business is it of his !!!!
I hope you have some luck in getting a new doctor.
Sarah.
|
746.9 | Do not overlook the obvious! | FSTVAX::ROYER | FIDUS AMICUS.. | Fri Mar 04 1988 10:16 | 23 |
| My parents were 40 afd 37 years of age whef I was born. I was born
at home, as were my brothers and sister. I have a brother who is
three years younger than I am.
** Mq parents never played games or other things after wgrk as they
were always too tired. You are looking at parents 40 years older
than their childref 'double generation gap?' who are ready tg
rest after wgrk and really have no time for their children.
Mq youngest is 12 afd I am 47.. 35 qears different, she wants to
do many things and I would rather relax. I try and participate,
mind willing body exhausted, and find I usually sprain or pull
something a lot easier now.
Just points to ponder.. Good luck on a family whenever you start.
Dave,
P.S. My daughter is also mildly retarded and was born with C.P.,
her right side is weaker, as she has about 2 inches difference
in leg length and the arm is also shorter. I would not have
had her had we planned and known in advance, but what she
lacks, she more than makes up by her loving ways.
|
746.10 | bouncing toddlers! | AIMHI::SCHELBERG | | Fri Mar 04 1988 11:33 | 13 |
| I think 40 is kind of pushing it....but I had a girlfriend who had
her first baby at age 35 and her second at age 37.....and she had
no problems whatsoever....but she did say that she wished she started
sooner because now at age 38 she really gets tired easier trying
to keep up with her two toddlers!!!! :-) The bouncing boys!!!
I'm 32 and want to start a family soon myself and my doctor also
keeps advising me to start *NOW*....but he didn't push it. Just
giving me his opinion.....I would love to do it NOW but the timing
isn't right.
bobbi
|
746.11 | appreciated | BPOV09::GROSSE | | Fri Mar 04 1988 11:40 | 17 |
|
RE. All replies
I truley apprciate the time yiu have taken to add to this Topic
as I have been a nervous wreck since my appointment with the doctor.
Everyone has offered excellent points which has given me more to
work on when all I had was the doctor on my back.
It may sound naive on my part but it never occured to me that it
really wasn't his business when I decided to have the baby, somehow
I assumed that it was his business as he is the doctor and he should
"know". But I realize that the problem here is not his concern for
me but that "if" it is a difficult delivery that he doesn't want
to have to deal with that or something to that effect.
Well, I've got two years to search for someone else who will take
this decrepit thirty-one year old on as a patient!
Thanks again,
Fran
|
746.12 | never too old or too young | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Fri Mar 04 1988 12:10 | 55 |
| This note isn't directly related to Fran's concern, but it's
something I wanted to add to the general discussion:
I was 19 when Kat was born and 30 when Steven was born, and if I
wnated to, I could recite some experiences and bad emotional times
that would make it seem like the disadvantages of having a child
at any age outweigh the advantages.
A couple of notes pointed out that an older parent can have less
energy and a bigger generation gap to cope with. Sometimes, too,
I find I resent having a child's unpredictable needs intruding
on my careful schedules.
Advocates of waiting to have children point out, correctly, that
when you're older, you're more stable, you quite likely are in a
better position to provide for the child, and you probably have
more insight into your own and the child's behavior. And that's
all true, too.
None of it matters. Every person has strengths and weaknesses as
a parent. Those strengths and weaknesses vary not only with your
age but with your personality, your experiences, your environment,
and the child's personality.
When you're thinking about having a baby, there's a tendency to
focus on the things you think you're likely to do wrong and
overlook your very real strengths. You worry about the fact you
never did like strong smells of the sort associated with dirty
diapers (I threw up more than once while changing Kat, but I
survived) and that you're impatient and tend to yell at people
when you're annoyed. I think, "What kind of damage am I doing to
Kat when I scold her because I'm p'd at my boss?" I wonder if she
feels bad because I'm not like her friends' mothers and I'm
not there after school to talk to her -- I must be irretrievably
damaging communications channels.
Then she gives me a birthday card that says I'm a one-in-a-million
mother and tells me I'd be boring if I was any different.
She tells me how important it is that I work because it tells
her she can do anything she wants to.
When you have a baby, you don't have the faintest idea if it's
going to grow up into a singer, a dancer, a politician, a chemical
engineer, or an axe murderer. In a lot of ways, having a baby is
like having a total stranger move into your house unannounced and
without much intention of conforming to household rules. You'll
have a hand in shaping that person's behavior and beliefs, but on
the whole, the kid is going to grow up into someone unlike you.
The fun of parenting is discovering who that child is and sharing
yourself with that new person. And in the end, that's all
that matters about being a parent -- the love and the excitement.
--bonnie
|
746.13 | Inspired!!! | LDP::BANGMA | | Fri Mar 04 1988 15:34 | 16 |
| Bonnie, your note (.12) has inspired me. Even though I don't have
any children yet, and my sister's baby is only 3 months old (the
"First" in the family), I've often questioned whether or not a
baby is something my husband and I truly want (I guess that's the
question of the times).
But what you said about your child growing up to be unlike you is
inspiring - I would want my child to be whomever he/she wants to
be (provided it's a "decent" way to be) and not a "clone" of me.
I think of raising that child as being a "challenge" and a
"friendship". Am I totally off-the-wall in my thinking? I don't
have a lot of experience behind me.
Pam
|
746.14 | women doctors are great | WHTNEY::ALEXANDER_EL | | Fri Mar 04 1988 19:13 | 2 |
| My doctor had her first baby last year at the age of 39. She and
the baby are fine!
|
746.15 | Inexcusable | HUMAN::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Sun Mar 06 1988 18:30 | 11 |
| Replace the doctor. If you can't get help through Tufts, contact
Personnel or the EAP, and get them to help you get a better
doctor. Both groups can be very helpful. One of them should be
able to answer all your questions, and if you getthe run-around
the should be able to help get things moving. It is reasonable
to not put off your first child beyond your mid-thirties and
therefore to be planning by the time you're 31, but there is no
reason for this sort of pressure at 31, and if he was doing it
when you were 25, then he was way out of line.
JimB.
|
746.16 | How about a first baby at forty-six? | JACKAL::CSMITH | | Mon Mar 07 1988 09:50 | 12 |
| I know an 82 year old woman who had her first and only child at
forty-six. Needless to say her daughter was a big surprise. Her
daughter is now 37 years old this year and had her first baby last
year and is expecting another this year. This young woman is extremely
talented. She is an exceptional artist and speaks four languages.
She studied voice and teaches piano and voice and owns a piano tuning
business.
I am very pleased to know that a woman can have a baby that late
in life and that the baby can be so healthy. I thought you might
like to know so that it will eliviate some of the fear associated
with having a child after thirty years old.
|
746.17 | | CHEFS::MANSFIELD | | Tue Mar 08 1988 12:57 | 3 |
|
Phew, for a moment there I thought you were going to say you knew
an 82 year old who'd *just* had a baby!!!!
|
746.18 | go for it | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Wed Mar 09 1988 09:12 | 16 |
| re: .13
No, you're not off the wall. It sounds to me like you'd make
a wonderful mother.
The special friendship a mother can develop with a child she truly
loves is perhaps the deepest and most rewarding part of being a
mother. Don't let all the apple-pie-and-motherhood crap you read
fool you; your child knows you're not perfect, knows in what ways
you aren't perfect, doesn't expect you to be perfect, and doesn't
care that you're not perfect. All your child wants is your love.
And there's nothing more challenging than loving someone for
what they are instead of for what you want them to be!
--bonnie
|
746.19 | Listen to yourself and no one else | LAGUNA::RIVERA | Ridiculous, yet sublime | Wed Mar 09 1988 13:35 | 39 |
| One should have children when they are ready and WANT to have children.
Can't you change insurance companies by getting a physical?
I don't know how much age has to do with problem pregnancies and
births. It seems that more and more women today are waiting. In
fact, when I was pregnant with my daughter, (I was 20), several
other women told me that I was crazy and should wait to start a
family, that I'd be sorry later. But I haven't been in the least.
I had my son when I was 22, and we decided that our family was
complete. Then this past year we changed our minds. (I'm now 27).
I experienced a miscarriage in June. The doctor said that 20% of
all pregnancies end in miscarriage and not to worry about it. So
I got pregnant again under advice of my doctor. The day before
Christmas, I was five months pregnant, and we found out that the
baby had multiple birth defects and would not survive if it even
lived to term. If , and I say if because I don't know if I can
handle such a loss again, I get pregnant again, I will have to have
an amnio done at 16 weeks. The doctor was very surprised at the
outcome of the last pregnancy as I should be "under the 35 year
old in my prime for having babies" period. I never had ANY problems
with either of my other kids.
Don't worry about being "too tired". I'm always too tired for physical
activity at the end of the day. I'd rather read, so I've spent
time increasing reading skills with the kids, and now they like
to read. They play after school. They look forward to their quiet
time with me at the end of the day.
I know SEVERAL woman over 35 and 40 who have had NO problems
whatsoever. In fact, I do not know of one who HAS had a problem.
Everyone is different, and I think that some doctors try to apply
too many statistics to individual situations.
I imagine that this isn't quite the place for this reply, but I've
felt like getting this experience off my chest for quite some time.
Excuse the ramblings....
D. Marie
|
746.20 | It's YOUR decision | EDUHCI::WARREN | | Thu Apr 28 1988 16:22 | 7 |
| Your doctor has NO RIGHT to pressure you on what is a very personal
decision. There should also be no reason why you can't change doctors
without changing HMOs. (I've done that with two doctors I wasn't
comfortable with at Fallon.) Try contacting the head of the OB/GYN
department, as well as patient relations. If those fail, get Digital's
help.
|
746.21 | Thank you for info | BPOV09::GROSSE | | Fri Apr 29 1988 10:57 | 8 |
| RE.20
THANK YOU! I have still been trying to find out if I could
change primary care physicians! And to date I still thought I couldn't
until next year or something... I'm due for my annual check up
in afew months and hopefully can have this worked out by then.
Sincerely
Fran
|