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Conference moira::parenting

Title:Parenting
Notice:Previous PARENTING version at MOIRA::PARENTING_V3
Moderator:GEMEVN::FAIMANY
Created:Thu Apr 09 1992
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1292
Total number of notes:34837

493.0. "Baby born in the car!" by WECROW::RAGHAVAN (Raghavan N. Srinivas, TAY1-2/D6, 227-3106) Thu Apr 01 1993 15:12

Hi,

Having been largely a RO noter while preparing for the big day, I decided to
write a short note to scare all the first time moms :-) ...

On Mar. 26th Chaya & I went for the regular weekly appointment. Since the Doc.
was held up in a C-section we almost gave up & left. Chaya told him that she
was experiencing back pain. On a routine examination, he told Chaya that she
could be close or it might even take 3 weeks(she was due on Apr. 7th)

Time : 10:30 AM

Chaya calls me at work and she thinks that she is having contractions.

Time : 2:30 PM

I reach home & in the meanwhile Chaya has called the Doc, who assures her that
its still a long way off.

Time : 3:20 PM

After an hour of contractions for every 5 mins, Chaya calls the doc. again who
asks her to drive to the hospital.

Time : 4:10 PM

I drive to the hospital, but baby is born in the car. My mom, who is with
Chaya, takes the baby in the arms and covers her.

Time : 4:43 PM

Chaya walks to the stretcher holding the baby in the arm and she is wheeled
to the delivery room, where the Doc. cuts & clamps the cord!

Time : 4:46 PM

Everything appears fine! The baby's name is Shruthi & weighed 6 lbs. 14 ozs.

Thinking back on the whole thing, I can't help getting scared.

We were told that Chaya had back labor & something called precipitated labor,
which happens extremely rarely & extremely fast.

Could the Doc. not have known about it, expecially when he made an examination,
the same morning (he had a big line of patients waiting when he came in late)?

Where did we err? For one thing, we shouldn't have chosen Lowell General even
though we were living in Nashua (we lived in Lowell, earlier).

We asked the Pedi whether the place of birth will have any impact on the baby.
He said, no ... but ...

Should we have called the Ambulance rather than me driving?

Thankfully, everything went well. Any similar experiences, anyone? BTW, we did
take the Lamaze classes ...

Raghavan

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493.1NEWPRT::NEWELL_JOJodi Newell - Irvine CAThu Apr 01 1993 16:0326
    First off, Congratulations! 
    
>We asked the Pedi whether the place of birth will have any impact on the baby.
>He said, no ... but ...
    
    ...but it will make for some great stories to tell Shruthi! 
    
>Thinking back on the whole thing, I can't help getting scared.

    Probably a very normal reaction. Just pat yourself on the 
    back for being calm during the whole process.
    
>We were told that Chaya had back labor & something called precipitated labor,
>which happens extremely rarely & extremely fast.

    Back labor is pretty common and very uncomfortable for mom. 
    Did you keep driving while she delivered or stop and help
    your mother deliver?  
    
    I don't know anything about precipitated labor, what are the
    symptoms?  
    
    Again, congratulations.
    Jodi-
    
    
493.2congrats!KAOFS::M_BARNEYFormerly Ms.FettThu Apr 01 1993 16:3610
    Wow, what an experience!
    And as Jodi says, now that it is all over, you can appreciate it
    as a memory - I'm sure you were all pretty nervous!
    
    Can you remember what street Shruthi was born on 8-)?
    
    Unless there was any dilation, I'm not sure the doc could tell
    whether or not delivery was imminent. 
    
    Monica
493.3CSC32::M_EVANShate is STILL not a family valueThu Apr 01 1993 16:519
    I think the word you are looking for is precipitous labor.  It is a
    rapid occurance with labor and delivery following very quickly from
    onset.  It is unpredictable, although I have coached a freind who does
    this.  First time 2 hours from when she called me.  Second time less
    than an hour from when she felt she was really in labor to a baby. 
    (Some people have all the luck).         
    
    Whether Shruthi was born in a hospital a cab, or in a garden won't hurt
    her, or the human race would have died out long ago.  
493.4hopefully some soothing thoughtsTNPUBS::STEINHARTBack in the high life againFri Apr 02 1993 10:1923
    It sounds like you are blaming yourself for staying with a hospital
    that was too far from home, despite knowing your wife's condition, and
    for staying with a doctor whom you didn't completely trust.
    
    May I humbly suggest that you look at it this way?  The birth was
    successful, if unconventional, and Baby and Mom are fine.  That's all
    that counts in the long run.  
    
    Perhaps you might have done things differently.  Most likely you just
    did the best you could.  As the expression goes, "Hindsight is 20-20."
    
    Try to enjoy the new baby and fatherhood and let go of your fears about
    what might have happened.
    
    If you have another baby, you'll surely benefit from this experience
    and you can easily select a new doctor and a closer hospital.
    
    Please try to stop blaming yourself and regain your serenity.  (Some of
    your distraught thinking may be do to normal new-parent lack of sleep! 
    We all get through it somehow.)  No harm was done.
    
    Namaste,
    Laura
493.5Distance is not the only considerationCSTEAM::WRIGHTFri Apr 02 1993 12:5825
    We choose our hospitals and OB's for a variety of reasons, not just
    how close they are to our homes.  You have to factor in that you chose
    a place that you were familiar with from a previous time, and perhaps
    chose a doctor because your wife was comfortable with that one, etc.  If
    you had chosen a different hospital that was closer to your home, and
    then something went wrong at that hospital, you would be wondering if
    you should have chosen a hospital that was further away! 
    
    I guess what I'm saying is that there is no perfect choice.  We make
    the best decisions we can based on a variety of factors.  You shouldn't
    blame yourself for going from N.H. to Lowell.  Think of all of the
    expectant parents who need to deliver at Brigham and Women's in Boston
    because they have high risks.  They've certainly got a long ride ahead
    of them if they live in the suburbs, but they choose it for the extra
    skills that they can find at B&Y's.  
    
    As for whether or not you should have called an ambulance -- my OB
    says that when your contractions are 5 minutes apart you have plenty of
    time to drive and do not need an ambulance.  So, again, I think you
    were acting reasonably and simply got surprised by an unexpected and 
    rare situation.  
    
    Please don't blame yourself.  Rather, commend yourself for how well you
    handled the situation.  
                                               
493.6RICKS::PATTONFri Apr 02 1993 13:3013
    Raghavan,
    
    Congratulations!
    
    A good friend of mine *nearly* had her first baby in the car because
    her labor was so short. Afterwards the doctor ruled that for any
    subsequent pregnancy, he would insist that she be induced a week or so
    before her due date, since women tend to have precipitous labor again.
    And she was told that there was no way to know ahead of time that you
    are going to have precipitous labor. 
    
    Lucy
    
493.7I am over it!WECROW::RAGHAVANRaghavan N. Srinivas, TAY1-2/D6, 227-3106Fri Apr 02 1993 13:5625
Hi,

We decided not to move from Chelmsford Center (which is attached to Lowell
general) since we were extremely comfortable with the Doc. We still explored
the possibility by visiting the Nashua Center & the St. Josephs hospital, but
everyone kept telling us, driving 30 mins. should not be a consideration,
given that it was the first labor!

No, I am not blaming myself especially after I heard from a colleague of mine
that her son-in-law was just unable to drive his wife to the hospital ... I
was pretty tense but I had just one purpose in mind - to reach the hospital!
I was so much entrenched in the thought that it probably never occured to me
to pull over. Also, once the baby started crying, I knew everything was safe!

Incidentally, the birth certificate is s'posed to read born on Wood St.,
enroute to Rourke bridge (or something like that). She was born right in the
middle of the bridge ...

The moment that both of us cherish is when I turned back for a fleeting moment
and declared, "its a girl!".

Thanks for all of you who think that we did a great job! Next time around,
we'll probably camp out near the hospital!!

Raghavan
493.8Congratulations!!!!!SUMA::KUHNFri Apr 02 1993 14:119
I can't believe you didn't even pull over, what incredible
drive and determination you must have!   Knowing the anxiety
is high when it's time to deliver, I think both you and your
wife should be commended for being able to keep yourselves
on the road and deliver a healthy child.

Enjoy your little one!

 		- Marji
493.9I certainly hope you got a discount!NEWPRT::NEWELL_JOJodi Newell - Irvine CAFri Apr 02 1993 14:273
    How much does a doctor charge for cutting the cord? :^)
    
    Jodi-
493.10Congratulations!!! WONDER::MAKRIANISPattyFri Apr 02 1993 14:2820
    
    so that's what this kind of labor is called. I was my mother's second
    child (of four) and was born this way. Her first labor from first
    contraction to birth was 5 hours. For me it was about 1 hour ( I was
    born in the hallway at St. Margerat's in Boston). The next one the 
    doctor told my mother he would induce or she would deliver on a
    sidewalk. She went to the hospital and was induced before being
    sedated (or given anything) and gave true natural childbirth in 
    1964. For #4 (I remember this one) she left our house to be at the
    hospital for 8pm and my sister was born at 10pm. 
    
    My older sister's water broke, but other than that nothing happened
    until 2 hours before my nephew was born. I was thinking "Great, maybe
    I'll have a fairly quick labor too".  22 hours of labor proved that
    wrong.
    
    Congratulations on keeping your head on your shoulders. I don't know
    if I would have been as calm in the same situation.
    
    Patty
493.11... and a story you might enjoyBROKE::NIKIN::BOURQUARDDebFri Apr 02 1993 15:2311
from a nurse to a friend to me...

As he and his about-to-deliver wife were going up the elevator headed for the 
maternity ward, the nurse mentioned that just last week she had attended a 
woman who had given birth in that very elevator.  The new mother was *extremely* 
upset and embarrassed about delivering in the elevator and kept repeating 
"I'm so sorry, I'm so sorry".  The nurse tried to soothe mentioning "Why, last 
year, we had someone deliver right on the front lawn of the hospital!".  The 
apologetic mother turned even more shades of red and lamented "I know, it was 
me".

493.12another storyTNPUBS::STEINHARTBack in the high life againMon Apr 05 1993 10:2312
    My friend Veronica delivered her baby in the car moments after her
    husband returned from the 7-11 store.  He was buying cigarettes for
    what he thought would be a long wait!  Luckily Veronica's mother (an
    obstetrics nurse) had urged her to take a towel just in case.
    
    The hospital staff wrapped (re-wrapped) up the baby after cutting the
    cord.  Baby was kept overnight to be sure that his inner body
    temperature was warm enough.  (Hypothermia is a risk in such
    deliveries.)  Baby and Mom were released the next morning.
    
    Laura
     
493.13Nashua Memorial Hospital is wonderfulSALEM::STPIERRE_DFri May 14 1993 13:097
Just for future reference....Both my boys were born at Nashua Memorial Hospital
and they are just wonderful.  They have birthing rooms and the baby is born
right there, and you stay there until you are released.  They are private rooms
and you have a specific nurse assigned to you for all shifts for you entire
stay.

Deb