Thanks for the reply, I really appreciate it. It seems to me that there is quite a gray area when it comes to what is medically necessary and what is not. Quite certainly, this is complicated by the fact that only medical doctors are really allowed to make this distinction (i.e., medical advice cannot just be given by a childbirth advocate). That said, I appreciate that you cannot comment on that specific situation, nor would I expect you to. I'm wondering, though, how is it that one knows, in these 'gray' situations, when the baby is really, truly better off being born than continuing to gestate?
I'm thinking about the fact that, although there are studies concluding that induction/c-section before 39 weeks is not recommended, many also recommend waiting until at least 42 weeks of gestation for induction (due to the median length of gestation being 41 weeks, 1 day). It gives a mixed message that medical intervention between 39-42 weeks is really a personal judgement call, in the absence of an emergency. In reality, this seems to vary widely based on the provider.
I hope I'm not talking in circles. I guess I feel like I'm walking in circles around this issue. Is there just no definitive information, in many circumstances, about whether the baby is truly better off being born (unless it stares you in the face, with symptoms of preeclampsia, fetal distress, etc.) even if the mother's bishop's score is 0 and it is a failed induction with 0 progress, followed by c-section at 39 weeks (as was the case with the above example)?
Or perhaps it's an informed consent issue. If mothers can really get the real risk/benefit conversation, rather than just the risk-of-staying-pregnant conversation (which is frequently catastrophied), maybe we will then really have a lower induction and cesarean rate. After all, women told Listening to Mothers that they weren't really asking for the inductions and cesareans, right?
Thanks for the dialogue,
Cindy