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Henci GoerFind out what other moms-to-be are asking.  Join in the discussion with Henci Goer, an expert in obstetric research. If you would like to contact Henci outside of the Ask Henci forum, send an email to Goersitemail@aol.com.

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Reply To Topic Topic: I don't' want to be Induced!
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Posted By Henci Goer, BA on 03 Jun 2009 08:00 PM

Let me take one thing at a time. First, if you have swelling, but your blood pressure is fine, then your ob is recommending an elective induction, that is, one for no medical reason. Every medical intervention has the potential for harm as well as benefit, so by agreeing to an elective induction you would be running the risk of the harm with no counterbalancing benefit. The best way of telling when your body is ready to labor is when you go into labor on your own.

Second, the "big baby" argument is, I'm sorry to say, pretty much a standard ploy used by conventional obs to get women to agree to an induction. Studies consistently agree that induction for suspected large baby does not improve outcomes. In any case, you clearly don't have problems birthing a good-sized baby, so don't let your ob scare you about that.

Third, your ob is mistaken in thinking that reaching 39 weeks makes it safe to induce without running excess risk of the baby having breathing problems. The medical literature says 39 completed weeks, in other words, at the beginning of the 40th week to avoid respiratory problems. Again, though, the best way to tell when the baby is ready to be born is when labor starts on its own.

Frankly, are you sure your ob is "natural childbirth" friendly because he sure doesn't sound like it. Natural childbirth friendly obs don't try to talk women into induction at 39 weeks. My advice is to maintain a little skepticism and not to be lulled by his talking the talk. He isn't walking the walk.

Your ob is correct that a high Bishop score, a measurement of how ready the cervix is for labor (soft, effaced, dilated), is a good predictor of whether an induction will be successful. But a woman with a score of "9" is likely going to go into labor within a few days anyway. 

The study that concluded that there were more stillbirths with induction at 41 weeks is flawed. Read my critique and make up your own mind.

Having had a vaginal birth before, you are at less risk of an induction failing than a first-time mother, but your own last statement is telling: "Everyone I know in the Washington, D.C. area gets induced and has c-sections and then has repeat c-sections for all the rest of their kids." Follow your gut instincts. As David Stewart wrote years ago in The Five Standards of Safe Childbearing: "When nature does work, it cannot be improved. Technology does not enhance a natural process that is working. It can only mar or destroy it."

-- Henci

 

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