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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: Internal Exams
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Posted By Henci Goer, BA on 23 Nov 2009 01:28 PM

It has become routine to check the cervix every week once a pregnant woman reaches full term (37-42 weeks pregnancy duration). As you have found, some research suggests that the examination may increase the risk of prelabor rupture of membranes. More importantly, NO research has found that the practice has any benefits. The information gained from this exam has little predictive value. A woman can have a soft cervix that is completely effaced (gathered up into the uterus--think of pulling your pursed lips flat) and starting to open, and the baby's head can be low in the pelvis, and she can go for another couple of weeks before labor starts. She can also be "none of the above" and go into labor the next day. On occasion, it is useful to evaluate readiness for labor when an induction is under consideration, but the general rule is "don't have a test unless the information will be used to make a decision."

Unfortunately, as you have begun to discover, virtually all obstetric tests, procedures, and restrictions have been shown to be harmful, ineffective, and usually both when used routinely or frequently and sometimes with any use at all. This is because any intervention in the normal process has the potential to cause harm, so when it is imposed in situations where there is no problem or a problem that could be solved by lesser means or just by having patience, there is no counterbalancing benefit.

Your doctor did not break the law because your wife accepted the exam, which is implied consent. I don't think it would occur to any doctor to ask specific permission in that a vaginal exam would seem to their minds to be as trivial and innocuous as taking your wife's blood pressure or listening to her heart. Of course, for a woman with sexual abuse or assault in her past, this might be far from the case, apart from any possible adverse effects or discomforts of the exam, but that is an argument for another day. I don't know why the exam took such a long time or why it was so uncomfortable. You could ask your wife's ob this, although it is likely the ob won't remember.

I don't know if the rupture of membranes a week later is connected. In any case, with so few doctors doing vaginal breeches, your wife would almost certainly have had a cesarean anyway. The only way that might have been averted was if your ob had told you the baby was breech, which can often be discerned by feeling the baby's position from the outside (Leopold's maneuvers), although it is not foolproof. Now's there's a test with real value! It has no downside, and if you had known in time, there are things that can be done to try and get a breech turned before labor. 

If your wife finds she is experiencing emotional distress over this birth, I recommend Solace for Mothers, a website that offers peer support for women who have had challenging childbirths. You may also find peer support and information on cesareans and vaginal birth after cesarean (VBAC) on the International Cesarean Awareness Network website.  And you can give feedback on your care provider and hospital on the Birth Survey website, which will help other women make informed choices of care providers and place of birth.

-- Henci

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