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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: Longstanding T1 diabetes, fighting off induction pressures
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Posted By Henci Goer, BA on 17 Apr 2009 11:17 PM

If I were you, I would look for a care provider who treated you as an individual, not as a Diabetic with a capital "D", and who assumed things would go well until proven otherwise. Being at greater risk for having a problem is NOT the same thing as having it. The problem with the "something can go wrong at any moment" approach is that it tends to become a self-fulfulling prophecy.  One of the ironies of medical model thinking is that the treatments it leads to can often cause the very thing the treatment was intended to prevent. Case in point: inducing labor before 39 completed weeks increases the chance of the baby having serious respiratory problems at birth, not to mention that it increases your odds of ending up with a cesarean because your body wasn't ready for labor. I would also wonder how up-to-date the doctor you consulted was. As you no doubt know, diabetes management has advanced enormously in the past decades, which means what may have been true for diabetic women who became pregnant in, say, the 1980s or even the 1990s no longer applies to a healthy pregnant woman under good control today. As for the statement that you wouldn't need a doula since you wouldn't be having a natural birth, "yikes" is the operative word. I don't know which is worse: the bland assumption that no diabetic woman can birth normally or that doulas are only for problem-free labors. While every woman benefits from one-on-one continuous supportive care in labor from a trained or experienced woman, that care is needed more than ever when the going gets rough.

I also wouldn't take the statistics you cite for pregnant women with Type II diabetes at face value. Women, especially women of childbearing age who have already developed Type II diabetes, are likely to have other health problems that could contribute to adverse birth outcomes. They are almost certain to be high-weight women and thus more likely to have the diseases that go along with that such as hypertension. They may also have less healthy lifestyles. 

If we lived in the best of all possible worlds, you would be able to get midwife-led care. A midwife would be your primary care provider, and she would consult with, co-manage, or transfer care to specialists as your specific case required. Even if transfer of care became necessary, she would remain part of the team, making sure that you got high-touch as well as high-tech care. The specialists in this ideal world would use the least medical intervention necessary to resolve problems, always keeping in mind that any intervention should be shown to be effective and that its benefits should outweigh its risks. I hope you can find something that approaches that model.

-- Henci  

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