by BEV1978 on Wed Jul 27, 2005 2:01 pm
I have considered a home birth but having nearly died having the twins and come close to losing them both too I'm not brave enough.
Mind you the complications were all due to a very rude difficult midwife who refused to believe i was in labour until eventually fully dilated probably for several hours (i was in a lot of pain - which she didnt believe because i wasn't screaming - but only had mild urge to push due to prem babies in odd presentation) and having been refused any pain relief one twins placenta gave up and came away. Thankfully there was a hero of a doctor called on the crash team who broke every rule going to save us all! But it was very messy, painful and extremely traumatic experience. Every person of the 15 that attended the birth came to see us in the days after - and all were amazed that myself and both babies had survived and not suffered any lasting damage, apparently with the level abruption i had most babies and a high percentage of mothers die - the fact i had two baies that survived that was a true miracle. Someone looked after us that night, of that i am sure.
We complained about the midwife and she recieved a supervision order, we were also assured that in any future pregnancy she would not be allowed to come into contact with me at all and I will be allocated 4 midwives i know to form a duty rota to look after me in labour. so i guess they will treat me a lot more carefully this time. But i still feel i need 2 people for support this time, to stop me getting bamboozled by medical staff while i'm vulnerable. I am nervous to complain though having already complained before I dont want to be seen as a troublemaker.
Mind you they now have in big letters on my notes "unusally high pain threshold" so atleast this time when i say i'm in pain but don't scream or show outward signs of pain they should listen. Though i don't feel their note is correct, i think i feel pain just as much as the next person i just don't scream with it. It is hard to explain, i think it comes down to my martial arts background - you learn ways to ignore/cope with pain that would normally have you totally out of control. But its why we chose Mark - he has been my training partner for 8 years (he's seen me in a lot worse situations than childbirth!) and my friend for many more years, and he understands how i handle pain so would be able
1. to help me keep in control
2. to explain to doctors that i really am in pain!
Also he and my husband are really good mates too, so i know i wont have 2 birth partners arguing with one another instead of looking after me!!