PregnancyLabor and Delivery: Your Birth Plan During your
prenatal visits, talk with your health professional about what you would like
to happen during your labor. Consider writing up your labor and delivery
preferences in a birthing plan, either in a
childbirth education class or on your own. You can
find various examples of birthing plans on parenting Web sites. Because no labor or delivery can be fully anticipated or planned in
advance, be flexible. Your experience after labor begins may be totally
different from what you expected. If an emergency or an urgent situation
arises, your plans may be changed for your own or your baby's safety. You may
still be allowed to share in some decisions, but your choices may be
limited. When making plans for your baby's birth, consider the
location of your delivery,
who
will deliver your baby, and whether you want
continuous labor support from a designated health
professional or a
doula, a friend, or family members. If you haven't
already, this is also a good time to decide whether you'll attend a
childbirth education class, starting in your sixth or
seventh month of pregnancy. After you've set the stage, think
through your preferences for comfort measures, pain relief, and medical
procedures and fetal monitoring, as well as how you want to handle your first
hours with your newborn. Comfort measures
may include: - Nonmedication pain management ("natural" childbirth),
such as focused breathing, distraction, massage, imagery, and continuous labor
support, which can reduce pain and help you feel a sense of control during
labor. Acupuncture and hypnosis are also low-risk ways to manage pain that work
for some women.12
- Laboring in water, which helps with pain, stress, and
may also help prevent slow, difficult labor.13, 14
- Walking during labor, including whether you prefer continuous
electronic fetal heart monitoring or occasional
monitoring. Most women prefer the freedom to walk and move around, which helps
reduce discomfort, but a high-risk delivery would require constant monitoring.
- Eating and drinking during labor. Some hospitals allow you to
drink clear liquids while others may only allow you to suck on ice chips or
hard candy. Solid food is often restricted because the stomach digests food
more slowly during labor. This may make you vomit or feel like vomiting. An
empty stomach is also best in the rare event that you may need general
anesthesia.
- Playing music during labor.
- Birthing positions during pushing, including sitting,
squatting, or reclining or using a ball, whirlpool, or birthing chair, stool,
or bed.
Pain medication may include:
- Epidural anesthesia, which is an ongoing injection of
pain medication into the epidural space around the spinal cord, to partially or
fully numb the lower body. A "light" epidural allows the mother to feel enough
so that she can push, reducing risks of stalled labor and cesarean delivery.
- Pudendal and paracervical blocks, which are injections
of pain medication into the pelvic area to reduce labor pain. Pudendal is one
of the safest forms of anesthesia for numbing the area where the baby will come
out. Paracervical has been generally replaced by epidural, which is more
effective.
- Narcotics, typically Demerol, which are sometimes used
to reduce anxiety and pain. Narcotics have limited pain-relief effectiveness
and can have troubling side effects for mother and baby.
Should I
use epidural anesthesia during childbirth?
Some pain relief medications are not the type that you
would request during labor. Rather, they are used as part of another procedure
or emergency delivery. However, it's a good idea to be familiar with them. They
include: - Local
anesthesia, the injection of pain medication into the skin, which numbs
the area before episiotomy or before inserting an epidural.
- Spinal block, the injection of pain medication into
the spinal fluid, which rapidly and fully numbs the pelvic area for assisted
births, such as for
forceps or
cesarean delivery. If you have a spinal block, no
pushing is possible.
- General anesthesia, the use of inhaled or
intravenous (IV) medication, which renders you
unconscious. It has more risks, yet takes effect much faster than epidural or
spinal anesthesia. General anesthesia is therefore only used for some
emergencies that require a rapid delivery, when an epidural catheter has not
been installed in advance.
Medical procedures for aiding a safe
delivery may include: - Labor induction and augmentation, including rupturing
of the membranes and medications for softening the cervix and stimulating
contractions. This can be a medically necessary decision, such as when a mother
has high blood pressure or another health problem that may endanger the fetus.
- Electronic fetal heart monitoring, either continuous
for a high-risk delivery, or periodic, to check for signs that the fetus might
be in distress.
- Episiotomy, which widens the area between the vagina
and anus (perineum) with an incision. Episiotomy is done to
shorten the time until the baby is delivered. Perineal massage and controlled
pushing may also prevent or reduce tearing.
- Forceps delivery or vacuum extraction to assist a
vaginal delivery, such as when labor is stalled at the pushing stage or the
baby has signs of distress and needs to be delivered quickly.
- Need for a cesarean birth during a labor in progress.
For more information, see the topic
Cesarean Section.
If you have had a cesarean delivery before, you may have a
choice between a vaginal trial of labor and a planned cesarean birth. For more
information, see the topic
Vaginal Birth After Cesarean (VBAC). Should I
plan to have an episiotomy?
Newborn care decisionsNewborn care decisions
include: - Whether you plan to
bank
your baby's umbilical cord blood after the birth for possible use as a
stem cell treatment. (This requires advance planning early in your pregnancy.)
- Keeping your baby with you for at least 1 hour after birth, for
bonding and introduction to breast-feeding. Some hospitals allow rooming-in,
with no mother-baby separation during the entire hospital stay. (A rooming-in
policy also allows you to request time alone for rest, if you need it.)
- Delaying vitamin K injection, heel prick for blood test, and
eye medication, to help calm your newborn after delivery.
- Whether and when you'd like visitors, including children in
your family.
- Allowing no water or formula for a breast-fed baby, to decrease
early breast-feeding problems.
Should I
bank my baby's umbilical cord blood?
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