Monthly Archives: May 2010

The Village

Posted on

No, I’m not talking about that creepy movie with the red cloaks and Those We Do Not Speak Of.

I attended a birth for the first time at Village at Pelham.  I had hoped to write a proper review covering how the rooms were set up, how the bed adjusted, and so forth.  However, my client began pushing upon arrival so I wasn’t there long enough to locate the popsicles or extra pillows. 

I’m not complaining, mind you!  It is usually a more positive experience if the mom spends most of her labor outside the hospital.  And, anyway, this hospital plans to close their L&D by the end of the summer.  Still, for what it’s worth, here is what I noticed.

  • When I walked in the main entrance, the receptionist recognized me as a doula (the birth ball is a dead giveaway) and greeted me with hopes that my client would have a happy birth. 
  • Once I walked into L&D, my client’s nurse stopped me in the hall and said, “I know your client is using hypnosis and I don’t want to interrupt her but I need to do an IV.  Can you prepare her for that?”  Nice! 
  • The mom did not push on her back. 
  • No one questioned the family’s decision to decline certain routine procedures for the baby.  The mom had uninterrupted skin-to-skin contact for at least an hour. 
  • And the same sweet lady working the front desk asked me as I left, “She already had her baby??”
  • Anything else?  Oh, the main entrance doors were neat.

That is about all I noticed.  I’m not scheduled to have another birth there before they close so I guess that is my short-lived experience with Village Hospital.

VBA2C can happen at a rural hospital

Posted on

At our April Blessingway, our positive birth story was Sarah’s VBA2C.  VBA2C stands for vaginal birth after 2 previous cesareans.  It is difficult to find a provider willing to take a VBA2C at a large hospital with 24 hour anesthesia and a level III NICU.  I know.  I’ve had clients try.  So to hear of a rural hospital supporting a VBA2C made me take notice. 

Of course, Sarah, who is also a nurse, pointed out that if a hospital is afraid of the risks of VBAC, they should not be doing any births.  There are higher risks for other types of birth-related complications.  (Ahem, Palmetto Baptist Medical Center Easley). 

Sarah found a supportive practice who influenced their hospital, Oconee Medical Center.  Drs Shannon Poole and Virginia Bass in Seneca (Blue Ridge Women’s Center) seem to be supportive of patient choice.   

Sarah shared that Oconee’s L&D nurse manager even held an in-service to help the other nurses understand VBACs and not be concerned about Sarah’s upcoming birth.  Some of them had not seen a VBAC before. 

If you’re on that side of the Upstate, it sounds like this practice is worth checking out.  I find AnMed Hospital to be a tricky place to birth, and an even trickier place to VBAC.  Oconee might be a good alternative.