View Poll Results: Which hospital would you choose?

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  • Option #1 - Military hospital (known good facility, but bad timing)

    13 65.00%
  • Option #2 - Good OB choices, not sure about hospital

    0 0%
  • Option #3 - Unknown OB choices, good hospital

    7 35.00%
  • Other

    0 0%
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  1. #11
    trcy is offline Ruby level (4000+ posts)
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    I voted for 1, but was torn between 1 & 3. If you can find an OB you like, 3 would also be good. I am not sure I would want to deal with finding a new doctor, but I am kind of lazy these days. Lol.
    DD 12/10
    DS 10/15

  2. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by abh5e8 View Post
    well, true that new interns will be supervised...but remember, residency finishes in June, so all of those brand new attendings (ie. the docs in charge of the interns) are also new.

    i'd go with option 3 and start asking around for good OB/midwife recommendations. no rooming in would be a deal breaker for me and I would avoid a teaching hospital at all costs in July.
    Why would there be all new attendings? Most places hire a new attending every few years; wouldn't op be with her OB group?

  3. #13
    abh5e8 is offline Emerald level (3000+ posts)
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    Oh no, not all will be new. But some will be every year. Just wanted to point out its not just the residents and students who are new in July.
    loving my dh and our littles (dd ~ 11 yrs, ds ~ 9 yrs, ds ~ 7 yrs, dd ~ 5 yrs and baby brother ~ 20 mo)

  4. #14
    Liziz is offline Emerald level (3000+ posts)
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    Thanks for all the feedback! You've helped validate some of what I'd already been thinking (done -- I'm eliminating civilian hospital #1 from my options!). I also had the chance to talk to one of the physicians I work with and trust a lot -- she's civilian now, but was former military and has seen both sides (and had her babies in a military facility, too). She really reassured me that I can make the call on who I want treating me/delivering, etc. Said that in July the staff expect to be more involved, and that especially b/c my husband is a physician working in the same facility (but it's huge, he doesn't know anyone in the OBGYN department...and he's always super reluctant in any situation to ask for special treatment, so I have to drive it), felt really confident no one would be annoyed with me if I asked for the staff physician (vs. new intern, etc.).

    Also, for those who reminded me it's more about the nurses, again -- good call, you're right. I had much more interaction with the nurses when I had DD than I did with the physicians. I think I'm likely going to stay with the military facility. Somehow, the unknown is really the most stressful part to me, especially b/c my experience with DD at the military hospital was so positive. I'd be really annoyed to switch then end up having the new baby at the end of June and feel like I didn't actually "need" to switch!
    Lizi

  5. #15
    Liziz is offline Emerald level (3000+ posts)
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    Oh -- and I guess I should also comment that in my first "very positive" birth experience with DD ... I didn't actually see a staff physician the entire time (birth or recovery)! A third-year resident and a chief resident delivered DD. So it's not like I'm against resident participation in the birth at all....mostly I'm just going to be clear this time around (and make sure DH is prepared in case I'm in a daze) that the intern doesn't get to learn stitching tears on me or anything like that, if it comes to it!
    Lizi

  6. #16
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    Sounds like you've already decided, but I wanted to chime in that 1 or 3 were my choices, though I voted 3 because I've had bad experiences with teaching hospitals throughout my life. To encourage you about changing doctors, I've had four children and one miscarriage, each in a different state with a new doctor who I met on my first pregnancy visit each time. And it was fine. With DS, I had the same doctor my entire pregnancy, then he went out of town the day DS was born, and a perfect stranger delivered him. That really upset me at the time because it was my first time, but I've gotten so much more chill with each delivery. So all of that is to say that if you went with a new doctor, you are no longer a newbie, so the relationship that you may or may not have established the first time might not be as important to you this time around. I personally go with experience over bedside manner--DD3's OB was totally old school, gruff, saw him for less than 5 minutes a visit, but there were complications in her delivery, and he saved her life. Obviously nice AND experienced is probably the ideal (DD1's OB was both), but if I have to choose, I always go with experienced. Totally agree that great nurses are key!
    Sharing advice/encouragement for homeschoolers at Homeschooling for Normal People

  7. #17
    AnnieW625's Avatar
    AnnieW625 is offline Black Diamond level (25,000+ posts)
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    The hospital where I had DD1 was a large hospital who had a RN nurses training program with a local college so I had nurses coming in and out with the supervising nurse throughout my labor and each one of them asked if they could be there, and most of the time I said yes as I didn't see the harm. They were quiet, respectful, and didn't intervene, just observed. I had DD2 at a private hospital and there were no training nurses, which was fine as well.

    I grew up in a smallish city with one hospital and medical practice so had I stayed there I would have had one of three or four OBs. I moved to a city with 500k+ people so I had a plethora of options. I was in a med. group with rotating obs so that was good for me, I saw someone a few different times when I was pregnant. Their supervising OB at the hospital ended up being on call when I had DD1 and he delivered her just fine and I didn't know him at all. With DD2 my assigned OB, (who I could have changed if I didn't like him, but he was fine) was on call until about 30 minutes before I had DD2 and he estimated I would be in true labor by 10 am, but I ended up having her 30 minutes later and was delivered by a resident. The hardest part of that delivery was being stitched up as the only time I had ever had stitches once when I had DD1 and I didn't feel it because I had an epidural, and DD2 was med free. I don't feel like I received less care because I had a resident deliver the baby.

    I know I am probably the lone person here to think this, but with Dd1 the hospital still took the babies to the nursery for some needed tests and the first night they took her for a few hours so I could sleep. I was eternally grateful for that time because I had been up for 30 hrs. by the time DD1 was born, and almost 32 by the time I got to the room as we hung out in recovery when we were getting used to breast feeding. They knew I was breastfeeding as well so they brought her back as soon as they knew she was getting hungry. I still bonded a bunch with DD1 in the hospital. With DD2 it was 100% room in and while I was fine with that I only stayed for one night and I kind of regret that. I had to bring DD2 back to the doctor 24 hrs. later to do the bilirubin test, which if the nursing staff had told me would be done the next day before we were discharged I would have stayed another night, but most of the nurses had heavy accents and were hard to understand so something was definitely lost in translation. The hospital also had a stupid extended flu season that year due to swine flu so DD1 couldn't visit so that was part of the reason I wanted to go home after one day, and I even had a private room.

    I think you need to keep your options open and keep looking, and I might try civilian hospital #2, but would probably stick with the military hospital because you had a positive experiences there. Good luck.
    Last edited by AnnieW625; 01-17-2015 at 11:32 AM.
    Annie
    WOHM to two wonderful little girls born in April
    DD E, 17
    DD L, 13,
    baby 2, 4-2009 (our Tri-18 baby)

  8. #18
    Kestrel is offline Sapphire level (2000+ posts)
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    Military hospital was my vote. However, my voice of experience says - put it in writing. Some of the not-so-good parts of military life is that we rarely saw the same doc twice. So - keep good records, and carry copies yourself. Also, write a birth plan, even if you think you don't need one. Don't count on the staff to remember anything specific about you, but the military runs on the written word - they're usually pretty good about checking written instructions.

  9. #19
    Pear is offline Platinum level (1000+ posts)
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    Separating mom and baby for anything other than an emergency is not ok. I would not go with option 2

  10. #20
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    I favor birth experience over the OB experience, so I would go with choice #3. I think that in labor, the nursing staff and the hospital policies matter greatly, and the OB is the least important part of the whole thing (unless you start to need the OB because the unexpected occurs). For instance, having attentive nurses who support your style of birth is good, but so does a hospital policy that has tubs in the labor room, birthing balls, and eating during and after labor. Breastfeeding support comes from good nurses, but also the hospital commitment of training those nurses well and having a lactation consultant on staff at the hospital.

    If you start to need the OB, in my opinion, that's why you are in the hospital in the first place. They are trained, you are in the hospital. You probably don't care tons if the OB is a stranger if you really need him or her.

    I have always felt my prenatal visits with OBs were pretty quick and not that meaningful, so having a set of warm prenatal visits would not matter as much to me as the birth experience.
    Last edited by american_mama; 02-25-2015 at 03:01 AM.
    Advice and commentary on living overseas

    DD1 15, DD2 12, and DS 9

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