After writing my last post, a "block" seemed to have been moved; story after story of amazing births I've been privileged to attend just seem to tumble from my memory; I sat down at my computer to start writing about them, and then I thought about E.
E. gave birth to her third child, a precious little girl, several weeks ago. It was E.'s third C-section, her second attempt at VBAC, her third attempt at a vaginal birth. With both of her previous birth experiences, the argument could be (powerfully) made, that mismanagement of her labor led to each C-section. With her third birth, only God knows why events unfolded as they did, and led to a third surgical birth, this one an emergency situation, that occurred with E. under general anesthesia.
E. had tried so hard to "do the right thing". She takes excellent care of herself. She's well educated, seeks out the right support for herself, does everything she can to have a safe, healthy birthing for her children and herself. For her first birth, she chose to be attended by very well-known Certified Professional Midwives; for her second, she chose to attempt VBAC with a physician who works very hard to be "hands off" and encourage her patients to give birth on their own terms; for this third birth, E. was fortunate enough to live in a city in which a prominent (it could be argued the national expert) physician-researcher (responsible for probably the most comprehensive study on VBAC ever published) practices. She chose this physician to attend her for her third pregnancy and birth, and together, this patient/physician team worked very hard to secure a healthy pregnancy and safe birth. In the end, that is exactly what they did...although with a significant "hitch" that both of them would rather not have experienced.
After an uneventful pregnancy and smooth first few hours of labor, no pain meds, no epidural, with an attentive husband and doula at her side, E. had progressed smoothly to nearly transition labor. I was so pleased for her! Having popped my head into her labor room to welcome and encourage her, and a share a quick hug with her doula, a close friend of mine, I picked up my bag and clocked out for the day (she had arrived near the end of my shift, and I would not have the good fortune to be her nurse). There was a celebratory mood in the room, and I was nearly floating on air out of happiness for her.
On my way off the unit, a barrage of nurses, residents, and the prominent attending physician suddenly came barreling out of the nurses station, clamoring towards E.'s labor room. The flurry of activity, calls for help and surgical preparations (anesthesia! OR!) that were occurring made it clear that something had gone wrong. The amazing emergency "machine" of our unit had mobilized. When a true emergency occurs, this is a thing to behold. The nurses, techs, clerks, anesthetists and physicians on the unit truly become a single entity, each individual a cog in a wheel that is rotating furiously, each performing nearly automatically, and almost always expertly, their own function, with the goal of getting the mother into surgery, and keeping her and her baby safe. While I admit that the "adrenaline addict" in me gets a bit of a "high" from situations like this, and while my main goal is to avoid having any of our mothers go to the OR, times like this make me feel grateful, and humbled to be able to call myself a part of this amazing team.
Already out of my scrubs, and off the clock, I felt helpless and powerless as I watched in dismay the "machine" thunder down the hall towards the OR with E., hunched over in "knee-chest" position in her bed, her doula and her husband running behind as they pulled on the white, zip-front "bunny suits", caps and masks they would need to accompany E. in the OR. I knew she would be OK. I knew the baby would survive...because I know that machine; but I ached that she seemed to be losing her last chance to have the vaginal birth she had always dreamed of having.
After the commotion had settled, the baby was out, and both she and her mother were deemed safe, I learned that E. had experienced a uterine rupture! This blew my mind. Why her??? She had worked so hard! She was well nourished, it had been several years since her last birth, plenty of time for good tissue healing, and from her previous op reports, she had had a strong, "double layer" repair after her second C-section. She had labored naturally, without the aid of Pitocin, and had (gratefully, in retrospect), had no pain medication or epidural to mask the symptoms of uterine rupture. She had labored to almost complete dilation. The odds were so in her favor for a vaginal birth that this occurrence was a true stunner.
Fortunately, the tear in E.'s uterine wall was repairable, and with the skill of what I am convinced is the best surgeon and surgical team in the country, E. was safe, her baby is healthy, and I know she will heal well.
Physically, at least.
But emotionally?
E. knows that what happened to her was a random, unlikely occurrence. She is grateful and happy to be alive, and to have a healthy daughter to love and raise; but still she grieves for her lost opportunities to experience birth as she had always expected she would; to give birth the way she was designed to. To give birth the way most mothers take for granted. To feel her baby emerge from her body as she worked and pushed to bring her forth under her own incredible power.
Everything had happened so fast. It must have taken quite a bit for it all to sink in, for E. and her husband. This is a couple that has always wanted a big family. Even as they counted their blessings from this averted tragedy, I heard that E.,s husband had asked their doula if they would ever be able to have more children. "Maybe...but only if you schedule a C-section at 39 weeks", she had replied...and this coming from a woman one of whose main missions in life is to help get our country's C-section rate down from it's current outrageous high of 33 percent. For a while I worried that E. just was not coping with her loss...that she was so focused on having a vaginal birth that she was letting the first precious weeks with her new daughter slip away ruminating about her lost opportunities and planning for a future VBAC. While most would feel that decision would be unsafe (and I even include myself in that number), there are midwives (who's judgement I reject) out there who might accommodate such a request. Indeed, well meaning posters on our local birth-support email lists tried to encourage E. by questioning whether she experienced a "true" rupture (she did) rather than "just a dehiscence", by questioning the decision to perform the surgery (!!??), by questioning her memory of the events, and by encouraging her to look forward to a VBA3C in the future. After a couple of unreturned telephone messages to her, and several emails without response, my worries increased...for a while.
My worries were unfounded. As much as I know she cares, I think right now I'm a reminder to E. of her lost dream of a vaginal birth. I understand that, and I won't pursue contact that she might be uncomfortable with, even though I mean only to support and care. Through the community of women who support birthing women in my city, I've learned that E. is doing well. From time to time I will see a post from her on our local ICAN (International Cesarean Awareness Network) email list, and I can tell that she is working through her grief in her own way. One post in particular that she made, was an impassioned plea to the leaders of ICAN in our community to provide more support for "those of us who will never have a vaginal birth".
My heart goes out to her. She is correct to make such a plea. While I support the work that ICAN does both nationally and locally, I've been concerned for a while that the focus on avoiding C-section, and the focus on VBAC neglects those women who may never experience another pregnancy after their C-section; that those whose C-sections were truly life saving or health-preserving might doubt their caregivers, or more importantly, their acceptance of their care-giver's decision. What aggravated me most in this particular situation, was how quick E.'s "supporters" were to second guess both her trust of her medical team, after she had put so much time and effort in choosing it, and in that team's decision, particularly when those supporters were so far removed from the situation. Hindsight is not always 20/20, and I did not consider that support.
I don't think this is or was intentional; but I think some of the printed materials, and particularly those mothers who were able to achieve a successful VBAC after a truly unnecessary c-section can inadvertently give off the "vibe" that ICAN is only for those mothers who are recovering from, or avoiding abuses of the medical system. Knowing that it will be a fine line to toe, I would like to see the group, while avoiding the risk of "normalizing" the procedure, provide more overt support to mothers who, as E. has so passionately phrased it, will never have a vaginal birth.
C-Sections are Births, too. No one would deny that, but I think in our zeal to reduce the c-section rate, to avoid that first c-section, and to promote VBAC, we have inadvertently minimized that. We in the medical community, in our rush to protect the safety of a mother and baby needing an emergency or emergent c-section, or to keep a busy, even over-loaded maternity unit running efficiently, are guilty of the same. That "machine" I spoke of, the one that I so admire and am so proud to be part of most of the time, continues to, on a calmer level, run much the same, even when the surgery is planned. It's what we do; it's our culture; it's what we are accustomed to; it's our turf!
Well, it may be so, but it's also the birth of a human being. A woman becomes a mother, a couple becomes a family, or a family grows by one (or two, or more ;-}). I've read about calm, quiet, lowly-lit (for the emergence the baby) surgical births where the baby is delivered slowly, in full view of the mother and her support person(s), sometimes even to be placed on her upper chest before being whisked over to a warmer to be dried off, examined and bundled up by nurses or pediatricians; of babies who have even breastfed while the mother was being sutured post-delivery. Even in my own experience on a unit made sometimes over-conservative as a result of being a referral center for high risk pregnancies, I know of at least one physician, one who is conservative himself, who is frustrated at the business-as-usual way in which our cesarean deliveries are usually carried out. I suspect he would balk at the slow, dimly lit delivery with a newly born, wet baby being placed immediately on the mother, or of baby nursing during surgery (I can also envision the hysterics of our very conservative chief anesthesiologist, LOL), but I know he would prefer that we keep baby with the mother and her support people during recovery, and get breastfeeding initiated, rather than whisk baby away to the nursery after a few moments in Dad's (or whoever the mother has chosen for her support) arms, while he (or she) sat next to the mother. On a busy unit such as ours that can be a challenge...particularly because our recovery room has limited space and no infant warmers...but we have done it from time to time, for those assertive mothers who have requested it. It can be done. I'd like to see it done more often.
Likewise, I'd like to see members of ICAN be more conscious (although I know they already try to be) of the feelings of mothers who have given and will continue to give birth surgically. I understand the triumph of a woman who has "beaten the system" to have a VBAC; but that is not reason enough to, even unintentionally, and even sympathetically, view a woman who has had a c-section as a woman who has had a negative birth experience...who has not researched all of her options...who has "given in" to the system.
No, we don't want to risk normalizing surgical birth; but we certainly could benefit from humanizing it much more...both those who perform surgical births, and those whose (admirable) goal is to avoid it.
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12 comments:
Well said. I hope that this lady stands firm on the fact that she did everything she could. She researched her options, chose people who were in line with her beliefs, hired a doula, etc. She was so well prepared. And we're all just doing the best with what we know and what we have. In the end, I hope she can hold on to that. I always tell my doula clients that they need to trust their care providers. If they don't, then they need to find one they do trust. Then if an emergency arises, they won't second-guess the decisions and protocol. They will know that their HCP did the best for them within the same philosophy.
Thank you so much for your post. As an active member of ICAN and a regular participant on their forums and international listserve, I can understand your concerns.
I wanted to comment about how the participants in the local email group reacted. Sometimes, the "receivers" of a story ask a lot of questions, just to process. With something like a rupture - that lurking spector hanging around every VBAC mom - it's almost like... it's too shocking of a reality to process that we need to be sure it really, really happened that way in order to be able to understand. It's not so much the doubt about the woman. It's about the disbelief that, wow, this really happened. In a sense, when we hear about a rupture happening to one of "our" moms, it's almost like it happened to ourselves. I know I have felt that way. I felt that way reading your blog, which is something I stumbled upon today.
I am glad that I read this today, because it does challenge me to think, "am I doing enough to support our cesarean moms?" and consider what else can be done. Thanks :)
Interesting take on this. I see how you can perceive a certain type of "support" on an email list, but in my local ICAN group (you know, where we meet face-to-face, share phone conversations, visit each other after a vaginal birth OR cesarean, etc.), we support each other no matter what kind of birth we have, no matter what the details of what happened are, and no matter what the mother's feelings--now AND in the future--actually are. Although, of course, the women who tend to participate in this kind of support are usually actual ICAN subscribers, rather than simply list members. It is interesting to see how the dynamics are different on public email lists versus one-on-one...
Point taken, Lily; It is more difficult to discern the intentions in writing, than face to face; some of these comments were made to E., face to face however. I think vbac lady had a very good point as well...after being surrounded by all of the optimism of the happy outcomes so many ICAN members are blessed with, it can be hard to grasp that the the "unthinkable" actually happened to someone we care about. I know that the ladies who made some of these comments meant only to encourage and comfort E...it 's a reminder to all of us (myself included, in the tone of my blog sometimes) to really think before we speak (or write ;-} )
Thanks for reading,
RedRn
Wow, I can't believe I happened to find this blog today.
Thank you for your heartfelt post.
I attempted a VBAC in July. I followed all the rules this time. I fixed every problem that led to my first c-section. E.'s prep for birth was the same as mine, but I ended up in the OR again also.
The people who suggest that we did something wrong to end up with a c-section are just scared that it might happen to them. If they can find something wrong that we did then they can relax. I see their point completely.
There isn't a designated place for cesearean birth after VBAC attempt Probably because CBAVBACA is just too difficult of an acronym. ;)
absolutely. as a woman who had the difficult choice of a planned, unscheduled CS the 1st time (after anticipating a HB), and despite my joy at our next daughter's normal vbac, I really feel strongly that we need to support and help those grieve who make the right choice which still feels so wrong to them for the health and wellbeing of their child. Birth is safe most of the time. For everything else, have midwives and high-risk specialists called OBs to increase our chances of healthy mother, healthy baby.
ICAN, and I am a part of it, needs to be more supportive of the good CS. They are out there.
My grieving process was long, and emotional. I finally feel (currently :)) COMPLETELY justified in my decision to CS 1st time--as a RESULT of my wonderful vbac experience at home. Both of my births were owned, researched, and decided by my husband and I, ultimately. I'm very grateful for all the professional and amateur support I have had along my journey. It's made all the difference in the lives of my 2 beautiful babies.
--almost finished my PEP process to become a CPM through NARM
i, also, will never have a vaginal birth. it is one of my greatest heartbreaks, and i will always grieve that loss.
my first c-sec was birthing triplets (ivf), which i fully expected. after all those years of infertility (also a loss to grieve), i became spontaneously pregnant and went to a CNM for a homebirth VBAC. my pregnancy was grossly mismanaged and my baby was stillborn on her due date (another loss to grieve). i never went into labor...i've NEVER experienced any kind of labor (another loss to grieve).
i have been trying to get pregnant again for many months, and the whole VBAC vs scheduled c-sec issue has come up, quietly, in my mind. for many, many reasons, i can't seriously consider an attempt at vbac, but i like to try it on sometimes...then the terror sets in. i could never, ever live with the guilt of another choice that kills another baby!
what i'm getting at is, my mind has been taking me to the (GASP!) place of a gentle c-sec birth? of trying to imagine a planned, calm, surgical delivery which results in a live baby. i feel like sh*t inside about all my losses; the grief is sometimes overwhelming. mostly, i grieve the loss of my reproductive self. that's what it's about for me, not statistics or politics. i know i can never have a vaginal birth. I KNOW THIS. where do we go from here? that's the question.
thank you so much for this post. and E, i'm right here with you.
Babiesforruby...congratulations on your pending CPM...keep me posted!
Charmedgirl...sorry it's taken me so long to bet back to my blog. Where do you go from here? Well, here is a website I'd like you (I'd like for everyone!) to check out. Sharon, the site's originator, and the founder of the company Sacred Beginnings became a mother through the process of what she calls "empowered C-section". She has found a way to come to terms with painful birthing losses, and the knowledge that she will always have her babies by c-section. She has a lot of information on both healing from those lost dreams, and on how to move towards an empowering, truly joyous surgical birth experience. She is a wonderful woman, a true blessing to birthing mothers. She does most of her work in the Central Ohio area, but is available for telephone and email consults, and she can help connect you with resources in your own area. Check her out at www.sacredbeginning.com
RedRn
Wow! Makes me glad I didn't try for a VBA2C! Very cool reading your story about what it's like being a nurse!!!
Curdiemer, we actually do have an acronym for cesarean after VBAC attempt--we call it a CBAC, and ICAN has a special forum on their website for CBAC moms. Several ICAN board members are CBAC moms, too.
I have always--no, scratch that. AFTER HAVING MY C-SECTION and joining ICAN, I understood that nothing can guarantee a vaginal birth. There are ways to increase your chances of having one, but never any guarantees--even if you've "done everything right." That's why my biggest fear during my last pregnancy was ending up with another cesarean despite "doing everything right." As with life, there are no guarantees. You'd be surprised at how many ICAN women are painfully aware of this.
RedRN: I encourage you to come to the ICAN conference this April in Atlanta. Joni Nichols, one of the keynote speakers will be talking about the "Respectful Cesarean":
When a cesarean becomes necessary, this sacred moment must still be considered a family centered celebration. The physical wound is hard enough...we don’t need to leave emotionally wounded women in their wake! How can we achieve this? We need a calm and tranquil atmosphere in the operating room, a mother-to-be with the person (or people!) she wishes at her side, immediate physical contact between mother and baby, continued contact during the remainder of the surgery, and a desire and attitude on the part of the professionals present to be of service to the new family. Think this is impossible? Come and see where these ideas have become realities.
http://conference.ican-online.org/index.html
Lilly,
Thanks you for your post. I am indeed hoping to attend the ICAN conference. I've enjoyed the pleasure of corresponding with Joni several times over the past few years, and I would love to meet her.
Blessings,
RedRn
What I never understood, and maybe this doesn't happen everywhere, is why the recovery nurses looked at me with disgust (could've been the drugs making me feel this too) for having a c-section. I felt like I had to explain that though mine was scheduled and nearly three weeks early, I had placenta previa and had no choice. Absolutely none.
Maybe it was karma coming full circle for all the ill thoughts I had towards people who had what I felt where unnecessary c-sections.
My point is (do I have one) I agree with you. People need to have more empathy, maturity, etc. when it comes to something as personal as birth.
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