Surprise Breech Birth
Very interesting surprise breech home birth with a postpartum transfer. It is a detailed story and I must say, it says a lot about birth, home birth, transfers, hospital care and treatment, and the current maternity system. Truly, personal stories like this tell bigger stories about our culture and our views of birth and birth history-
Enjoy!
The birth of Callan Leo
LMP due date: March 17
U/S and conception due date: March
22
Born: March 29, 2011 @ 3:35 p.m at
41 weeks.
7 lbs 12 oz, 21 inches
Right from the very beginning,
everything about Cal’s pregnancy was a test of my ability to accept
life as it comes.
My husband and I knew we wanted a
second child and planned to start trying for one in September, just
before my first son turned two. A summer baby seemed so nice, but
this baby wanted to be born in spring instead.
I definitely was not charting as I used
to, but figured since I was on cycle day 20 or later, that the chance
of conception while on a family vacation celebrating our wedding
anniversary was pretty slim. But just before July 4, I noticed some
tell-tale fertility signs and realized it was a little too late to
prevent a possible pregnancy. Sure enough, a couple of weeks later I
was woken with the urgent need to pee and discovered I could no
longer drink even a sip of coffee or make it long without eating. I
tested on July 17 and low and behold, we were expecting our second
baby in March.
I knew immediately I wanted to make a
homebirth happen. My first son’s hospital birth was the best I
could ask for from that setting but it was stressful, not the
comfortable or relaxing environment I wanted. I knew I would again
birth without assistance from pain meds and therefore felt a hospital
was utterly unnecessary in terms of the care I required for my baby
and I. I also knew that for me, another hospital birth would
necessitate laboring at home as long as possible and had no interest
in making the mad dash to the hospital in active labor.
With my first, my labor began when my
water broke and after only 6 hours or so of contractions I was
getting copious amounts of bloody show and already feeling pushy. I
was fully dilated and fully pushing by the time we arrived in
antenatal. My 8 pound son was born after 90 minutes of pushing at
3:26 p.m. It was pretty fast for a first baby and all involved agreed
a homebirth might make the best sense for my second, assuming my
pregnancy was as low risk as my first was.
I began my second pregnancy with the
same midwives from my first, knowing I would eventually have to
transfer to a midwife who would attend my baby’s birth at home. So
I set out to find that midwife, interviewing five possibilities while
receiving prenatal care from my old CNM. We did all of the routine
prenatal testing including the early risk assessment ultrasound and
anatomy scan at 20 weeks while we knew my care was safely covered by
insurance.
Meanwhile I was also sorting out
insurance and trying to make every possible preparation for my home,
health and family to ensure to the best of my ability, that birthing
at home would be safe and peaceful.
There were constant tests of my
decision along the way: from questions about whether my insurance
would ultimately pay for most of this or whether it would be entirely
an out of pocket expense; questions from friends and family about our
choice to birth at home; questions about my choice of midwife and
whether or not to consent to various prenatal care options in the
later part of my pregnancy. Questions about birth pools even! I did a
lot of soul searching and research--more so than I did even with my
first pregnancy.
The last two weeks of my pregnancy were
the toughest. I was really feeling doubts about my body working that
I’ve never experienced before. My mom, a labor and delivery nurse
for more than 30 years, was staying with us so she could attend the
birth and help with our son. But having her there was bringing out
the worst in me in so many ways. It seemed as soon as I would get
myself back into a peaceful mindset, someone would say something or I
would read something that would just slam me back into this doubting
place. It was really taxing.
Most of the stress stemmed from my
foolishly convincing myself that this baby was going to come early.
My first son was born a week before my earliest due date and none of
my sisters’ six babies were born post 40 weeks. I for some reason
believed it was impossible for us to gestate babies longer than that!
So when my first due date came and went, then my second came and
went, I got a great big taste of how agonizing it is for women to go
post dates.
The single best thing that did come out
of the wait was that my husband became critical to me in terms of my
dealing with the stress. I am fiercely independent and often
resistant to leaning even on him, and he totally showed me that I
could and should rely on him more. I think we needed that for our
relationship and that bond would end up being really important to me
later in ways I only really grasp now.
41 weeks
By 39 weeks I was having fairly regular
but inconsistent contractions. The kind that have you convince that
labor MUST be imminent. But I ended up experiencing a good two weeks
of this sort of labor pattern: A day of really minor early
contractions that followed no pattern, followed by a day of
absolutely nothing. I sat on my birthing ball, tailor sat, did pelvic
rocks, took long walks including hills and curb walking, everything I
could think of to coax labor to begin in earnest. Nothing was
working.
My midwife and I decided that if I was
still pregnant at 41 weeks, we would get an ultrasound and
biophysical done to check on the baby. But once again, baby had his
own plans. On Sunday morning, March 27 I woke up at about 7 a.m. to a
subtle gush that reminded me of my water breaking with my first son,
only it really wasn’t much fluid and unlike last time, I wasn’t
able to force more out by pressing on my belly. I rested there with
the cat and felt a few contractions come and pass thinking we might
finally be in labor. When my husband and son woke up later, I told my
husband I thought today might be the day and was overcome with a
feeling of readiness that was so reassuring. I didn’t feel stressed
in the least. We even called my cousins and asked them to be on
standby in case we decided to send our son to their house. I was so
sure things were happening. But after a good long walk up hills and
home, it was clear this was just another warm up labor and not, in
fact, the real thing.
Clearly discouraged and even a little
depressed, my parents decided to spend a night at my brother’s
house to give me a little space. On Monday they returned because my
mom had a dentist appointment right by my house and despite not
feeling well, intended to go. She looked pretty exhausted and had
really bad stomach issues that we were pretty sure was the same GI
bug my brother’s son had recently gotten over. I felt terribly for
her and yet was thinking to myself, ‘man, she probably shouldn’t
be in my house right now.’
My husband cooked us all dinner and my
mom hardly ate anything before going off to bed at 8:30. More than
once I thought to myself: ‘great, now after weeks of dodging
illness we’re all going to get a GI bug and my labor will be
delayed even further!’
Or maybe not… I went to bed myself a
couple of hours later and was woken at 2 a.m. or so to a contraction.
As I lay there I felt another come and pass… then another and
somewhere around 3 a.m., felt a real gush of amniotic fluid. I
immediately turned on the light so I could tell whether the water was
clear and so I could get to the toilet before the rest of the fluid
released (this was exactly how my labor started with my first son).
As soon as I stood up I made a puddle on the floor instead. I removed
my white sweatpants and used them to clean up the mess and further
confirmed there was no meconium staining or obvious reason for
concern.
I popped into my son’s room where my
husband was sleeping and gave him the news, then decided to just
relax in bed and see what happened. I wasn’t getting real strong or
regular contractions and wanted to let everyone sleep as long as
possible. I felt pretty calm and good until I felt this pulsing
sensation low in my pelvis and for some reason immediately worried
that it might be his cord. I reached for my perineum and felt
something that wasn’t my body. It was really thin and didn’t
really feel like a cord to me but it sent me into a brief panic so I
decided to call my midwife for her opinion.
Because I had to go downstairs to get
her number, I had to wake my dad who had elected to sleep on our
couch to give my sick mother some solitude. I assured him I was ok
and sent him up to sleep with her while I spoke to my midwife. She
convinced me a cord would be unmistakable and upon investigating
further it was pretty obvious what I was feeling was probably some
amniotic sac (I could even press more fluid out of it.) She asked if
I could feel the baby moving and as if on cue, I felt our son turning
his head on my cervix and felt him move his foot away from my hand
when I played with it on my right side. Now feeling MUCH calmer, I
let her off the phone with the agreement I’d call her back when
things got more active.
Labor
At that point I had the downstairs to
myself. I made myself some toast and decided to sit on the birthing
ball and tie up some final work things that I had planned to do that
day. I had always planned to work right up until labor began but
ended up working from home for the last week of my pregnancy. I had
actually just told my boss I planned to make March 29, or the day I
hit 41 weeks of pregnancy, my final workday. My stubborn son, the one
who insisted on being born an Aries instead of a Pisces like his mama
wanted, obviously changed that plan too!
I was casually timing the contractions
while finishing up work—ten minutes apart, not quite a minute
long—then at approximately 5 a.m. I felt sleepy and like the
contractions were mellow enough that I wanted to try and nap. I
managed to sleep from about 5 a.m. to 7:30 or so which was great.
Around then the whole family was waking
up. My parents decided to take my son out for the morning so my
husband and I could have some peace and quiet. I sent my husband back
up to nap and spent the morning letting myself labor to the Beatles
and picking up here and there. The contractions started out really
slow when I first woke but by 11 a.m. they were regularly at least a
minute long and between 3 and 7 minutes apart.
I was just jotting down when they
started on a pad of paper in between frequent trips to the bathroom
and decided I wanted to use the contraction master web site so I
could get a fuller picture of my labor patterns. The laptop was on my
dining room table by the stereo so I stood behind my son’s
highchair, using it for support when a contraction came, kind of
grooving out to the Beatles in between. I was honestly having a
lovely time.
Sometime really soon after my moving
over to the table, the contraction intensity kicked up quite a bit.
They were still pretty spaced out – about 8 minutes or so – but
much longer and harder to breath through and I was feeling the
contractions intensely focused right on my cervix. It felt a bit like
someone was driving a hot piece of steel through my cervix at their
peak: a lot more intense feeling than my contractions with my first
son. Those ones radiated around my lower belly in textbook labor pain
fashion. And while they had a peak to them that was quite painful, I
didn’t experience any of this cervical sensation with him. I recall
wondering if maybe baby #2’s hand was by his head? Something felt
different.
At that point I asked my husband to
come down and join me and not long after that just got this
overwhelming wave of vulnerability and fear that labor was starting
to get really fast. My first son’s entire labor and birth lasted 9
hours – I knew this could kick up in intensity quickly.
I decided to call my midwife then and
ask her to come over and as soon as I picked up the phone to call
her, I started crying. My voice totally gave her the impression I was
ten seconds away from pushing and I seriously had her at my door in
what felt like minutes. Really, she arrived at about 12-12:30 p.m.
Our backup midwife came right behind her.
Of course just having them at the house
set my mind at ease and things mellowed out a smidge again. She
listened to the baby who sounded great and let me listen too. Checked
my blood pressure (120 / 60, higher than it’s ever been but still
normal) we checked his position: still ROA / head down.
She did not check my cervix, nor did I
ask her to. With both pregnancies, my cervix was only ever checked
when I got the urge to push just to be sure I was in fact fully
dilated at that point. I had no interest in knowing how dilated I
might be: that information always seems discouraging to me rather
than helpful and I didn’t see any reason to introduce a possible
infection considering my water had broken so preferred to leave that
whole region alone.
Around 1-1:30 p.m. my mom returned with
my son and two sisters. This was a little unexpected. I had
previously told both of them I was ok with them being there for the
birth thinking the likelihood they would actually make it was slim.
But then the friend I had arranged to be there to take pictures and
back up my mom with our son, was a no show and my mom really did need
some support since she had been sick the day before.
My midwife checked in with me to make
sure I was ok with all the people in the house and I assured her I
was. This point is actually my favorite memory of the whole day: My
mom, sisters, husband, son and the midwives all sitting around my
table chatting and laughing. I was even able to joke, chat and snack
with them in between contractions. This was exactly what I envisioned
when I thought of a homebirth.
My husband, the midwives and my mom
took turns supporting me through contractions and the midwives would
periodically check the baby’s heart rate. Every other contraction I
had to pee and would go upstairs and hope for some bloody show or
signs things with moving along. I got a small amount of blood tinged
mucous around 2 p.m. but not much. I asked my midwife when she
thought it would be ok to get into the tub and she said, I should
feel free to get in whenever I felt drawn to but that it can
theoretically slow things down. My demeanor between contractions and
how spaced out they were definitely didn’t let on to any of us that
things were that far along. So I elected to keep laboring upright,
sitting on the couch or standing until my mom made the suggestion to
try laying on my left side. She told me later that she made that
suggestion thinking that it might help coax the baby into a better
position for birth.
Laboring like this was excruciating and
after my second contraction in that position I told myself not to
stay like that long. But the rest it was allowing me between
contractions was too nice to motivate myself to get up so I stayed
for a few more. My son was starting to want more of my attention so
my mom and sisters decided they would take him out for a walk: my mom
saying when she left, “call me when she starts pushing.”
The moment they closed the door, things
went from a 5 to ten in intensity. My husband was by my side helping
me through a contraction and something happened. I just felt this
crazy sensation that I honestly don’t have any good memory of to
describe other than to say it felt excruciating and before the
contraction even hit its peak, the rest of my bag of waters exploded
out of me, I got a serious Charlie horse cramp in my left hamstring
and I immediately felt my son’s body move way down and the need to
push.
I exclaimed something, “pushing!,”
I think. And my midwives jumped up and got the tub cover off and
started prepping for the birth. I didn’t want to move because what
I was feeling was so intense but when I managed to get a break in
between the urge to push, my husband helped me get into the tub.
Time To Push
The water felt amazing! And I pushed
with the next contraction on my knees and could tell my son was going
to be born pretty quickly. My midwife wanted to do the requisite
cervical check and this is when things got really interesting. I was
indeed fully dilated and baby boy had turned frank breech.
I think what I said then is, “Is that
bad?” or maybe, “what do we do now?” My midwife reassured me we
could deliver him, she’s delivered numerous breech babies before,
in fact this was one of the things that attracted me to her in the
first place not EVER thinking it might be necessary. But then when we
checked my son’s heart rate again, his rate had dropped from the
120s to 80-90. This kind of heart rate change is not unusual at this
point in labor but it was not comforting given the circumstances. We
all agreed it was probably for the best that we transfer and so our
backup midwife called 911.
Everything that happened next was a
rapid, whirlwind of activity and given my role in all it, I can’t
really claim perfect accuracy. All I can tell you is the whole
process of my getting in the pool and delivering my son was about 15
minutes. Any pondering how I felt about it all was done later. In the
moment, I was on autopilot just doing what felt necessary to deliver
my baby or following the suggestions of others. Some of this I only
know clearly because I asked what happened after the fact.
My husband called my mom to tell her
what was going on and went about gathering up some clothes for me
while my midwives discussed whether to get me out of the tub before
EMS arrived. They wanted me to breath through the pushing
contractions and not actually push, which I was able to do once,
maybe twice, but after that it felt damn near impossible to not push
that baby out. They both felt like keeping me in the tub would keep
me more relaxed and hopefully slow things down: the goal being to
avoid me delivering in the ambulance which everyone agreed was the
least safe option. They gave me oxygen during this time, had me
change positions and the next time they checked my son’s heart rate
it was back in the 120s.
At that point my midwife felt things
were moving much too quickly to make a section possible even if we
were able to make it to the hospital (my son’s entire hips were
through my cervix by then: I could feel his butt and testicles about
an inch in.) So with his heart rate again where it had been all
along, she gave me the go to just push. The backup midwife called
back EMS to request that they wait outside until the baby was born.
Not long after that, maybe two-three
pushes? His body was entirely out. His head was another story. At
that point my mom is there and soon after EMS came in (I guess they
didn’t heed our midwives’ request). Getting his body out was
remarkably easy and other than the first moment of his hips coming
through my perineum, was surprising not painful. I felt most of his
body slip out but his head was still inside and I couldn’t feel it
at all which totally confused me.
I knew, both because it was instinctual
and because I could see my backup midwife’s face in front of me,
that we needed to get his head out ASAP. I pushed with everything I
had and it seemed nothing was happening. So my husband lifted held me
up out of the water so my backup midwife could apply pelvic pressure
without my body moving away from her hands in the water. My mom had
one leg and an EMS worker had the other while my midwife managed to
get her finger in my son’s mouth to get his chin towards his chest
(a flexed chin makes birthing the head more difficult). Some
combination of all of this got his head out but that time between
when his body was out and his head was in felt like an eternity. In
reality it couldn’t have been even 5 minutes.
My midwife brought my baby up onto my
chest and he immediately looked up at my husband and I but then
promptly went limp and clearly wasn’t breathing. They gave him
breaths with the resuscitation bag while we talked to him and rubbed
him and let the cord stop pulsing. My husband then cut the cord and
they brought him over to the couch so everyone there could be assured
he was breathing well.
This was unquestionably the hardest
part. I was in the tub and couldn’t see anything. My husband talked
in my son’s ear while our midwife continued giving him breaths with
the bag and an EMS worker warmed him with warm towels/blankets. His
heart rate was apparently strong through all of this and he was
breathing without help within minutes. Throughout this time, my
midwives and one of the EMS workers were giving me updates but I feel
like I was in space somewhere. People periodically asked if I was ok,
and I said I was but I remember feeling kind of numb. Not scared,
somehow knowing he was fine and yet not fully knowing that at the
same time. Just stunned I guess.
Because of the crazy eventfulness of it
all and the fact that our baby needed help to breath in the
beginning, we decided to take advantage of the ambulance and make a
trip to the hospital to have a pediatrician make sure my son was ok.
The EMS team had brought him into the ambulance before I was even out
of the tub so I didn’t get to see him again until they got me out,
dried off and into the ambulance. By then everyone was assuring me he
was crying vigorously and was completely fine. I finally got him back
in my arms and could see that for myself while naked under a pile of
blankets on a stretcher.
Postpartum Hospital Transfer
We transferred to Brigham and Women’s
hospital over the one where my first son was born because the
ambulance could only go to hospitals within city limits. At this
point it was only a precaution to make sure Cal’s breathing was ok.
He received an APGAR of 10 when we finally got to our room and
latched on and was nursing almost immediately. A pediatrician checked
him out and said, other than breathing that was a little more rapid
than they would like, he seemed perfectly healthy. They just wanted
to evaluate him again after four hours to see if his breathing rate
returned to normal range and at that point we were free to head back
home.
He looked fantastic, super alert and
not remotely health compromised to the point where as soon as we had
a moment to collect our thoughts it felt beyond unnecessary to even
be there. The only sign of what he had gone through were his huge,
purple balls and a big bruise on his hip from that being the
presenting part during pushing. My midwives noticed his head had some
really unusual crowning on the back. His head was shaped kind of like
ET’s, which can be typical of a breech baby, but you could also
feel this ridge at the back where his fontanel sutures molded. He was
facing my rear so I’m sure it was this getting lodged on my pelvic
bone that made it so tough to get his head out. Not to mention, we
later realized his head was in the 98% in size! (Still is! Doesn’t
look like it but baby boy has a big head!)
Our nurse upon checking in was
absolutely awesome. Such a nice lady and really laid back, supportive
and not judgmental. She was like the bright light of our brief stay
at BWH. Sadly we were catching her at the end of her shift so we
didn’t get to enjoy her for long. But she was so awesome, I can’t
not mention her.
EMS wanted to get Cal and I on the road
quickly so I had yet to birth the placenta. As soon as we got in the
room my midwife was encouraging me to try and squat and push it out
before the OBs started to make their own suggestions.
The idea of squatting at that moment
seemed semi impossible but I had Cal on the boob and his sucking got
a good contraction going so I was able to push it out pretty easily
while reclining. My midwives, my mom and the awesome nurse all
checked it out and declared it intact and no one was concerned about
the amount of bleeding I had. There was a little membrane left
hanging out of me that my midwife gently worked out with her hand
in case it was attached to placenta or something. I felt immediately
better once the placenta was out!
Moments later an OB, about my age, came
in to tell me that, “she would feel better if she could do an
internal exam.” Meaning without even looking at the placenta, she
wanted to reach both her hands up into my uterus to check for
retained placenta. She had two L&D nurses and two midwives
telling her that there was absolutely no reason to be concerned about
retained placenta but SHE would feel better if I would consent to her
sticking her hands inside my body where nothing other than my child
had been before. I’m fairly sure my jaw dropped and I flatly
refused. Awesome nurse basically schooled her (with back up from the
three other trained medical professionals in the room) and that OB
hightailed it out of there and fortunately we never saw her again.
I’m still aghast that this woman
would even suggest that though. I can’t help but think of a woman
in my position with less support or less familiarity with what is
appropriate. I can’t imagine why she would subject a woman to that
kind of painful, invasive procedure without even a cursory glance at
the placenta first to be sure it was medically indicated. It’s
insulting if not abusive.
Once that event was behind us, the
parade of residents began. At first I wondered if some sort of memo
had gone out: ‘hey, homebirth transfer in room 505, anyone want to
practice some gyno procedures?’ But after talking with a few other
moms that delivered there, I guess this is not so uncommon at
teaching hospitals. They came in in pairs and all wanted to check out
my under carriage which my midwife had already given me a report on.
I had definitely torn but was also
pretty swollen at that point so it was tough to get a really good
gage of how bad the tear was. My midwife felt it made best sense to
get it repaired by an OB while I was there so that I could be more
mobile, more quickly. Plus, she wasn’t positive there was no
involvement of rectal muscle, which needs to be stitched.
The line from my parade of residents
was: “We think this is going to be a fairly significant repair and
that you will not be able to tolerate the procedure without an
epidural.” Seriously: No fewer than six residents and two OBs came
into my room on at least three occasions and tried to convince me to
agree to an epidural (or at least IV morphine) before they attempted
to stitch me up. One OB said the only reason why I was able to
deliver my breech baby without drugs was because of endorphins and
that there was no way I would be able to sit still for stiches using
local anesthetic alone because ‘no woman can.’
Of course this part I love, because
apparently I’m super woman (I’m not.) But I told them from the
very beginning the drugs were completely off the table. Another
favorite quote from one guy resident: “Can I ask why you are
reluctant to get the epidural?” I can’t even remember what logic
I gave him. In my head I was just thinking, “How about you just
accept that I just don’t feel that I’ll need one.”
And I really didn’t need one. I had 5
stitches after my first son’s birth and while this tear appeared
worse, it didn’t appear to be massively so. In fact there was a lot
of debate over what degree it was.
Finally they relented and got ready to
stitch me up with lidocaine injections alone. Getting the shots was
literally the only discomfort I felt and it was nothing. And because
a resident was the one stitching me up, the whole procedure took way
longer than it needed to take. I received 8 stitches and it was
ultimately concluded I had a borderline 4th degree tear
because there was very minor rectal muscle involvement but generally
the tear was pretty shallow. I do suspect it was truly pretty minor
even if it was technically a 4th degree tear. I had no
discomfort during recovery and was up running around the next day. I
only iced the area once and never felt the need to take ibuprofen.
In hindsight it seemed more like the
push to get me to relent to an epidural was so they could guarantee a
docile patient for the resident to practice on. I can’t verify that
but I’ve had other people confirm my suspicion.
Back at Home
At this point we were ready to head
home. I had already been up to pee and felt great compared to my
first son’s birth when I had actually had a minor hemorrhage.
My midwife came to pick us up in our
car and we were back home by about 9-10 p.m.? My midwives and my
family had cleaned up so my husband and I could just relax at that
point. We were obviously pretty tired but I was still a little too
wired to go to sleep so we sat in the living room for a little while
before taking Cal to bed and finally falling asleep a family of four.
It’s been almost a full year since my
son was born and I’ve spent a lot of time trying to process it all
after the fact. It was just so far from what I had envisioned--as
birth always is--and not without its moments that are incredibly hard
to think about.
Overall my husband and I are relieved
we chose to birth at home and not for any of the reasons why we chose
home birth to begin with. And at the same time, I definitely have
felt some serious sadness over how far Cal’s welcome into this
world was from what I had hoped for him. I’m deeply aware these
things go as they go and feel nothing but gratitude for the
beautiful, thriving baby boy in my arms and everything giving birth
to him has taught me.
The first question I’m always asked
though is ‘would I choose home birth again.’ The short answer is
not unless our healthcare system changes to the extent where
homebirth is covered by health insurance and care can be seamlessly
transitioned back and forth between care providers.
I personally found it really stressful
having to worry about what procedures may or may not be covered and
the fact that in my state (MA), home birth midwives cannot legally
carry things like antibiotics.
That said, I do not at all feel like my
son’s birth would have been less eventful if we had birthed in a
hospital. I think most people assume I would have had a section if I
had. But I’ve since had multiple conversations with OBs and the CNM
that delivered my first son and it seems we potentially avoided a
really scary situation: a care provider faced with a vaginal breech
delivery that had never delivered one before.
A common cause of serious injuries from
vaginal breech birth is aggressive measures used to deliver an
entrapped head. My midwife knew how to deal with that exact
complication and because of that, I have a perfectly healthy baby boy
who just happens to be a little stubborn about how and when he does
things. It’s totally possible I could have had one of the few care
providers at my old hospital with the same skillset, but it’s more
likely I would have had one who only knew one way to deliver breech:
with a scalpel. Trying to shove Cal back through my cervix to deliver
him that way does not sound safer to me!
Comments
Also, your son has one of the best birthdays ever! He shares a birthday with my oldest daughter! :)