It also lets you and baby bond physically and helps with breastfeeding. You should be able to have it in the operating theatre. You can ask a midwife to go with you to the recovery room to help you breastfeed your baby. After a general anaesthetic, the midwife or nurses will look after you in the recovery room until you wake up.
The midwives will regularly check your blood pressure, your wound and how much vaginal bleeding you have. After the first 12 hours, a midwife will help you get up so that you can shower.
Getting up and moving around as soon as possible after the surgery will help reduce your risk of blood clots. And you might be asked to keep wearing compression stockings or be fitted with another compression device over your lower legs to reduce your risk.
Some birthing mothers are also given daily injections of blood thinning medicine. Breastmilk is the best possible food to help your baby grow healthy and strong. After a caesarean, starting to breastfeed can take a while. The midwives can help you find the most comfortable ways to hold your baby while breastfeeding.
The sooner you start with breastfeeding, the easier it is for you and your baby. The hospital should help you breastfeed as soon as possible after birth. They don't ask for it, it simply invades them, accumulates like clouds on the horizon and passes through, carrying the child with it," she wasn't talking about a caesarean section.
Pregnancy is not a medical condition so it seems counter-intuitive that it could routinely end in a surgical procedure.
There are no prizes for bravery in childbirth but there is now good pain relief, and Nice found no evidence that epidurals increase the risk of needing an unplanned section.
As Nice says, if you are worried, you should discuss your fears with your antenatal team. If you have a section and want to try a vaginal birth next time, you are likely to be able to have a successful, normal birth.
Having had a section myself and given birth vaginally — which, on balance, I preferred , the most significant part of Nice's new recommendations is that women should have a say in what music is played in the operating theatre.
Dr Dillner's health dilemmas: should I have a caesarean section? Should you opt for a caesarean section if there's no medical reason to do so? What is best for your baby and for you? You should look at the evidence — Nice presents all the statistics online — and then decide.
The solution What Nice doesn't tell you is that having a caesarean, even with regional anaesthetic, feels as if someone is doing the washing up inside your abdomen. An ultrasound can help to narrow it down, but the estimated date of conception could still be off by a couple of weeks.
Babies born late pre-term are generally healthy but may have temporary problems such as jaundice , trouble feeding, problems with breathing, or trouble keeping an even body temperature. You might be impatient to meet your little one, but vaginal delivery usually carries fewer risks than a C-section. Plus, you can come home sooner and recover quicker with a vaginal delivery. If you're interested in having a C-section instead of a vaginal birth, talk about the risks and benefits of both options with your doctor.
It makes guidelines for health and social care across the UK. NICE guidance is not law so does not give you a legal right to a treatment. But a hospital has to give good, clear reasons if it does not follow NICE guidance.
Birthrights factsheets give you information about your human rights when you are pregnant and giving birth.
Birthrights champions respectful care during pregnancy and childbirth by protecting human rights. We provide advice and information to women and birthing people, train doctors and midwives, and campaign to change maternity policy and systems. Disclaimer: Our factsheets provide information about the law in the UK. The information is correct at the time of writing May The law in this area may be subject to change.
Birthrights cannot be held responsible if changes to the law outdate this publication. Birthrights accepts no responsibility for loss which may arise from reliance on information contained in this factsheet.
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