Hi, for all the ladies with GD, do any of you know if when you are actually in labour you are under the care of a specialist diabetic midwife? Or just a 'standard' midwife? I really hope it will be a specialist, as the midwife who has just taken my antenatal class was really black & white in terms limitations for ladies with GD, it got me quite miffed to be honest, and now I feel really uneasy.![]()
Obviously this midwife didn't have a clue about my history/sugar control, but she kept making sweeping statements about me and the two other ladies with diabetes in the group. When talking about spotting signs of labour she mentioned that 'this won't apply to the ladies with diabetes, as you will probably already have your induction dates or be getting them soon'. Umm actually no, I will only have to be induced if I get to 41 weeks as i'm succesfully diet controlled. When I mentioned this to her she said, well you still might have to go on insulin yet! I know this is true, and there's still plenty of time for things to go pear shaped, but I don't think there was any need to piss on my chips like that!Also when pointing out the fetal monitoring kit in the delivery room she made a comment that 'high risk pregnancies, such as the the three ladies with diabetes will need continous fetal monitoring'. Again, I have been told by the diabetic team that should everything continue to go smoothly I won't need to be continuously monitored
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I'm going to clarify these points at my midwife appointment next week, but i'm really worried now that if it isn't going to be part of the diabetic team actually delivering the baby, that a normal midwife will just see GD on my notes and strap me to a monitor without question. I really don't want this, I want to be able to move around!This midwife also mentioned that once labour starts I will need to go into hospital earlier than a normal pregnancy. Does anyone know if this is true, as so far no one on the diabetic team has mentioned this? If so, at what point are you supposed to go in? With a normal pregnancy they recommend ringing the hospital when contrctions are 5mins apart?
Sorry this has turned into quite a rant! Thanks for reading.![]()
With regard to having a standard midwife, at my unit the specialist diabetic midwives only work in the antenatal clinic and don't work on labour ward looking after labouring women. The midwife who will be allocated to you on labour ward would have had experience and guidelines to follow regarding women who are Diabetic or Gestational Diabetic insulin or not. That midwife who was at your antenatal class, was she a community midwife, if so their input with Diabetic labouring women won't be as much as your Labour Ward Midwife.
To be honest, there isn't much that has to be done in labour with regard to your diabetes especially if you are diet controlled, compared to what your labour ward midwife has monitor just for the labour itself. There are guidelines to follow and the Doctor on Labour Ward that day will be made aware of your presence as well.
As for continous monitoring it will depend on the unit, NICE guidelines and your pregnancy history etc. If you were at my unit, with diet controlled gestational diabetes you wouldn't have to come to labour ward early or be continuously monitored unless there is a concern with your blood sugars recent, scans and baby growth is normal and you are well in pregnancy etc. Fingers crossed.
