23/03/2021
This is very relevant to me at the moment. I was given my âestimated due dateâ or EDD at my 12 week scan. I had been tracking my cycle as we were actively trying to get pregnant and I believed my actual due date was 4 days later than the scan predicted. Roll on to 40 weeks pregnant and the midwives and doctors start getting twitchy:
Do you want a sweep?
No thanks.
What is the plan now?
Only my baby knows that!
What if you reach 42 weeks?
I reach 42 weeks.
But the stillbirth rate goes up after 42 weeks.
Yes it goes up from c 1.5 in 1000 to 2 in 1000, hardly a material increase.
What if your placenta fails? Thereâs very little evidence for this and there are early signs, so Iâll just keep an eye on movements and come in for additional monitoring thanks.
All of the above are conversations Iâve had to have in the last couple of weeks and Iâve been pressured to accept many an intervention, all of which Iâve declined. Itâs been stressful, and the people pleaser in me has found it hard to push back against the medical professionals. And it all stems from a date that was given to me in early pregnancy. A date I donât even agree with. According to the NHS, Iâm overdue and hence am subject to their concerns (most of which they canât show the evidence for). According to my dates, Iâm still within the normal range
And what if I go over 42 weeks? Just like we all are different heights, shapes and sizes, does it not make sense that we might all need different amounts of time in utero?
I feel thankful that Iâm part of the birth community and thus armed with the knowledge, evidence and statistics to know that going over 42 weeks isnât dangerous. But it makes me angry that lots of women will have accepted interventions based on fear mongering from healthcare practitioners.