Hey, I did have an epidural and I wasnāt sure if I wanted one before labour as I was hoping for a water birth- but I did decide to have one as the back pain was intense for me and I couldnāt get comfortable. I am so glad I got one as I had a very long labourš (I could still feel pressure down there just took the edge off and make the back pain more bearable) Yes there are risks like everything - recommend doing your research and you can always decide when in labour like I did.
I had an epidural quite late into my labour as I hadnāt wanted one. I didnāt have any side effects and it did take the pain away so would have one again if I couldnāt manage the pain. I did have an assisted delivery but that may also been because I had a hormonal induction due to meconium. I didnāt like not being able to move though so would have preferred a mobile epidural but my hospital didnāt do them
I had an epidural with my first baby. My labour was very long and I could not cope any longer without some permanent pain relief haha. It was an assisted delivery but overall Iām glad I got the epidural. Iām due end of November and I have put epidural on my birthing plan again.
Like @Caroline I had it with my first and similar thing the heart rate dropped and I had forceps, but also not sure if this was because I had a back to back labour. Iād say during the labour itself it helped a lot because I could barely talk from when I got to the hospital until I had it( about 12 hours) Only issues were made me sweat and shake, I felt instant relief though so at the time Iād say it was worth it. And I think It caused me back pain after but not serious pain
If you can Iād have a x section , yes it sounds scary and I was , but it was the best decision ever , I had a bad experience with epidural as I was induced , it didnāt work for me
I loved mine, literally the best. I was induced with the drip and was barely coherent until the epidural went in. Then napped my way to from 2-10cm in about 4 hours, pushed out baby in 45 mins, no forceps/c section etc. 2nd degree tearing but they were debating whether to put 1st or 2nd on my notes so canāt have been that bad. Best thing you can do is ahead of time research the risks and side effects cause in the moment when they ask you thereās no time to read through it then, you just want it in! Iām 17m post partum now and have had no effects from it.
Honestly I think itās all personal preference. Some people cope very well without and some do not (me)!. We all feel birth/pain differently. Create a birth plan that you want with some research, but be open to how it could change! X
I had an epidural first baby as she was back to back. I wasnāt dialating and I couldnāt cope with the pain in my back. I had rubbish people at it took 3 attempts 2 people to get it in. Then when I needed a top up the clasp broke so they had to remove it and put another one in. I was actually more worried about a catheter than the epidural lol The epidural itself wasnāt painful, itās just hard to sit when you are having contractions. I didnāt feel baby coming out at all, which did make it harder to push (2 hours!) and I needed suction to get her out I did have back pain for some time after birth. Im 24 weeks with my second and I would have another one if in that moment I time I felt I needed it x
I was about 8cm when I had mine done, if Iād known how far I was I probably wouldnāt have bothered but glad I did in the end because I had to have my placenta manually removed so they were able to just top it up to full spinal. I could still walk around with it before that and it was amazing!
I had one after 12hrs induced labour unmedicated, I was putting it off as k was terrified of getting it but I only wish I got it sooner. I only went 1cm bigger in that full 12 hrs and it took 8hrs to go from 4-10cm with the epidural. I did stop using it 1&1/2 hrs before birth so I could feel my contractions and was better to push her out. Didnāt need any intervention and I didnāt have any issues in labour with it thankfully xx
I don't think you can say whether you want one or not until you're actually in labour, especially if this is your first baby. You may find that you cope better than you think and don't need anything stronger! The midwives usually recommend other pain relief first rather than going straight to epidural
I went into preterm labour (34 weeks) and had a very long labour, I initially refused the epidural (for no other reason other than I was unexpectedly early so hadnāt researched anything yet and all I knew was my sister didnāt want one for her birth so I said no myself š ) however my waters didnāt break right up until baby boy was born and as there was so much pressure from my waters not being broken yet, I couldnāt stop involuntarily pushing which the midwifeās explained to me I needed to have an epidural because if I couldnāt stop pushing (as I wasnāt ready too yet) I would damage myself. So i had the epidural very late into the labour but honestly as soon as I had it I went to sleep for about three hours, woke up and 10 minutes later Iād had my baby boy. I couldnāt feel anything so midwifeās had to tell me when to push, his heart rate had dropped slightly and I had a episiotomy and forceps delivery however all was absolutely fine & baby was happy and healthy once born xx
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Had an epidural with my first, soon after it went in babies heart rate dropped and ended in forceps delivery. I read 1 in 3 will end up in assisted delivery with an epidural. Second time round I managed without any pain relief and it was so much better both the delivery and recovery. I recommend a hypnobirthing course, was the best thing I did during my second pregnancy x