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Thanks for sharing... am curious to know if the doctors / midwives here would delay cord clamping if it is there in the birth plan, or will they continue as usual......
I've heard so many stories about birth plans in Hong Kong I wonder what is the %age of doctors who actually follow them.
For our first birth we had one of the top 5 (famous/infamous) doctors in Hong Kong : Sally Ferguson.
(We never used her again and would never recommend her for too many reasons, but plenty are happy with her that she is still in top 5)
We dutifully made a plan, discussed it with her and made sure she knew our wishes along with the fact that I would want to cut the cord when the time came.
Time came, she looked and snipped and moved on. When we called her on this, her response was "she forgot".
With all the doctors not following previously discussed plans makes me wonder what the point of these plans are and how many doctors really pay any attention to them.
In Hong Kong, especially the public setting, getting them to delay cutting the chord seems a near-impossible task. But with regard to the article above, I was reading the comments and another midwife contested the assertion that it is impossible to wait till the chord stops pulsing and then collect the chord blood.
From what I understood, in the article you linked to, the focus was on collected cord blood and the midwife's assertion was that to get enough cord blood one must cut the cord immediately (which is the reason she does not recommend cord blood collection anymore). However, another midwife in the comments pointed out that one can wait at least until the cord has stopped pulsing to cut and still get enough cord blood with some effort. So it may be possible to have both - a delayed cutting of cord (though not as delayed as waiting for the placenta to separate naturally) as well as cord blood collection.
Now, whether there are any merits to collecting cord blood itself is another issue.
I gave birth in a public hospital here in September. I asked for delayed cord clamping. They did not cut the cord. After about five minutes the midwife showed me the cord, it was white and had stopped pulsating. My husband then cut it.
eta. The midwives we had at my most recent birth were wonderful. They followed our preferences in the birth plan and we had a great experience.
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Prince of Wales. Other than eating during labour they did everything I asked. Luckily I was only in labour a few hours so that didn't matter too much!
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