Blog Layout

Giving Birth in the Age of COVID

Anne Marie Reidy, MD and Tiffany Golub, CNM
This is a very anxious time for everyone, but imagine having another life that you have been nurturing for the last nine months within you, and now you are about to give birth while facing the risk of contracting a serious and sometimes deadly virus. That is the situation our patients are facing every day with courage and grace.

At Women4Women OBGYN, our physicians, Dr. Anne Marie Reidy and Dr. Allison Warren, and Certified Nurse Midwife Tiffany Golub have been offering advice and reassurance since day 1 about how to navigate this situation. We started implementing enhanced safety protocols the week of March 18, including limiting patient exposure by cancelling non-emergent gynecologic appointments, including routine annual appointments, cancelling elective surgeries before the hospital mandate came out, requiring patients to sanitize their hands on arrival and again on entry to the clinical area, limiting visitors, standardizing more rigorous cleaning protocols, etc. etc. We have only made these policies more comprehensive as the situation has evolved. We have been in communication with our patients via email, text and social media about this and other COVID-19 related items every step of the way. Our patients have repeatedly thanked us for our serious approach to the pandemic. They have told us how safe they feel in our hands.

The other area of understandable concern for patients is the hospital and their delivery experience, as there have been many changes over the last 4 weeks. We deliver solely at Huntsville Hospital for Women and Children. Governor Ivey has mandated only one visitor per patient during labor and delivery, and it must be the same person throughout their stay. We have clarified confusion as to whether that person has to stay at the hospital the entire time – the answer is that the support person is allowed to leave and come back, but must be re-screened for fever on re-entry to the hospital. Other questions have included: Are there still childbirth classes? Not right now. Is there a newborn photographer still? Not right now.

All these changes may make it “seem like you might be missing out on something,” according to one of Dr. Anne Marie Reidy’s patients who delivered recently, Nicole Gibson, an RN at the Heart Center. “But that’s not the case. This is our third child and this has actually been our best birth experience because we have had so much uninterrupted bonding time. We haven’t had to worry about different people interrupting us in the room and visitors dropping by all the time while we were there.”

Nicole had also voiced some concerns about the safety of delivering at Women & Children’s during the pandemic and possible exposure to the virus. Recently the American College of OBGYNs issued a joint statement together with the American Academy of Family Physicians and American College of Nurse Midwives re-affirming that hospitals remain a safe place to deliver. We discussed this statement and the many safety measures in place at Women’s & Children’s. Nicole was also assured that we would discharge her as early as possible; we are often discharging our patients on the first postpartum day. After her delivery Nicole said most of the staff wore masks while she was there, and that she felt comfortable throughout her stay.

For many of Tiffany’s patients, they plan to have an unmedicated birth and many use a doula. While it’s typically beneficial to spend your early labor at home, this has been encouraged even more during this time. While at home, patients can labor in a comfortable environment and use their doula as originally planned. Once they come to the hospital in active labor, they can continue having doula/family member support via technology: Facetime, conference calls, etc. A woman and her OB provider develop a special and unique relationship over the course of pregnancy that continues into her hospital stay/birth. This continuity of care over time is an important aspect of prenatal care which was emphasized by the Joint Statement put out by the governing bodies for OBGYNs and Midwives mentioned above.

One of Tiffany’s patients, Danielle Bentley, had this to say about her experience: “When I chose Women4Women I had no idea during delivery the world would be in the middle of the fight against COVID-19. I am so thankful I had those at Women4Women supporting and caring for me and my baby during pregnancy. I delivered at Huntsville Hospital and was impressed with the safety standards and precautions implemented…Overall we had an overwhelming sense of peace, safety and confidence in the care we received.”

We know how scary pregnancy and childbirth can be even in normal times. The joy that a new baby brings to a woman and family should not be overshadowed by fear. For each of these moms and their babies, their birth story will be a special one in this historical time in which we are living. While the virus causes an added layer of concern, HH for Women & Children and all of us at Women4Women OBGYN are doing everything in our power to make each patient’s birth experience as close as possible to the one she has dreamed of while still keeping her and her baby as safe as possible.

— Anne Marie Reidy, MD and Tiffany Golub, CNM
By Lisa Dye 05 Aug, 2021
Personal Breastfeeding Tips from our Certified Nurse-Midwife and Mom, Megan Chandler
By Jessica Ivey 26 Apr, 2021
It is " Infertility Awareness Week ." Does it surprise you to know that 1 in 8 couples are inflicted by some sort of infertility? You will notice throughout my story, I may use words different than what you are used to hearing. I will not say 1 in 8 "struggle", because that implies that if we fought just a little harder, struggled against it a little longer, we could change the outcome- which is obviously not the case. Infertility is not a "struggle," it is not a "fight," it is a medical problem that unfortunately afflicts many of us. Well-meaning friends and family may say "it will happen when you least expect it," or, "as soon as you stop trying you'll get pregnant." Well, quite honestly that is not true. Infertility is not something that can be changed by willpower, it is a medical condition that needs to be treated. Sometimes the cause of infertility can be pinpointed- I, for example, have one fallopian tube that is closed. But often there is no definitive reason. The conception of a child requires the combination of so many things to be perfectly in sync- it is no wonder so many couples cannot conceive! Hormones, endometrial health, ovarian health, egg count and age, and semen- all of this has to be functioning properly at the same time to allow a couple to become pregnant when they want. I will tell you our story. Thankfully, it has a happy ending. I met my husband, David, when I was 25 and got married at 27. At the time I was an anesthesiology resident at Georgetown University. We did not try for children right away. Working 80 hours a week and having a newborn did not feel feasible or enjoyable to me. And what little time off we did have we enjoyed going out and experiencing DC or traveling as much as we could afford. Fast forward a few years, I am now 30 and we have decided we want to start our family. Being a physician I knew it could take some time. I was not stressed the first month, or two, but after 6, 7, 8 months… I was both frustrated and concerned. Time seems to slip by when you are counting it in 4 week "cycles" tracking your period and peeing on a stick most mornings. Any couple who has actively tried to get pregnant knows the roller coaster: each month waiting to get the signal you're fertile, trying to conceive, hoping it worked, and then: either it does or it doesn't. And if it doesn't you are deflated but you know that next month- that could be it, that could be the month that it finally works! So you start all over again. Up and down, up and down. Please know, you are not alone on this roller coaster. Hopefully you have a supportive partner with you on the ride. But also, there are millions of women out there doing the same thing. If you are open about your experience you will likely find other women close to you that are on the ride with you. I will spare you all the details but we saw Elizabeth Irby, Women4Women CRNP, and did all the testing for myself and my husband. I do have a closed tube, but you should be able to get pregnant with just one tube so it is still partially unexplained. We tried fertility medication for a few months before deciding to move on to an infertility clinic. After conversation with our fertility specialist, Dr. Long, we opted to go forward with IVF using the invocelle. The invocelle is an awesome little device that allows you to incubate your embryos. After the eggs are fertilized, they are placed in a culture medium in the device and then inserted in the vagina where you incubate them for 5 days. Our first round we were so hopeful, we fertilized 3 good looking eggs. We went back after 5 days, and none of them had developed into usable embryos. I was not prepared for the level of heartbreak I felt at that moment. It was just a bunch of cells, right? But all of a sudden those 3 potential babies were gone in an instant from a glimpse at a microscope. And that was hard. My friends and family stepped up in a big way. I got flowers and well wishes and it bolstered us to try again. The second round of IVF worked. There is still a spot on my butt that is tender from all the progesterone injections, but I wouldn’t trade that for the world. Because our daughter, Rose, is now 4 months old and the most awesome part of our lives. She has a big gummy grin and chuckles like an old man and will completely melt your heart. Thankfully, I have had family and friends who were invested in this process with us. David and I made a conscious decision from the start to be open with those around us about what we were going through. You will be surprised when you start telling people what you are dealing with how many have their own story to contribute. We have made friendships built on the shared experience of infertility. I am glad we chose not to go through it alone. If you have not felt comfortable sharing with your friends and family, ask yourself why? Women have trouble recognizing that this is a disease inflicted upon them, not a failure. I have had the thought "if only I hadn't put off trying to get pregnant until after residency maybe we wouldn't have had to do IVF." But, maybe we would have? I will never know and guess what- it doesn't matter. There is no use thinking the "what ifs," or blaming yourself. I have never once blamed myself for having asthma, and I refuse to blame myself for having infertility. It is not your fault, it is not your body's fault. And that is why I believe Infertility Awareness Week is so important. I hope these stories empower women to be more open with their friends and families. You will be surprised- they want to be there for you, let them.
Show More
Share by: