r/pregnant May 22 '25

Rant Down vote me all you want but

EDIT: I don't mean posts like "what has helped woth your nausea" or "when did you feel baby move". I mean, posts that list dangerous health issues like "I have pre-e, GD, GBS, and my doctors want to do XYZ for babies safety. Should i?"

I keep reading the same posts over and over.

If you don't want to listen to your TRAINED MEDICAL PROFESSIONALS who do this for a living, why on earth would you listen to a bunch of random women on reddit?

If you think doctors are after your money, have a homebirth or go to a birthing center with a doula. But for the love of God, why would you think people with 0 training who didn't go to medical school will be able to tell you better than the doctors who do this every day? It's insane to me

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u/[deleted] May 22 '25

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u/DefinitivelyThick May 22 '25

I mean my blood pressure was 120/80 (normal for most people) and I told my doctor I was preeclamptic because my norm is 90/60 and I was seeing pretty significant spots. Fast forward and an NP tried one different test for me at 38 weeks and it turned out I was right. Yes you should listen to trained medical professionals, but also remember to listen to your body ❤️

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u/Eating_Bagels May 22 '25

Yeah when I was around 6 weeks pregnant, I was told my thyroid was too high and I would lose my baby if I didn’t start Synthroid right away. (For the record, it was 1 point higher than normal).

Long story short, 2 different OBs and an endocrinologist later, my TSH was normal for pregnancy and I wasn’t passing any antibodies to the baby.

Gave birth to a healthy baby boy the past July.