What methods will the medical staff use to assess my babys condition during labor?
When you arrive at the hospital or birth center to have your baby, the healthcare team will measure your contraction pattern and the baby’s heart rate. They may use an external fetal monitor, with its two belts that signal contractions and gauge the fetal heart rate, or they simply may listen to the heart rate with a Doppler instrument or a fetoscope (a type of stethoscope). Often, a 20-minute recording from the external fetal monitor is used to give the healthcare team an initial assessment of your contraction pattern and how the baby is tolerating labor. If the heart rate is within the normal range, shows good variability, and provides no evidence of worrisome slowing, it is said to be “reassuring,” meaning that the baby seems to be in good condition and tolerating labor well. In that case, your practitioner may keep you on the monitor, or take you off the monitor and check the baby’s heart rate at regular intervals. The latter method is known as intermittent auscultation; “auscultat
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