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PREGNANCY BED REST

 

STORIES

STORIES FROM FAMILIES WHO HAVE EXPERIENCED ITS EFFECTS

Bedrest During a Twin Pregnancy

I was almost 28 weeks pregnant with twins when I was put on bedrest. I was told that I should be lying on my side 20 out of 24 hours per day. I could only get up to use the bathroom and to eat. A home uterine monitoring service was ordered so my contractions would be counted twice a day. I wish I could say that I accepted this news gracefully. I did not. I cried all the way home from the doctor's office. A day later, I was put on a preterm labor drug called terbutaline when the home uterine monitoring revealed I was having too many contractions.

Bedrest was one of the hardest things I've ever done. I've always been an active person who exercised regularly. Inactivity was extremely hard to accept, especially since I knew I had to endure about 8 weeks of bedrest to reach full term for twins. It also was difficult to watch the grime and dirty dishes pile up in our house. My husband tried to pick up the slack, but he couldn't do it all.

The worst part of bedrest for me was the terbutaline. It made me jittery and nervous. My hands shook so much from it that I couldn't write well or do anything requiring fine motor control. This meant no letter writing, bill paying or needlework.

In addition my bones and muscles ached from lying on my side. I developed terrible heartburn. I didn't sleep well at night because I had been lying down all day and because I was scared of all the things that might go wrong. I also was worried I wouldn't have the strength to deliver my babies after weeks of inactivity.

I cried each day I was on bedrest. It upset my husband, so I usually cried after he left for work. Crying was my stress release valve. I think it also was a sign of depression.

We had just moved to a new city midway through my pregnancy, so I didn't know many people. But I found support from a few other mothers of twins. My mom and dad lived nearby, and my mom would help with some of the chores I couldn't do. Some people never did understand what bedrest really was like . When my best friend found out about my preterm labor diagnosis and bedrest, she said, "Enjoy your life of luxury."

My twins were born after 5 weeks of bedrest, at 33 weeks gestation.


-Sarah


 
 
 

Part of: Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing
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