Checklist for taking care of yourself during labour
Light exercise (stretch, take walks, continue your kegel exercises)
Pampering (get your haircut, bikini wax)
Take a parenting class
Read up on labour and delivery scenarios and procedures
Checklist to prepare a delivery plan
Who would you like to have in the delivery room with you?
What kind of environment do you want?
Do you want to document the delivery (photography/video)?
What kind of pain relief do you want?
How would you want to deliver?
Do you want your partner present if you have a caesarean section?
Do you want your little one circumcised?
Checklist during at home
Make sure the room is ready
Buy a month’s worth of supplies
Pack your delivery bag
Cook extra meals and freeze for later; gather delivery menus
Pay your bills (rent/cell phone/credit card) in advance
If you have other kids, arrange for babysitters/relatives to care for them and provide instructions
Fill up your car’s petrol tank
Know the signs of when you should go to the hospital (ask your doctor)
Come up with plans for different scenarios: if the husband is at work when you go into labour, if it happens in the middle of the night, etc.
Prepare a list of numbers to call for when it happens
Checklist during at the hospital
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Make sure the room is ready
delivery room
maternity ward
nurse’s station
administrative area for processing and payment
Pre-register at the hospital if possible
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Ask about hospital policies
Visiting hours
What items they provide (like diapers, maternity pads, toiletry kit)
What you can and cannot bring (like food warmers, music players)
Who can be in the delivery room with you
How long can you stay postpartum
Screening tests they give for postnatal
How to know that you’re in labour
Stronger, more frequent contractions (ask your gynaecologist how far apart they should be before you head for the hospital)
Thick vaginal discharge; your water breaks
Strong back pain
Pressure on your pelvis
Diarrhoea
* When in doubt, call your doctor. If it happens at odd hours, proceed to the hospital. You might get sent home, but it’s best to be safe.