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by jbandela1 1280 days ago
> they were there for a voluntary c-section.

This is the key to understanding this incident. A voluntary c-section is scheduled surgery. There is already an operating room reserved for it and staff. As with other scheduled surgeries, the patients and their families often have a pre-op waiting area where they wait for the surgery, so that there can be minimal delay getting them back to the operating room when it is ready for them.

My guess is that the determining factor in their shorter waiting was not their wealth, but rather the fact that their surgery was scheduled.

Source: Am a medical doctor trained in surgery.

1 comments

Now that I recall more clearly, I got this part wrong… they had requested an early induction (not a scheduled c-section). Unsure if that changes things, but they weren’t going straight to an operating room.
This sounds like a scheduled induction.

Now I have been involved during medical school with a lot of them. Every one of them I saw, it was a very miserable experience for the woman. Basically, the body is not ready for birth, but you give various drugs to force the body to give birth.

These inductions are done when there is some risk to either the mother or baby. A big cause for an early induction is pre-eclampsia which can be a life threatening condition and is treated with early induction.

For inductions you have to have careful monitoring of the baby and mother because you may need to convert to an emergency c-section.

Because of all this, it is not unreasonable for the scheduled induction to be taken first.

I don’t want to discount your experience here, but it seems unlikely to me that what happened followed ordinary medical prioritization.

It’s tricky to relay over a short internet comment the full experience and context - for example, hearing the phone calls the couple made to family/hospital, the full conversation the nurse had with us about priority, or the missing detail that my wife had pre-eclampsia. I guess we don’t know with 100% certainty, but having been in the situation, I’d say there is a 98+% chance that the status/wealth of the couple directly influenced how soon they were given a bed.

(Sorry to add facts after the original comment; I wanted to avoid writing something too lengthy but I can see how these details may have been necessary).

Usually inductions are scheduled too. At least in my family’s case it was.