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Hi,

Does anyone have any information about Rhogam shots?I had my boys at

the hospital,but then I found a midwife who delivers at home and had my

next two babies with her and did not get the shot. Now I am pregnant

again and because of insurance I need to go to the hospital. Does

anyone have any information relating to this shot.I read somewhere that

the Rhogam shot was only an unecessary vaccine. I have tried to contact

the midwife but no luck.Thanks.Kris

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RhoGAM is not a vaccine. It is an immune globulin, which is derived from

human blood. It is strongly recommended for pregnant women who have a blood

type that is Rh-negative (as in O-negative, A-negative, B-negative, or

AB-negative) AND whose partner is Rh-positive (O-positive, A-positive,

B-positive, or AB-positive). Because the Rh-positive gene is dominant, it

is highly likely that the baby would be Rh-positive as well. If both the

mother and the father are Rh-negative, then the baby will be Rh-negative.

If the mother is positive and the father is negative, then this is not a

problem either.

 

If an Rh-negative mother is exposed to her baby's Rh-positive blood, her

body may mount an immune response to it because her body sees the

Rh-positive blood as a foreign invader and will attack it. This can be very

bad for the baby inside! There are a few ways that the mother could become

exposed to her baby's blood: abdominal trauma like a car accident or fall

during pregnancy where the placenta is damaged, amniocentesis, external

cephalic version (abdominal manipulation to turn a breech baby), and during

birth (doesn't matter if it's vaginal or cesarean), which is the most likely

event in which the mother's blood can mix with the baby's blood via the

placenta.

 

The research shows that somewhere between 3-14% of Rh-negative women will

mount an immune response to their baby's Rh-positive blood if exposed. This

may be a relatively small risk, but the consequences can be devastating.

The pregnancy in which the mother becomes " sensitized " is not likely to be

affected (unless the sensitization occurs in early pregnancy), but

subsequent pregnancies are at a much higher risk because the mother's body

will already have antibodies circulating. Risks to the fetus in this

situation include mild to severe anemia, jaundice, heart failure, and death.

 

RhoGAM is routinely administered to Rh-negative mothers at about 28 weeks

and is believed to be protective for the remainder of the pregnancy. Once

the baby is born, blood from the umbilical cord can be collected and sent

off to the lab or typed by the midwife to determine the baby's blood type.

If the baby is Rh-positive, then another dose of RhoGAM is recommended

within 3 days postpartum. If the baby is Rh-negative, then the mother would

not need the shot. RhoGAM has the effect of " fooling " the mother's immune

system into *not *mounting an immune response to the baby's blood. Because

it wears off within a few months, it is recommended to go through this

process in each pregnancy.

 

There is a blood test that can be done to check whether or not a woman has

already been sensitized to the Rh factor, and that is called an antibody

screen. This is part of the routine prenatal panel of tests that is done

for every pregnant woman at the beginning of prenatal care.

 

I hope this helps, and please feel free to contact me if you have more

questions.

 

 

--

*Wendy Hughes, CPM, LDM

Professional Home Birth Midwife

Infant CranioSacral Therapy*

Vivante Midwifery

Portland, OR

www.VivanteMidwifery.com

 

 

On Dec 5, 2007 7:10 PM, rockcreekherbs <rockcreekherbs wrote:

 

> Hi,

> Does anyone have any information about Rhogam shots?I had my boys at

> the hospital,but then I found a midwife who delivers at home and had my

> next two babies with her and did not get the shot. Now I am pregnant

> again and because of insurance I need to go to the hospital. Does

> anyone have any information relating to this shot.I read somewhere that

> the Rhogam shot was only an unecessary vaccine. I have tried to contact

> the midwife but no luck.Thanks.Kris

>

>

>

 

 

 

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Claudia, that was Wendy who gave the great explanation about RhoGam. I'm sure

you'll hear from her shortly. Vicky

-

DCBirthingHands

ayurveda

Tuesday, December 11, 2007 5:43 AM

PerinatalAyurveda forum Re: Rhogam

 

 

Vicky,

 

I found your information on rhogam just what I needed. But could you

continue on the the RH-factor part?

 

Claudia

 

**************************************See AOL's top rated recipes

(http://food.aol.com/top-rated-recipes?NCID=aoltop00030000000004)

 

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Hi Claudia --

 

Could you be more specific about what you'd like to know about the

Rh-factor? I'm not sure of the direction in which you'd like me to

continue.

 

--

*Wendy Hughes, CPM, LDM

Professional Home Birth Midwife

Infant CranioSacral Therapy*

Vivante Midwifery

Portland, OR

www.VivanteMidwifery.com

 

 

On Dec 11, 2007 5:43 AM, <DCBirthingHands wrote:

 

> Vicky,

>

> I found your information on rhogam just what I needed. But could you

> continue on the the RH-factor part?

>

> Claudia

>

>

>

 

 

 

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