S5:E15 - What you need to know about being induced as a solo mum

S5:E15 - What you need to know about being induced as a solo mum

Nearly half of first-time mums in Australia will have their labour induced. Most of them have no idea what that actually involves until they're in the middle of it.

This episode is here to change that.

I'm joined by Nat — Melbourne midwife, solo mum of three boys, and someone who has had three very different births of her own (including one that ended with her in ICU — more on that in her own episodes, which are linked below, but maybe save those for after you've had your baby). Nat works in a Melbourne tertiary hospital, and she's here in a personal capacity to give you a practical, informed, non-scary breakdown of what an induction actually is — and what you need to think about as a solo mum specifically.

This is not medical advice. For risks, benefits and research, Nat recommends The Great Birth Rebellion podcast — search your specific situation and you'll find the evidence base you need. What this episode gives you is the foundational knowledge to walk into those conversations with your care provider informed, confident, and asking the right questions.

Because here's what Nat — and I — both wish more women knew before they got to this point: there's a significant difference between being offered an induction because it's hospital policy, and being offered one because of your specific medical situation. Knowing which one you're in changes everything about the conversation you should be having.

In this episode:
  • What an induction actually is — and the difference between induction and augmentation

  • Why nearly one in three women are induced in Australia, and nearly half of first-time mums

  • The two types of induction recommendation: hospital policy versus your specific medical situation — and why this distinction matters

  • The BRAIN acronym — Benefits, Risks, Alternatives, Intuition, Nothing — and how to use it in any appointment

  • The bishop score — what it is, what it means, and what happens next depending on the result

  • The gel and pessary — how they work, how long they take, and what to expect

  • The balloon catheter — what it actually is, how it works, and why you can ask for gas and air

  • Breaking your waters — what it involves and why it's less dramatic than it sounds by this point

  • The oxytocin (syntocin) drip — how it works, why it's different from natural labour, and why Nat recommends going in with an open mind about epidurals

  • CTG monitoring — what the straps are doing, what the numbers mean, and what it means when they adjust the drip

  • Why an induction can take two to three days — and what that means practically for solo mums with limited support

  • Birth plans, support people, doulas, private midwives, and student midwives — your real options

  • How to advocate for yourself if you're being pushed in a direction you're not comfortable with

  • Birth trauma — what causes it, and how being informed reduces your risk

  • Postpartum doulas and private midwives — what they can do for you after baby arrives

  • Setting your home up for a C-section even if you're aiming for a vaginal birth

Key Takeaways
  • Ask your care provider: is this induction recommendation based on hospital policy, or on my specific medical situation? The answer should change how you respond

  • Use the BRAIN acronym in every appointment — Benefits, Risks, Alternatives, Intuition, Nothing

  • An induction can take two to three days — plan your support accordingly, and don't assume you'll have your baby the same day

  • If you're a solo mum without a support person, a doula or student midwife can be your advocate in the birth suite — and they don't count toward your support person limit

  • Research epidurals before you need one — going into an induction without considering it sets you up for a harder experience

  • Prepare your home for a C-section recovery even if that's not your plan — the solo mum who has meals in the freezer and grab rails in the bathroom will thank herself no matter what happens

  • Birth trauma comes from not being heard, not from the type of birth — being informed is protective

  • You can say stop at any point in this process. Even mid-induction. You are not obligated to continue anything without being heard

Resources Mentioned This episode is brought to you by City Fertility

Exploring fertility treatment as a solo mum in Australia? City Fertility offers an exclusive 20% discount for No Need for Prince Charming listeners. Claim your discount here.

Pregnant solo and looking for your village?

The Bump Membership is a private WhatsApp community and fortnightly Zoom connection calls for solo mums-to-be across Australia and New Zealand. Join here.

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