In my experience, all pregnant women will see the nurse practicioner for the majority of the appointments, so the doctor can focus on the high risk patients that need to see the actual MD. You will probably meet with an actual MD later on to review your birthing plan and for a couple appointments just for him to review your progress. Nurse practioners are perfectly safe for normal pregnancies, in fact, usually prefered. They are kind of like having a mid-wife getting you through the pregnancy but having the nursing school education and doctor boss to take over when neccassary. I didn't see the delivering MD until the birth, because I had mine at military hospitals, and I had whoever was on call that day deliver my babies. And even the high risk one was just fine. All the MD I saw for the high risk one did was the same thing the nurse practisioner did.
2006-07-21 11:36:09
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answer #1
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answered by sweets 3
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Yeah, switch as soon as you can. I absolutely hate seeing NPs. They're really pretty useless. She won't deliver your baby, so why do they insist you see her for all your visits? If you get too far along in your pregnancy, some doctors won't take new patients who are beyond a certain week. Switch now while you still can.
My concern is...why would they have seen you twice in only 8 weeks? SOP is to see a patient for the first time toward the end of the first trimester (usually 10 - 12 weeks). If you're high risk, it's different...they'll want to see you more often/sooner than a normal pregnancy. However, if you're high risk, you should be seeing an obstetrician. I wonder if this is some sort of sham to get $$ from the insurance company.
2006-07-21 15:42:35
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answer #2
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answered by brevejunkie 7
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I assume every pg woman has a specific ob that will take care of the pg issue in detail. If nurse practitioner takes charge most of the time i'll be very disappointed cause from my experience, the nurse practitioner is just not as knowledgeable and reliable as a md. Don't want to sound mean but last time the nurse practitioner just offered me several wrong answers regarding ovulation and reproduction.
2006-07-21 11:51:18
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answer #3
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answered by mimosa 1
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With both of my pregnancies, it was about 50/50- about every other appointment was the md, the rest nurse practitioner. And in all honesty, during labor and delivery the nurses do most of the work anyway- the dr doesn't even show up until it's time to push. I wouldn't worry about switching just because of that. The vast majority of your prenatal visits will just consist of blood pressure, urine test, measuring your belly, and the doppler to hear the baby's heartbeat, all of which the nurse is completely capable of. Just make sure that you are with a provider that will be sure to answer any concerns that may arise in the months ahead- I promise, you will have tons of questions, and you want someone who is available to answer them for you!
Good luck to you and your baby
2006-07-21 11:46:20
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answer #4
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answered by chelle 4
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As the patient, you have the right to see the doctor...you're paying for that expertise. I am a doctor's wife and my husband's rule has always been that we don't see DO's, PA's, nurse practioners or clinical specialists...just board certified MDs. If this clinic doesn't offer MD visits...find another one. Unless you live is some remote village...there are probably many doctors to choose from.
2006-07-21 11:48:45
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answer #5
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answered by Chainsawmom 5
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NOPE and no-one is offering it the two. the present proposals different than the completed scientific coverage or high quality issues sounds precisely what scientific specialists reported needs to happens at many seminars I truthfully have been to.
2016-11-02 12:06:09
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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