| Right Occiput Anterior |
I
believe my baby is ROA, but you talk about the
importance of the baby being LOA. You claim that LOA is the best for
chin tucking and moving through the pelvic outlet.The back of my baby is more on my
right side than on my left side. There is information about exercise to
turn an LOP or ROP to ROA, but not anything about ROA to LOA.
I'm not sure of
the symmetry and what organs get in the way of a baby who is more to
the right to keep him from tucking his chin as well, or to keep his
head from fitting in the cervix as well. Can you explain more about
this?
Your baby is Right Occiput Anterior. The back is to your right, and the baby is facing towards the roomy sciatic notch in the back left of your pelvis. This position is not clearly associated with a resulting labor pattern. The baby may rotate to the posterior and, if so, labor may have a posterior pattern of cluster contractions with slow downs or stalls. The baby may rotate to the anterior and labor may be straight forward. The main thing is whether the chin is tucked.
Variables with the ROA baby that effect labor;
Use the 3 Principles to give the ROA baby a chance to turn and face the back, right side and have their back on mother's left.
Notice if there are small wiggling parts near the front, lower half of the womb. Hands in front indicate a posterior baby. The LOP baby is often labeled ROA because the forehead of the LOP baby feels the same width as the nape of the ROA baby's neck.
|
Information about fetal positioning is given freely throughout the many articles of the Spinning Babies Website. Perhaps this information made a difference in your birth. Perhaps you refer the families you work with to Spinning Babies. Please donate if and when you can. Each occasional donation is a big boost!