If anyone knows about the dangers and concerns of giving birth during the coronavirus pandemic, it’s Dr. Leana Wen.
The emergency physician and former health commissioner for Baltimore has been a leading voice in public health and a frequent national commentator on coronavirus. She was also one the first experts to express deep concern that Americans weren’t taking social distancing recommendations seriously enough.
Wen, who on Friday gave birth a healthy 7-pound, 2-ounce baby girl, Isabelle Wen Walker at Mercy Medical Center in Baltimore, detailed her pregnancy and delivery journey in a video diary for “Morning Joe” and Know Your Value.
Like many near-term pregnant women during the height of the coronavirus pandemic, Wen too had a host of worrisome, previously unimaginable questions. Would her partner be allowed in the delivery room? Would she be induced early if hospital capacity became an issue? Would her newborn be safe in the hospital after birth?
Here’s a look at Wen’s thoughts, concerns and observations:
Sunday, 3/29: Will the hospitals be too crowded?
5:00 p.m.: “My baby is due on Tuesday, although there is no sign of her quite appearing yet.
I’ve been thinking a lot about how different this time is from when I was about to give birth to my son two-and-half years ago, and I was thinking about…how to install the car seat and whether I would get help for breastfeeding. And this time, I’m thinking a lot about whether I should be inducing labor so that I can go in before hospitals get too crowded. And I worry about whether my husband would even be allowed to come with me when I give birth.
…There’s just a lot in the next few days that I don’t quite know how to prepare for or anticipate. I mean, I packed my hospital bag, my husband is packing his, we’re getting our son ready so that we know where he’s gonna go when I go into labor. But we don’t know what’s gonna happen when I actually get into the hospital. Last time, I walked around a lot in a way to try to induce labor, but I know I’m not going to be able to that this time. Again, I don’t whether I’m going to induce labor if the baby doesn’t come in the next few days. I think that uncertainty that so many of us who are pregnant … so many of us with medical conditions that have to be treated will be thinking about.”
Monday, 3/30: A mandatory stay-at-home order is issued
5:00 p.m.: “…Gov. Larry Hogan has just issued a mandatory stay-at-home shelter-in-place order, which is about time. It’s definitely the right thing to do but it does also make me wonder what information is he seeing from the perspective of our hospitals and hospital capacity, that’s making it necessary? It’s the right public health measure but another illustration of the changing and very rapidly evolving times that we’re in.”
Wednesday, 4/1: ‘I really, really want to deliver this baby’
Before 9:00 a.m.: “So I’m about to drive to the hospital … I have my routine OB appointment, so my husband can’t come with me because of the no visitor policy and we’ll see. I mean I really, really want to deliver this baby. I am concerned as I’ve talked about, about hospital overcrowding. But I also think about, what if the baby gets sick and I don’t want to have to take the baby in during the first 28 days when her immune system will be really weak and going in to a hospital that’s battling COVID-19. So for all these reasons I’m hoping that I’ll be ready to deliver so I’ll keep you posted.”
9 a.m.: “So I just got to my hospital…And it feels totally different. It’s a weekday, but there are barely any people here. There’s a ‘no visitors’ sign. I got my temperature checked as I entered, I got asked a list of questions, was asked to use hand sanitizer and I’m about to walk into my OB’s office.”
9:30 a.m.: “So I just got my cervix checked, and I’m a bit dilated but not enough and actually the labor ward is full and so induction is not going to look possible so I’m discussing the options with my OB shortly. But it looks like I’m gonna be headed home and we’ll just keep on waiting.”
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Friday, 4/3: A healthy baby, but ‘I am worried about exposure’
4:45 a.m.: “… I’ve called the hospital, and they actually have a bed available. So I’m all packed virtually and we’ve had our bags packed actually for a few weeks now. We’re gonna go, and I called ahead of time. Sebastian, my husband, is able to come. He’s the only person allowed, and they can only have one person so they can’t rotate in and out … We are packed, we are ready. I never thought I’d be so excited to have a hospital bed available but here it is, and we’ll see how this day unfolds.
… I’ve been trying to reach my pediatrician to ask about when we should be bringing the new baby when she arrives to the pediatrician. Technically, it’s supposed to be the day after. So, the day after you go home and be discharged, you’re supposed to bring the new baby to a newborn visit. But the problem is I am worried about exposure. I actually don’t know what the policies are at the pediatrician’s office and while I want her to get checked out, I also want to limit exposure to potentially COVID-19 in the office. And so, it’s just another one of the things that we have to be thinking about now that I certainly was not thinking about the last time around.”









