From today's New York Times: Hospitals re-think "video on demand" policies in the delivery room, with some going so far as banning all pictures and videos during birth unless - or until - the medical team gives permission.
Hospitals set these policies based on assessments of customer preferences and the attendant risks. That's not new and neither is it a bad thing. But inevitably, it means some hospitals will allow things that others don't. Some hospitals will strive to attract the "I want everything on Facebook" crowd, others won't.
It gives consumers another dimension of choice in hospitals. Also not a bad thing.
But those same consumers should do themselves, their medical team and their preferred hospital a favor: have the "what is allowed in the delivery room" discussion BEFORE reaching full dilation.
Hospitals set these policies based on assessments of customer preferences and the attendant risks. That's not new and neither is it a bad thing. But inevitably, it means some hospitals will allow things that others don't. Some hospitals will strive to attract the "I want everything on Facebook" crowd, others won't.
It gives consumers another dimension of choice in hospitals. Also not a bad thing.
But those same consumers should do themselves, their medical team and their preferred hospital a favor: have the "what is allowed in the delivery room" discussion BEFORE reaching full dilation.
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