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I've heard Ai-Iku hospital is good in Hiro/Roppongi and bilingual.. But expensive.ASmilie2B wrote:Thanks both for your replies.
I did find this site which lists clinics, maternity hospitals and general hospitals. maternity (specialised) hospitals I didn't know existed, so that is another one to consider.
Charles wrote:I will pass along advice from a friend of mine, an American woman married to a nihonjin, she gave birth in a Japanese hospital. She said that no matter how inconvenient, you should go to the USA and give birth there. She was quite adamant about that.
gboothe wrote:Charles, what the hell kind of advice is that? I am sure that you are aware that having a child is quite obviously a very important event to a young couple and to post a loaded statement like that borders on vindictiveness. It sounds like some kind of scare tactic! ASmilie2B posted a reqauest for assistance, so if you are going to post and answer like that, you could at least say what it is she was so adamant about? Why it is a must to go to the US? Give some information as to why, other than what appears to be some ominous warning from one person which may or may not be based on incident that only they found distasteful or bad!
gboothe wrote:Charles, what the hell kind of advice is that? I am sure that you are aware that having a child is quite obviously a very important event to a young couple and to post a loaded statement like that borders on vindictiveness. It sounds like some kind of scare tactic! ASmilie2B posted a reqauest for assistance, so if you are going to post and answer like that, you could at least say what it is she was so adamant about? Why it is a must to go to the US? Give some information as to why, other than what appears to be some ominous warning from one person which may or may not be based on incident that only they found distasteful or bad!
Charles wrote:She was quite clear that Japanese childbirth practices are primitive compared to American hospitals, they had all sorts of supersitions that had somehow become elevated to the level of medical practice, for example, they would not let her bathe for 3 days after giving birth, not even a sponge bath. And no epidurals (as others have noted, this is not widely available). I suppose those superstitions might be comforting to nihonjin mothers under some circumstances. She had a whole lecture on the subject of Japanese childbirth practices, which I mostly tuned out. But she was quite clearly agitated about her experience. Take that for whatever it is worth, thirdhand info or whatever.
There are other reasons why it might be preferable to return to the US for birth, like the automatic US citizenship which would make life easy for any child that might want dual passports.
ASmilie2B wrote:Thanks Charles for the advice, something to ponder over going to America when my home country is Australia. But thanks for the input anyway!
cstaylor wrote:There was an article about the rise of c-sections in the U.S. in last year's New York Times. They're quicker, simpler, and more profitable for the hospitals, mothers be damned.
That doctor you avoided should go before a review board for that bad advice. C-sections should be the exception, not the rule.
American Oyaji wrote:I like you and think you're a good guy, but when you go off the edge like this....
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