The delivery method follows the mother and baby—not a target.
Normal delivery is prioritised when the clinical condition is favourable. C-Section readiness is maintained so the plan can change when safety requires it.
Normal delivery is prioritised when the clinical condition is favourable. C-Section readiness is maintained so the plan can change when safety requires it.
Retrospective hospital figures are not a guarantee of a particular outcome. Individual eligibility and risk can differ significantly.

Labour can change. Monitoring and reassessment help the team identify when continuing normal delivery is no longer appropriate. The reason for a proposed change should be explained to the family whenever the situation allows.
Epidural pain relief may be considered after obstetric and anaesthesia assessment. It is not suitable in every situation.
A previous C-Section does not automatically rule out vaginal birth, but VBAC requires individual specialist assessment and emergency capability.
Induction should have a medical indication, an agreed monitoring plan and a clear route for escalation if progress or wellbeing becomes concerning.
Pregnant patients travelling from far away should seek advice first. Nearby qualified care may be safer than a long road journey.
A website cannot decide your delivery plan. Speak with the clinical team and bring previous records and investigation reports.