Hi Becky,
Thanks for your response. The reason I originally asked the question was due to seeing on here that so many of us seemed to end up with sections, and then I was told the stats by the obs lady about it being '60/70% likely to end up with one anyway.'
Ideally, I would like to have a sucessful induction far more than I would a section, but I am increasingly aware of the fact that this looks more unlikely than likely. I am also concerned that I will have days of induction and therefore be exhausted and then find a section even harder to cope with in the event that I need one anyway.
I started a similar conversation with the last obs I spoke to and she was saying that vaginal deliveries are easier for recovery etc etc (you can guess) but then I showed her a print out I found from the British Medical Journal about
why so many diabetics have a hard time -
http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/40859/ (this is not the one from the BMJ, but it says the same thing.) Our uterine contractions are significantly weaker due to being diabetic, which is why so many of us can only get to a certain point and this is despite all the drugs (and stronger doses make no difference.) This may hopefully shed a different light on things - what it did do at the time was get the obs to suggest that perhaps we do an examination and see where things lie (so to speak) and, if things are in a 'favourable' position try to induce, but have an early cut off point of either 12 or, at a push, 24 hours. This sounds far better to me than their initial talk of what 'normally' happened with diabetics which was 3 days of pessaries (with one 'rest day' in the middle) which get the cervix open enough for them to break the waters and then they put the drip in - this sounded bloody awful, and even more so because it still may go to section anyway. The 12 / 24 hours idea sounds far better as, like I say, I would like to give it a try but I don't want to be in there for days with them trying and trying! Esp as, now I have read, the drugs aren't as effective with me as they would be with non-diabetics.
However, the obs I discussed this with (she knew nothing of the BMJ research, and neither did the other obs she showed it to) said they would not discuss properly until the final scan which is a week on Wednesday due to the old chestnut of the baby being the size of a small cow (not quite their words!) We shall see...