Thanks for the zofran support. My husband actually warned me about sticker shock when I left the house, apparently some formulations run $1000 per dose in the hospital
(chemo patients are not in a position to bargain, I guess.) My pharmacy substituted a generic, and the copay was only $10 so that''s fine. For kicks I asked what the brand name would cost (for 30 pills, apx. a 5-10 day supply if taken according to the instructions) and got a 4-digit price back before the decimal.
I have taken two of my generics, so lets hope they work!
Luvinlife, ugh for your experience. I have not actually lost scary amounts of weight as I haven''t actually been throwing up. But the nausea has been pretty incapacitating and making me miserable. I am seriously concerned for my work performance if it keeps up like this, so I''m trying the meds. Even with a few random hours here and there of relief like yesterday afternoon, its not enough to maintain a semblance of reasonable output for the bosses! And ideally things will be better for the baby if I remain employed in some fashion
Mara, little julian is a little love bug, what cheeks!
MP, I am clearly not an expert on the bf, but it seems that many women pass a hump of some kind and it gets much easier for them and then pumping is a pain relative to straight from the tap. Obviously go with whatever works for you, and for some women it never gets easier, but if you are interested in bf it seems that making an effort to get past early difficulties can be rewarding later with an easier time. Also, *one* of the benefits to the baby of breastfeeding is the exercise and aerobic capacity from having to suck the milk out. Clearly there are lots of benefits that come from the milk substance itself that your baby would get if bottle-fed with pumped milk, but just thought I''d throw that out there as another tidbit to consider. Some of the hospitals have LCs that can visit you and the newborn while you are still in the hospital, and maybe you can ask your doc about if there are LCs available for you to visit in the early weeks if needed? So while taking a class ahead of time seems ideal, maybe some reading and rely on LCs after would be sufficient?
Luvinlife, ugh for your experience. I have not actually lost scary amounts of weight as I haven''t actually been throwing up. But the nausea has been pretty incapacitating and making me miserable. I am seriously concerned for my work performance if it keeps up like this, so I''m trying the meds. Even with a few random hours here and there of relief like yesterday afternoon, its not enough to maintain a semblance of reasonable output for the bosses! And ideally things will be better for the baby if I remain employed in some fashion
Mara, little julian is a little love bug, what cheeks!
MP, I am clearly not an expert on the bf, but it seems that many women pass a hump of some kind and it gets much easier for them and then pumping is a pain relative to straight from the tap. Obviously go with whatever works for you, and for some women it never gets easier, but if you are interested in bf it seems that making an effort to get past early difficulties can be rewarding later with an easier time. Also, *one* of the benefits to the baby of breastfeeding is the exercise and aerobic capacity from having to suck the milk out. Clearly there are lots of benefits that come from the milk substance itself that your baby would get if bottle-fed with pumped milk, but just thought I''d throw that out there as another tidbit to consider. Some of the hospitals have LCs that can visit you and the newborn while you are still in the hospital, and maybe you can ask your doc about if there are LCs available for you to visit in the early weeks if needed? So while taking a class ahead of time seems ideal, maybe some reading and rely on LCs after would be sufficient?