Category: EDD

Another Way to Calculate Your EDD

 

I’ve been thinking about the Due Date issue a lot and wanted to clarify some points. There are many ways to calculate your EDD (Estimated Date of Delivery), and no matter which method, machine, rule or formula you use, always keep in mind the following to ensure the most accurate estimate possible. Note that these factors are not limited to your first visit with your midwife or doctor:

 

  1. The average length of menstrual cycle, which is first day of bleeding to the day before your next period starts. The average length is 28 days, but this can vary and may certainly not be average for you. Most care providers in the medical model assume your cycle is 28 days. If it’s not, be sure to tell them.
  2. The regularity of your menstrual cycle. Does it sometimes skip a month? Do you sometimes stop bleeding when you are more active?
  3. The first day of your last two normal periods. Was the length, amount of flow and timing normal for you? If not, how did it differ? Also, what were the dates of any other bleeding that may have differed from normal during the last 2-3 months before you felt you conceived. See 3 Probably Early Signs of Pregnancy  earlier in this blog for more info about spotting.
  4. What is the date you think you conceived. If you are unsure, maybe you can recall events (holidays, weekend activities) when sex was more likely. Did you keep an ovulation chart, that may help. Even if you aren’t “charting” as birth control, you can still keep a piece of paper by your bed to note first and last day of bleeding and ovulation. 
  5. Were you using contraceptives, and, if so, what kind. This could have an effect on pregnancy.
  6. EDD can also be readjusted as baby grows based on when you first felt fetal movement – usually 16-20 weeks for first-time moms and 15-18 weeks in moms with previous pregnancies. The date when fetal heart rate could first be heard could also be grounds for EDD recalculation. 
  7. Ovulation can occur with orgasm and some women ovulate twice. Many women have a sense that they got pregnant at a certain time. Delayed implantation has been documented with in vitro fertilization. Don’t dismiss your experience of your body. If you think you ovulated at a certain time, share that with your midwife.
  8. African women tend to have pregnancies that are 8.5 days shorter than white women, according to some studies. 

The Wood’s Method, developed by Carol Wood Nichols, a nurse-midwifery professor at Yale University, created a formula that takes into account individual variations in menstrual cycles as well as the effects of a woman having a previous pregnancy. Her formula is as follows:

Add 1 year to the first day of LMP (Last Menstrual Period), then:

~ For first time moms: Subtract 2 months and 2 weeks (14 days)

~ For second or more time moms: Subtract 2 months and 2.5 weeks (18 days)

2. Add or subtract the number of days your cycle varies from 28 days

~ For cycles longer than 28 days: EDD from above + (Actual length of cycle – 28 days) = EDD

~ For cycles shorter than 28 days: EDD from above – (28 days – Actual length of cycle) = EDD

And there you have it!

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The Lie of the EDD: Why Your Due Date Isn’t when You Think

300_361878Associated Content, an online publisher and distributer of original content, published the below story on Setp 24, 2008, written by Misha Safranski.

I’ve posted several times about the inherent problems associated with basing due dates on a 28 day menstrual cycle or on ultrasound. The below article provides another way of estimating when your baby will be born.

But remember, it’s always an estimate and baby will be born when she is ready.

 

 

 

http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/1047180/the_lie
_of_the_edd_why_your_due_date.html

We have it ingrained in our heads throughout our entire adult lives-pregnancy is 40 weeks. The “due date” we are given at that first prenatal visit is based upon that 40 weeks, and we look forward to it with great anticipation. When we are still pregnant after that magical date, we call ourselves “overdue” and the days seem to drag on like years. The problem with this belief about the 40 week EDD is that it is not based in fact. It is one of many pregnancy and childbirth myths which has wormed its way into the standard of practice over the years-something that is still believed because “that’s the way it’s always been done”. 

The folly of Naegele’s Rule

The 40 week due date is based upon Naegele’s Rule. This theory was originated by Harmanni Boerhaave, a botanist who in 1744 came up with a method of calculating the EDD based upon evidence in the Bible that human gestation lasts approximately 10 lunar months. The formula was publicized around 1812 by German obstetrician Franz Naegele and since has become the accepted norm for calculating the due date. There is one glaring flaw in Naegele’s rule. Strictly speaking, a lunar (or synodic – from new moon to new moon) month is actually 29.53 days, which makes 10 lunar months roughly 295 days, a full 15 days longer than the 280 days gestation we’ve been lead to believe is average. In fact, if left alone, 50-80% of mothers will gestate beyond 40 weeks. 

Variants in cycle length

Aside from the gross miscalculation of the lunar due date, there is another common problem associated with formulating a woman’s EDD: most methods of calculating gestational length are based upon a 28 day cycle. Not all women have a 28 day cycle; some are longer, some are shorter, and even those with a 28 day cycle do not always ovulate right on day 14. If a woman has a cycle which is significantly longer than 28 days and the baby is forced out too soon because her due date is calculated according to her LMP (last menstrual period), this can result in a premature baby with potential health problems at birth. 

The inaccuracy of ultrasound

First trimester: 7 days

14 – 20 weeks: 10 days 

21 – 30 weeks: 14 days 

31 – 42 weeks: 21 days 

Recent research offers a more accurate method of approximating gestational length. In 1990 Mittendorf et Al. undertook a study to calculate the average length of uncomplicated human pregnancy. They found that for first time mothers (nulliparas) pregnancy lasted an average of 288 days (41weeks 1 day). For multiparas, mothers who had previously given birth, the average gestational length was 283 days or 40 weeks 3 days. To easily calculate this EDD formula, a nullipara would take the LMP, subtract 3 months, then add 15 days. Multiparas start with LMP, subtract 3 months and add 10 days. The best way to determine an accurate due date, no matter which method you use, is to chart your cycles so that you know what day you ovulate. There are online programs available for this purpose (refer to links in resources section). Complete classes on tracking your cycle are also available through the Couple to Couple League. 

ACOG and postdates

One of the most vital pieces of information to know when you are expecting is that ACOG itself (American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists) does not recommend interfering with a normal pregnancy before 42 completed weeks. This is why knowing your true conception date and EDD is very important; if you come under pressure from a care provider to deliver at a certain point, you can be armed with ACOG’s official recommendations as well as your own exact due date. This can help you and your baby avoid much unnecessary trauma throughout the labor and delivery. Remember, babies can’t read calendars; they come on their own time and almost always without complication when left alone to be born when they are truly ready. 

Sources: 

Mittendorf, R. et al., “The length of uncomplicated human gestation,” OB/GYN, Vol. 75, No., 6 June, 1990, pp. 907-932. 
ACOG Practice Bulletin #55: Clinical Management of Post-term Pregnancy

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Induction Facts

Under most situations, if you are giving birth in a hospital, you are likely to be offered an induction after 41 or 42 weeks, with significant pressure to accept. This option may be provided based on the schedule of the caregiver, concern’s for baby’s size, timing of ruptured membranes, or other health concerns. (Buckley 2009)


A serious concern with induction is that often other interventions are needed to cope with the induction, which increases the risk of a cesarean birth. The first important step to preventing an induction is understanding your estimated due date.


Estimated Dates

  • In obstetric terms, the expected due date is usually calculated at 40 weeks from the first day of your last normal period. This is based on a 28 day cycle and conception at 14 days after the first day of your last period.
  • If you know the actual date of conception, count 38 weeks ahead.
  • If you have a longer cycle, the probable day of conception can be calculated as 14 days before the next expected period, according to the usual cycle length. Then add 38 week for estimated due date.

Gestation

  • Studies have shown that the average length of gestation in healthy moms is 41 weeks.
  • Age, ethnicity and previous births influences the average length of gestation.

Induction Benefits

  • Reduction of stillbirth
  • Possibly reduce risk of Shoulder Dystocia 
  • Possibly reduce risk of large baby (over 8 pounds 13 ounces) and labor complications
  • However, natural labor onset best prepares mom’s pelvis to soften and flex around large baby

Induction Risks

  • Longer, stronger and closer-spaced contractions, leading to artificial pain relief because of body’s inability to quickly produce own pain-relieving hormones
  • Compromised blood and oxygen supply to placenta because of strong contractions
  • Low APGAR scores
  • Increase risk of instrument delivery and cesarean birth
  •  Prematurity of baby

Alternatives

  • Trust in your body and your baby’s process and timing
  • Walking / exercise
  • Intercourse
  • Prostaglandins from semen near the cervix can induce labor
  • Nipple stimulation
  • Trigger labor by releasing oxytocin
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