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Supporting induction means knowing how to support what is actually happening.
Many clients are scheduled without clear information about why, how induction begins, what options remain, or how long it may take. Then ripening takes a day or two, the plan changes, and disappointment builds because the expectation was unrealistic.
This conversation puts induction back where it belongs: informed consent, realistic expectations, and support that adjusts without losing advocacy.
Bishop score, cervical ripening, provider language, and accurate information shape how prepared a client is before induction begins. As doulas, we need to understand what these mean, how they shape expectations, and why support matters more when plans shift.
Join us as we talk about leaving old messaging behind and supporting induction with more skill and less bias.
By Doulas of the Roundtable4.4
6767 ratings
Supporting induction means knowing how to support what is actually happening.
Many clients are scheduled without clear information about why, how induction begins, what options remain, or how long it may take. Then ripening takes a day or two, the plan changes, and disappointment builds because the expectation was unrealistic.
This conversation puts induction back where it belongs: informed consent, realistic expectations, and support that adjusts without losing advocacy.
Bishop score, cervical ripening, provider language, and accurate information shape how prepared a client is before induction begins. As doulas, we need to understand what these mean, how they shape expectations, and why support matters more when plans shift.
Join us as we talk about leaving old messaging behind and supporting induction with more skill and less bias.

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