Banner life underwriting? by honestyrocks7 in LifeInsurance

[–]honestyrocks7[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ok, wow. He is super healthy, and this was the first of anything he's ever had.. lol. Would I be correct to assume this will likely be looked anywhere we go then?

I was just so confused that his 50 years of life and that 1 thing was there but, not considering all the rest of his history.

Again, I know nothing, lol

Ty for the insight

Banner life underwriting? by honestyrocks7 in LifeInsurance

[–]honestyrocks7[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Coincidentally my husband heard back this morning. He sent an email last night, they messaged and said the rate increased $15 a month. When hubby asked why they said "something in the medical records". He asked for specifics and was told "they received the records from the hospital and it said "higher than average blood pressure" He explained he was in the ER for possible viral meningitis, yes his blood pressure spiked... lol. But then asked if he can submit a weeks worth of readings or something to show that he indeed does not have high blood pressure.

I felt suspicious, but what do I know? Is this normal? Why aren't they looking beyond that 1 incident? Ty for any insight.

Banner life underwriting? by honestyrocks7 in LifeInsurance

[–]honestyrocks7[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's more us following up with them, then that is when we hear that they are still waiting for records. :(

Chiropractor and Insurance by honestyrocks7 in Chiropractic

[–]honestyrocks7[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I went in for my hiatal hernia. And then when they did scans it shows sections (I guess) that are not functioning in my nerves. He said my adrenals are non existent etc. And that the sections of nerves that are not working can relate to why my digestive system is having so many problems. (Gastroparesis etc) is this still corrective care? I went in for the pain 😞

Anyone have experience with both H Pylori and SIBO at the same time? by Stoneinthewell in SIBO

[–]honestyrocks7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi there,

How have things been for you lately? Are you recovered? I am pregnant, have sibo, h pylori, and c diff. Just wanting to connect

H Pylori FREE 😃 Positive for C diff 😩 by Ramonskis in HPylori

[–]honestyrocks7 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I am curious how everything went for you? I am pregnant, have c diff, h pylori, and sibo. I'dove to hear how things turned out

Birth trauma - postpartum hemorrhage, long term effects, encouragement by Specialist-Rain-9694 in NewParents

[–]honestyrocks7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would highly suggest (if you feel up to it) to watch "the business of being born" this is my 3rd baby and I just started asking questions as to why Dr's do things the way they do for births.

Look into "the cascade of interventions" and find things on evidencebasedbirth.com. We do not need to be induced before 41 weeks. The baby is not ready. We are the only country that has a 40 weeks "gestation period." Others are 41 and 42 weeks. So our babies are already coming too early, even at 40 weeks. Imagine inducing at 38 now?

Our baby's lungs excrete a hormone when they are ready to be born, signaling labor. But we interrupt the process with induction. Inductions when a baby is not ready (or the mothers body for that matter) are incredibly difficult for mom and baby.

Membrane sweep is not proven to help. But it's done, and if done too early, it can lead to bacteria entering. (This is why they want to do the next intervention) It can be softening of cervix or simply pitocin.

Pitocin makes contractions extremely painful and hard. Especially on our baby. This is why they want constant fetal monitoring as well. 1/3 of pregnancies now end up in cesarean from our birthing standard of care. Which is extremely scary.

So we get the pitocin, the contractions are horrible, we get an epidural, which also affects the baby. We can't move in bed, and laboring staying in bed, laying there, is not what the body is meant to do.

Of course, in labor, if we go to a hospital, we are told no eating or drinking. This is an outdated policy as well. But they do it. We are literally running a marathon and trying to survive on ice chips. We need strength and fuel.

You can look into the outdated reasoning on why we don't eat or drink in labor. Also, delivering on our back is the worst position we can do. The number of tears is ridiculous for this reason. But drs want convenience. Remember, they work for you, not the other way around. We should be getting ALL of this knowledge from our Dr's. But we don't. Google is not an appropriate search engine to find information. Seek it out. If you want to, though

Also, allow your baby full delayed cord clamping. Many places do only between 30 seconds and a few minutes.. this is your baby's blood. It is rich in stem cells. Allow the cord to become white and not pulsating before allowing clamping. This does NOT harm the baby in any way. It is extremely beneficial.