Abuja - Dr Chris Agboghoroma, Chief Consultant Obstetrician and
Gynaecologist at the National Hospital, Abuja, has advised expectant
mothers to avoid air travel during the last months of their pregnancy.
Agboghoroma said on Tuesday that a woman in the 36th or 37the week of pregnancy could deliver at any moment.
He said that the risk of a premature delivery and the hazards of
delivery without adequate care were very high if the woman attempted to
travel by air.
“A pregnant woman can fly as much as possible or until the later part of the third trimester (last months of pregnancy).
“The reason is that one, most of our planes are safe and well
pressurised so there is no problem in terms of altitude that is the
level you have gone to.
“The problem is that some flights take more than two, three, four,
five, six hours, some even up to 12 hours and the process of labour can
be so rapid that the woman can deliver within three hours or four hours.
“So, if you put a woman, who is already advanced in pregnancy and can
fall into labour any moment and delivery within three to four hours in a
flight of seven hours, that woman can be airborne and then go into
labour and deliver in the plane.
“How would you handle that? will you ask the plane to stop on the way
because the woman wants to deliver? and you cannot expect that the air
hostesses have been trained to assist.”
The gynecologist, however, advised all pregnant women to get a note
from their doctors before they travelled by air, saying that the note
would help if complications arose.
“Complications can arise in pregnancy at any time but we are talking
about delivery which is imminent in a woman who is already advanced in
pregnancy.
“Apart from that any other complications that occur there is no way anybody could determine or predict them.
“So you cannot say once you are pregnant you cannot travel it is only
in the later part of pregnancy that you are restricted but early
pregnancy you can travel.”
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