Pelvic Health Network Podcast

Endurance runner's experience with home health OT after C-section

1 h 2 min · 6 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Endurance runner's experience with home health OT after C-section

Descripción

Four days after her C-section, Jenna couldn’t lie flat. She was short of breath. Her blood pressure kept climbing. She went to OB triage and was told to go home and rest. Instead, she went to the main emergency department with ongoing chest pressure, where her systolic blood pressure rose above 180 and her BNP registered at 1650. She was treated for postpartum fluid overload and acute heart failure. Jenna is an ultra-endurance athlete and cofounder of Enhanced Recovery After Delivery®. In this conversation, she shares what warning signs were missed, what happened during her postpartum readmission, and the role of home health occupational therapy after discharge from the hospital. Topics discussed: * Postpartum readmission * Acute heart failure after C-section * Home health OT * Return to running after birth * Early postpartum rehab 1. Start your postpartum rehab practice within the first week after birth: https://courses.pelvichealthnetwork.org/postpartum-rehab-practice 2. Grow an OB rehab program in the hospital and home: https://enhancedrecoveryafterdelivery.com/program/ 3. Find hospitals offering OT and PT in the hospital after birth: https://pelvichealthnetwork.org/hospital

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Portada del episodio What Happens When Recovery Waits 6 Weeks?

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Portada del episodio Build a Physician-Led Postpartum Recovery Program

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Most postpartum recovery conversations start too late.This one started with a woman who collapsed trying to get upstairs after birth.She had been discharged home after a complicated delivery. No rehab consult. No functional assessment. No equipment. No one evaluated whether she could safely navigate her own home.By the time a physician finally reached her weeks later, she had been confined to her couch. She could not get to the bathroom independently. She was using a bowl because she physically could not make it across the room.A home health referral for occupational therapy and physical therapy was finally placed at 5 weeks postpartum.In this conversation, physicians, physical therapists, and innovators in maternal health discuss a question that is becoming harder to ignore:What happens when we discharge mothers based on medical stability alone, without assessing whether they can actually function at home?We discuss:• Why some maternal fetal medicine physicians automatically order PT and OT after complex births• How postpartum rehab programs are reducing readmissions in hospitals across the U.S.• What therapists are identifying in the first days after discharge that vital signs at rest often miss• Why movement, function, blood pressure response to activity, and home setup matter after birth• The growing role of telehealth, wearable monitoring, and remote postpartum recovery supportFeaturing conversations with clinicians working to build physician-led postpartum recovery pathways in hospitals and homes.This is not a conversation about “bouncing back.”It’s about whether mothers are being assessed for the realities they’re returning home to.

20 de may de 20261 h 42 min
Portada del episodio Endurance runner's experience with home health OT after C-section

Endurance runner's experience with home health OT after C-section

Four days after her C-section, Jenna couldn’t lie flat. She was short of breath. Her blood pressure kept climbing. She went to OB triage and was told to go home and rest. Instead, she went to the main emergency department with ongoing chest pressure, where her systolic blood pressure rose above 180 and her BNP registered at 1650. She was treated for postpartum fluid overload and acute heart failure. Jenna is an ultra-endurance athlete and cofounder of Enhanced Recovery After Delivery®. In this conversation, she shares what warning signs were missed, what happened during her postpartum readmission, and the role of home health occupational therapy after discharge from the hospital. Topics discussed: * Postpartum readmission * Acute heart failure after C-section * Home health OT * Return to running after birth * Early postpartum rehab 1. Start your postpartum rehab practice within the first week after birth: https://courses.pelvichealthnetwork.org/postpartum-rehab-practice 2. Grow an OB rehab program in the hospital and home: https://enhancedrecoveryafterdelivery.com/program/ 3. Find hospitals offering OT and PT in the hospital after birth: https://pelvichealthnetwork.org/hospital

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