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Preparing for Your Visit

University of Vermont Medical Center
Preparing for Your Visit
A birthing center nurse poses with a patient and her newborn baby.

Our Birthing Center provides essential hygiene items for you and your baby during your stay at the hospital, but there are additional items you may consider bringing.

Make Your Stay More Comfortable

We recognize there is so much information that we share during your short postpartum stay, and we realize you may want to prepare prior to coming in to have your baby. We recommend reviewing the following resources to feel the most prepared for this upcoming experience.

What to Bring

Our Birthing Center provides essential hygiene items for you and your baby during your stay at the hospital. Here are additional items you may consider bringing:

For You

Recommended items to bring for labor and delivery:

  • Comfortable labor clothes
  • Slippers/sandals
  • Robe
  • Phone charger
  • Birth wishes
  • Chapstick/lip balm
  • Hair ties
  • Hydrating beverages (if you have a favorite)
  • Light snacks/gum
  • Music and speakers
  • Cooler for placenta (if you decide to take it home)
  • Essential oils and aromatherapy
  • Name of pediatrician/pediatric provider for your baby

Recommended items to bring for post-partum/hospital stay:

  • Comfortable clothes/robe for in-hospital use
  • Comfortable going home outfit
  • Comfortable slip-in shoes (your feet may be swollen)
  • If breastfeeding:
    • Nursing bra or tank
    • Breastfeeding pillow
    • Have you insurance-covered pump delivered to your house. No need to bring to the hospital. We provide breast pumps.
  • Toiletries/hair ties
  • Snacks
  • Make a pre-determined plan for care of siblings (no child under age 13 can stay overnight in the hospital)
For Your Newborn
  • Two going home outfits (size newborn and 0-3 months)
  • Car seat (ideally installed by a technician)
  • Two baby blankets
  • Diaper bag with supplies for your trip home
For Your Support People
  • Comfortable clothes and shoes
  • Book
  • Snacks
  • Toiletries
  • Medications/Tylenol (we cannot provide any medications to anyone other than the patient)
What We Will Provide
  • Hospital gown
  • Birthing balls, peanut balls
  • Medications
  • Water, juice, popsicles
  • Light snacks
  • Peri pads
  • Ice packs
  • Mesh underwear
  • Meals for birth parent only (cafeterias are available for support people)
  • Paperwork for the birth certificate and social security number

Parking

As a patient, you have several parking options.

Overnight Arrival

If you are arriving between 9 pm-6 am, please park in the Emergency Department lot and enter the hospital through the ED. The staff will assist you in getting to the birthing center. Your car will need to be moved to our parking garage once you have been admitted.

Daytime Arrival

If you are arriving between 6 am-9 pm, you can park in the hospital parking garage and walk up to the birthing center. Parking is priced per hour, with a $7/day maximum.

View detailed parking information

If you feel that delivery is imminent, park at the Emergency Department. 

Arrival

The birthing center is located on McClure 7. When you arrive, you will be checked in and then taken to your room for evaluation. Once your nurse and provider have had a chance to assess you and monitor your baby’s heart rate, you will be admitted or discharged (depending on your circumstances).

View our hospital maps

Visitor Policy

University of Vermont Medical Center believes in patient-and family-centered care and strives to promote patient and family participation in all aspects of care. In most cases, adult patients are permitted unrestricted visitation, with consideration given to the environment and our ability to provide safe, high-quality care. One visitor may stay overnight in the room as space allows. All children under the age of 13 years old must be supervised by an adult at all times.

Visitors are required to follow all staff instructions while onsite. Please help us maintain a healing environment by staying home if you are sick and avoiding overcrowding or noise.

Please note that there may be times when we limit visits to certain locations due to safety concerns, such as during a disease outbreak.

Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU)

Parents are welcome 24 hours a day. We encourage parents to be present for daily rounds, to actively participate and ask questions as well as help set goals for their baby every day. Please contact the NICU for specific guidelines.

Injury Prevention

Car Seat Safety

Our Child Passenger Safety Program offers car seat inspections, education and outreach to reduce the risk of serious injuries or death in car accidents. Learn more about keeping your child safe.

A mother buckles her child into a car seat.
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