How I Avoided GBS Naturally

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How I Avoided and Got Rid Of GBS with Natural Remedies
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GBS, or Group Beta Streptococcus, is an colonization that affects many people and around 1/4 to 1/3 of women in the third trimester of pregnancy. Many people carry this bacteria in their digestive systems with no problem, but it can cause complications in a newborns of mothers who are colonized.

Mothers are often tested for Group B Strep in the third trimester of pregnancy and if they are positive, are usually given antibiotics during labor. I tested positive for GBS in my fourth pregnancy, though I eradicated it and tested negative before the birth, and then I tested negative in my next pregnancy (thus the title of the post). As there is a very small chance of serious and life threatening complications for baby in GBS positive moms (even with antibiotic use), I wanted to share what worked for me in hopes it would help other women avoid this risk to baby. This is just my experience and is not intended to be medical advice.

For more information on the risks associated with GBS and with antibiotic treatment, check out this well-researched article. This page provides a compilation of a lot of research on GBS and antibiotic use.

Natural Remedies for GBS

GBS certainly has the potential to be serious and shouldn’t be ignored, but antibiotics carry their own risks and can cause problems as well. Especially with all the emerging research about the transfer of gut flora and immunity from mother to baby during delivery, it would definitely be preferable not to take antibiotics if it can be avoided (especially if testing positive for GBS can be avoided in the first place).

The good news is, at least in my case, GBS can be avoided with natural remedies.

As GBS occurs naturally in the digestive tract for some people, I felt it was important to treat the digestive tract as a whole when working to eliminate GBS instead of just focusing on the genital area. A probiotic rich diet is beneficial for overall health,and I also found it helpful in getting rid of GBS.

When researching, I found the following advice for treating/preventing GBS:

  • Eating a probiotic rich diet including things like Kombucha, Water Kefir, Yogurt, Sauerkraut and other fermented foods to help create a healthy gut environment.
  • Taking a probiotic supplement and using it vaginally (I used this one orally daily and vaginally every day or two).
  • Consuming garlic capsules or raw garlic cloves daily.
  • Consuming Coconut Oil for its naturally antiviral properties.
  • Using plain organic yogurt vaginally to help balance bacteria.
  • Taking Vitamin C daily.
  • Using a Chlorhexidine rinse vaginally before and during labor. (This is the usual protocol) This was a last resort for me and I was glad to not have to use it, as the emerging evidence about the bacterial transfer during labor brings this practice into question.
  • Consuming raw apple cider vinegar daily and using it as a diluted rinse.

What I Did That Worked

With my fourth pregnancy, I tested positive at 35 weeks for GBS and then at 37 weeks was tested again and the result was negative. What I did during that time (and what a friend did successfully after testing positive very early in her pregnancy) that worked:

  • Took 2,000 mg of Vitamin C in divided doses each day
  • Consuming 2 cloves of raw garlic each day by finely mincing them and drinking them down with water
  • Consuming at least 2 Tablespoons of coconut oil daily for its antibacterial/antiviral properties
  • Using a diluted apple cider vinegar rinse vaginally each day
  • Taking 6+ probiotic capsules a day
  • Consuming large amounts of fermented foods and drinks
  • Using a garlic clove vaginally for one night (anecdotal evidence supports that this is very effective)

In my next pregnancy to prevent GBS to begin with, I followed a protocol that is recommended by a midwife I know (and she is yet to have a case of GBS when a mom is following this):

Have you ever had GBS while pregnant? What did you do? Share below!

GBS (Group B Strep) can affect up to 1/3 of pregnant women but these natural remedies helped me (and can help you!) to avoid it.

Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

364 responses to “How I Avoided GBS Naturally”

  1. Kimber Avatar

    Thanks for all the I info! I was very upset to test positive with my first pregnancy. I’m now 10 weeks with my second baby and ordered the probiotics and garlic capsules to start now and continue until birth. However, they just came today and I got the garlic capsules provided in your link….I was disappointed to see they contain soybean oil :(. I’m on the search for a better brand.

  2. Rakan Avatar

    Thanks for the info Katie,
    I have been using garlic supplements and probiotics, and plan to do real garlic maybe for a week or two closer to the end, but for the rest of the time, which garlic supplements are better for gbs prevention purpose, ones which say fresh garlic or aged garlic, the fresh one claims to have 22x higher allicin, the aged one is well known and reviewed for cleansing yeast…

  3. Rakan Avatar

    Is the fact that Stanford U. is conducting a study called “Effects of Oral Probiotic Supplementation on Group B Strep (GBS) Rectovaginal Colonization in Pregnancy” scientific enough for you? Maybe you should give them a call and tell them they are wasting their time on pseudoscience…

    1. Sonne Avatar

      Thank you! I was GBS+ and the way it was handled medically leaves a lot to be desired. As usual the medical establishment is the last one to catch on but better late than never.
      And no, we are not gullible women. Just better informed ones taking our health in our won hands because those we trusted let us down!

      1. Juliann Avatar
        Juliann

        Amen, and amen, from someone else who is dealing with long-term effects of antibiotic use during delivery in myself and also my now toddler. My son and I have both struggled with systemic inflammatory diseases since his birth, and I am 100% confident the use of during and the over-prescription of antibiotics after his birth are 100% related to our current health nightmares. Western medicine does rely too much on antibiotics, and sadly, they will be the last to realize that, since most of them believe they are God’s gift to men and know everything and therefore have no need to learn more. Many lives will be blessed WHEN Western medicine acknowledges and implements the practice that antibiotics should not be handed out like candy. It makes complete sense if you realize to take out the “enemy” (aka. GBS in a soon-to-be-delivered mother), the answer is not wiping out your “allies” (aka. friendly bacteria who actually make up the IMMUNE SYSTEM), but increasing the number and strength of your armies and allies (aka. strengthening your immune system w/ probiotics vs. weakening it with antibiotics) in order to properly fight the “enemy”. I predict when Western medicine as a whole becomes truly educated, it will be probiotics prescribed, and not antibiotics.

  4. Rachel Avatar

    Do you happen to know how Hibiclens affects the good bacteria? I am still gbs positive even after doing the protocol, and myidwife suggested Hibiclens rinses during labor. Will this also kill all the good gut bacteria I have worked so hard at building?

      1. Rachel Avatar

        Thanks so much, just wondering if I should be worrying about thrush and/or yeast when going this route. I will buy some infant probiotics to have on hand after delivery. Thanks again =)

  5. Ryen Avatar

    Have tested positive for gbs and I am NOT pregnant. My 16 yr old daughter also had same symptoms and her swab came back positive for gbs. How is it contracted? I was given clamidicyne(sp?) And was symptom free for months then it is back again.

  6. Karen M Avatar

    Hi all,

    I’m jumping into a heated discussion it looks like. Let me add some more heat from another angle. I have Crohn’s disease. I was fortunate enough to have 2.5 healthy/flare-free/drug-free years (post-massive-emergency-surgery) topped off with a beautifully healthy pregnancy and natural delivery. An absolute miracle. A time in my life that I cling to because I want it back so badly.

    Post-delivery, I went to hell in a handbag. Weeks before delivery, I tested positive for GBS, and I received IV antibiotics during labor. Within a week, I went into the most insane downward health spiral, and I’m still reeling from it 1.5 years later. I am still trying desperately to crawl out of it, I’ve been on all the nasty immunosuppressant drugs (prednisone, Remicade, Humira, Cimzia), more antibiotics, etc., and nothing is working to keep me afloat. I just spent four days in the hospital after a massive bleed that required a major blood transfusion.

    Antibiotics are a b*tch, especially for anyone with an autoimmune disease-and there are more and more of us popping up every single day. If antibiotics can be avoided, they should be. I would NEVER put my baby at risk by refusing treatment, but why can’t we all put our heads together and look for alternative solutions like high-dose probiotic therapy? What is so wrong with that? Why is it so wrong to look for a more natural approach, especially if it can be just as effective as the harsh drugs WITHOUT all the terrible side-effects? If there is a way to pre-treat ourselves with probiotics and manage to shift our internal flora to the point where we test negative, then that is A-W-E-S-O-M-E!!!! Why wouldn’t we do it???????????

    I really hope that I can manage to get out of this flare, and get pregnant again and have another healthy pregnancy. I’m going to continue to saturate myself with lots of probiotics in hopes of avoiding a positive GBS test so I do not have to rinse and repeat my post-delivery trip to hell.

    BTW, I was SO bummed when I tested positive for GBS because I didn’t want my son to have to be stripped of all the beneficial microflora that he would have gotten from me via the birth canal. That is enough of a reason to want to beef up on probiotics and avoid the antibiotics. But I walked away with another reason to avoid the antibiotics – one that I never saw coming!!!!! Lots of people, including people that do NOT have Inflammatory Bowel Disease, end up with C Diff infections and all sorts of nasties because of the IV antibiotics given for GBS. So keep hunting for alternatives ladies!!!!! You do NOT want to deal with these issues post-delivery. Taking care of an infant is enough!

    1. Amanda Avatar

      I wanted to post this in response to the “Medical Professional” that is displaying unprofessional and ill-mannered behavior on a blog in which you are not welcome. Here is a site with credible evidence (research-based) https://www.healthychild.com/treating-group-b-strep-are-antibiotics-necessary/.

      It is interesting to note: 10 one study found no decrease in GBS infection or deaths among newborns whose mothers were given IV antibiotics during labor.

      There are women out there that genuinely appreciate any remedies that could offer their newborn a better chance for an active and productive life.

      1. Jennifer Casey Avatar
        Jennifer Casey

        Thank you for posting that link. I agree that the “Medical Professional” is behaving unprofessionally. The original article never suggested that antibiotics shouldn’t be used, just that there may be a natural way to rid oneself of GBS and then get tested again before labor. Wellness Mama is careful to state that she is not a doctor or offering medical advice, yet the “Medical Professional” seems to think that she is qualified to recommend antibiotics to all women who test positive for GBS despite the fact that she is not their doctor.
        I read the article from the link you posted and found it to be relevant, informative and very current.

      2. Jacquelyn Avatar
        Jacquelyn

        thanks for posting this link. Looks like administering antibiotics in this perceived risk situation doesn’t out way the consequences that can then arise from taking antibiotics. I understand that this bacteria can harm however a .5% chance of the baby contracting it during labour and then a 6% chance that it will cause a serious disease is a risk that I would be willing to take in order for my baby to have a chance at a regular gut flora. With the amount of allergies, illnesses and cancers in infants/young children I think we need to start questioning over use of medication. How can you bring health into the body by poisoning it

      3. Lucy Avatar

        Excellent article! A must read for anyone scared of transmitting group b strep. The information will set your worried mind at ease. DONT LET THOSE ILL INFORMED OB/GYN’S SCARE YOU ANYMORE. I know I am not worried about gbs anymore and I will refuse antibiotics. For anyone scared to refuse something from a doctor…print out that article and keep that in your arsenal! Good Luck

    2. Tara Avatar

      How is your son doing? I tested positive, am on cimzia for ankylosing spondylitis and am terrified at taking antibiotics because I want him to have a healthy gut (because I truly believe in a gut/brain connection), but also don’t think I’d live with myself if he catches gbs and is ill. I can’t decide if I should opt for antibiotics at the first sign of fever/infection or just take the iv meds and load up on probiotics for me and him afterwards. What would you do second time around?

      1. Ashley Avatar

        My son is doing just fine he is now 2 years old healthy and happy so far. I was just tested for Strep with this pregnancy and it came back negative!! I am so happy! I took the probiotics, vitamin C, and a garlic capsule orally every day from 32 weeks to when I was tested at 36. I also take wellness vitamins for pregnancy they come in a pack. Good luck.

  7. Carol Avatar

    I think it’s great to learn from you about GBS and what to do about it! Thanks! I have questions though…Once pregnant and informed of having GBS, say at 3 months, how long should a person follow the regime? What is the maintenance regime? And what is the ratio of apple cider vinegar to water for the rinse? Is there a possibility of having too much fermentation in your system with this regime? Would appreciate your response! Thank you.

  8. Camila Irwin Avatar
    Camila Irwin

    wondering if you’ve heard of women’s probiotic called RePHresh Pro-B and if you have any idea how well it works to regulate GBS…?

  9. Megan Avatar

    Hi! I’m in the same boat 🙁 Just wondering how you did the apple cider vinegar rinse and how you consumed the coconut oil. Thanks!

    1. Brie Shaffer Avatar
      Brie Shaffer

      You posted months ago, but to do an apple cider douche, I do 2-4 tablespoons to 8 oz of water, I just use the disposable douches from CVS, I dump out their vinegar & pour in my own apple cider vinegar (raw organic)
      Apple cider douches have completely gotten rid of yeast infections for me. I swear by it. However I recently had intense irritation & my normal apple cider remedy didn’t work (usually after 1 or 2 douches I am completely back to normal) so I got a pap & the results were that I had no yeast but tested positive with Strep B. I immediately cut grains & sugar out of my diet, and alcohol (I am NOT pregnant) and the symptoms subsided but are still mildly there.

      I am now trying garlic cloves orally & vaginally but just started today. Hopefully the natural approach will work, otherwise my DR wants to give me penicillin.

      To consume coconut oil, you can cook eggs with it, pour on your salad, or just take it orally. I’m not sure what the site recommends but 1/4 cup would be quite a bit to swallow. You can blend it in a smoothie.

      I had strep b when I was pregnant. I had 2 IV drips of antibiotics during birth. I WISH I had done more research and tried a natural approach and retested closer to my due date. My poor 1 day old son smelled like penicillin when he burped. Undeniably those antibiotics were in my milk and saturated in my and my sons body.. I would NEVER risk his life and not do antibiotics. That is NOT what I’m saying.

      I’m saying, if I had known I would have at least tried to get rid of Strep B naturally well before my due date just in case I was able to get rid of the Strep B. I would have stopped eating mint chip ice cream every day and eaten garlic and fermented veggies etc etc. What’s to lose?

      And if I retested and was negative, great, if I tested positive, then I would do the antibiotics.

      It’s called PREVENTATIVE measures. No one is arguing that antibiotics have saved millions upon millions of lives. It’s just we do have the option to use nutrition to prevent needing antibiotics.

  10. Amelia Avatar

    Hey Katie, did you increase the intake of probiotic capsules orally during pregnancy? I just got prescribed with the pill, and it says ‘2 capsules daily with or after the main meal’ only. I’m struggling with GBS for way too long already! =(

  11. Uke Avatar

    My story is very similar to rest of prev comments but i was wondering if I can use a probiotic supplement vaginally if directions say to take it orally? I really don’t have lot time left before I want to get retested for GBS in next 4 days and i cannot not find a store that carried the ones you insert vaginally (I just bought RepHresh Pro-B for feminine health thinking that’s it, but got home & saw the directions to take it orally) and I do not have time to wait if I order one online. And if I can, does it matter what type of probiotic it is? Does it have to be gel capsule or can it be solid form? I have been taking probiotics orally everyday even before I tested positive but in last several days I’ve taken about 3 a day (same w vit. C supplements). Also I am doing a Hibiclens rinse for last 3 days & inserting raw garlic clove for 2 days now and will continue. I’ve been eating raw garlic cloves with 1 or 2 of my meals daily & drinking milk Kefir & Activia yogurt. But the reason I feel I need to focus my attention on getting rid of the bacteria more so in vaginal area is bc I get yeast infections often and believe I had one after I got tested (or even during) and also had bacteria vaginosis during my pregnancy.

  12. jen Avatar

    *especially if you will be birthing outside of a hospital! In retrospect, my having to be transferred from home to hospital in order to deliver was the best thing that could have happened. Surely my baby would not have made it otherwise

  13. jen Avatar

    Dont mess with GBS! I almost lost my baby because of my not receiving IV penicillin during L&D. Spent his first week of life fighting for his life which was totally avoidable. Choose your battles. GBS is not to be taken lightly. <3

  14. Sara Avatar

    I am 37 weeks pregnant and tested Negative. I am mid-twenties, healthy and active and this is our first baby. One thing that i changed after hearing about GBS was that I stopped wearing thong underwear and switched to cotton only.

    About two weeks before my swab, i…started taking 1,000 mg of Vitamin C, drank Kefir, ate live-active yogurt everyday(i already ate yogurt everyday), minimized my consumption of sugar, switched from whole grain/white bread to sourdough(it’s fermented and much more beneficial for your digestion!), ate about two cloves of garlic daily(either in my food, or ate garlic-stuffed-olives. For the three days prior to my test I diced up a garlic and drank it down with OJ…this worked for two days and the night before my test I tried to drink it down but threw up after-yuck!), rinsed with diluted apple cider vinegar(also have since learned about all the health benefits of ACV and love it!), stopped using harsh fragranced soap down there and instead clean around with unscented basic soap and just rinsed with hot water and would wipe with with hazel and water also I always wipe front to back. I am thankful that I tested negative but totally understand everyone being worried about it. I didn’t want to be forced to receive penicillin during labor(I am requesting a HepLock and do not want fluids). I plan to continue this regimen best I can(Although pumpkin pie has been my recent craving-yummy sugar!) up until birth because I felt great and understand that GBS can come and go and is a real threat to baby. I don’t know if I would have tested negative without all these changes, but I’m not sorry I made them! Good luck girls:)

  15. Jessica Avatar

    I had GBS last pregnancy and I’m hoping to not get it this time. By taking garlic capsules daily, am I killing off my good bacteria too? I’m only 22 weeks and just started adding them to my diet. I’m taking Bio-Kult probiotics but if i take them with the garlic, will that be counter productive? And should I keep taking the garlic, even after(or if) I get a negative test result?

  16. jenny Avatar

    Garlic can also disrupt your natural flora. Just because it’s natural doesn’t mean it can’t have side effects. You are much better off requesting IV antibiotics because they are targeted to work on GBS, and they don’t disrupt your gut flora nearly as much as oral antibiotics. Take a good probiotic a few hours afterwards to replenish your flora. Drink all the kefir you want! But get that antibiotic. GBS is so simple to treat and has such excellent results for babies and their families. This is one thing the US health care system does right. Other countries where they do not offer routine antibiotic prophylaxis for GBS+ moms (in order to save money) see much higher rates of loss due to GBS.

    1. dribby Avatar

      I will have to diagree with you. From a medical perspective, IV antibiotics do not target GBS. Antibotics kill everything they come in contact with and they do not clear up room for the right bacteria. There are real and serious consequences to getting IV antibiotics during labour. With all do respect, this information is medically unsound and incorrect. The consequences for mother and baby as a result of antibiotics can be very stressful. Sure you have prevented meningitis but now the baby’s GI system is compromised and it can effect them for life. If you are pregnant, be proactive, and don’t ask for IV antibiotics unless it is absolutely necessary.

      1. Tracy Rodgers Avatar
        Tracy Rodgers

        Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. Look up the spectrum of penicillin. GBS isn’t treated with broad spectrum antibiotics. What are the serious consequences of IV antibiotics given in labor? You think altered gut flora is a bigger consequence than meningitis? Where’s the evidence that antibiotics given in labor affect your child gut for life??? That’s a neck of a claim. Advice like yours could take gullible people out of the gene pool. And, exactly when do the antibiotics become, as you say, absolutely necessary?

        1. Kat Avatar

          Isn’t Penicillin a broad-spectrum antibiotic? It’s what they gave me with my first baby for my GBS. And it wiped out everything. Yeast problems galor in both me and my infant.

      2. jenny Avatar

        GBS is a gram positive infection. The antibiotic most commonly used, penicilliin, targets gram positive bacteria. Now it’s true that some of your beneficial flora is also gram positive, which is why you should take a probiotic. But some of your flora is gram negative and some are yeasts and other microorganisms which will be unaffected by the antibiotic. Garlic contains a lot of sulfur and has the potential to kill a broader spectrum of organisms all while still missing the one we want to get rid of. No one is suggesting all laboring mothers recieve antibiotics, only the ones who need it.

        1. Julianna Avatar
          Julianna

          Other microorganisms (e.g. Yeasts, parasites, etc) ARE affected by the antibiotic, in that once the antibiotic wipes out the protective good bacteria along with the bad, the other microbes such as the yeast and parasites have no resistance to prevent their proliferation. An imbalance in our bodies natural protective immunity is the result.

          Once these parasites and fungi are free to proliferate, they will do so unhindered, to the point where they seek more space to feed and grow. They bore holes in the intestinal wall (a condition known as “leaky guy syndrome”) leading to systemic issues like chronic yeast fections, skin rashes, chronic fatigue, mood disorders like depression, arthritis, intestinal disorders like Chron’s and colitis, to name a few.

          Antibiotics are mycotoxins, TOXINS, fungal metabolites, that are meant to kill. Yes, they kill the bad guys, but they also kill the good guys, our “allies”.

          To believe there is no residual effect from ingesting or circulating literal toxins in our bodies is short-sited. Yes, the antibiotics may reduce the risk of infant GBS infection rates by 80%, but even WITH antibiotics, there is still a 20% chance an infant will STILL get a GBS infection.

          When a GBS+ mother choses NOT to use antibiotics during birth, her child has a 50% chance of being colonized, NOT infected, just colonized. About 1% to 2% of those babies can then later become infected. Mortality rates for infants born to GBS+ mothers whether or not they get antibiotics during labor is the SAME.

          The reason CDC encourages universal GBS screening and free administration of antibiotics for positive mothers is not for mortality rates but for the morbidity rates, and the costs of hospitalizations. What they do not take into account is the long-term healthcare costs AFTER taking antibiotics and the affects it has on our immunity and acute and chronic conditions that result thereafter.

          1. Neda Avatar

            Do you know why some people get it in the urine and would you still opt out of antibiotics if you had it in your urine?

  17. Cameron Stoddard Avatar
    Cameron Stoddard

    Hi! Thank you so much for this information! I was negative my first preg and now positive for my 2nd so have just started the protocol in hopes that I can be retested and test negative. Have you heard of anyone getting extreme diarrhea and nausea by following this? Not sure if its the “die off”, but I’m on day 4 and last night I was so ill. But I am willing to do anything to get rid of gbs as long as it doesn’t send me into labor!! Btw I’m 38 weeks yesterday. Thank you!!

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      Could be… I’d back down on the Vitamin C or take smaller doses throughout the day…

      1. dribby Avatar

        Vitamin C in high doses causes diarrhea. You can get buffered Vitamin C which does not irritate the GI system as much or decrease your dose by 500mg. Also you can split up your Vitamin C intake so that you are not taking the entire 2000 mg at once. 1000mg in the morning and 1000mg in the evening might be better on your GI system.

  18. Mary Penn Avatar
    Mary Penn

    Thank you for this information! I am hoping to prevent the GBS this time. You mentioned that a midwife you know hasn’t had anyone test positive for GBS while following her protocol: Taking a high quality probiotic daily, vitamin c daily and garlic capsules daily….was that with people starting this at the third trimester? I’m really hoping to prevent it the next time around. How many garlic capsules? You started the vitamin c and garlic in the third trimester, but I understand the probiotics should be taken from the start, right? Or do you increase the probiotics in the third trimester. Embarrassingly, I need to ask- how do you do them vaginally? Is there a right or wrong way? thanks so much and sorry if I’m repeating questions. I’m just hoping to understand this all correctly!

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      A couple garlic capsules a day and yes starting all in the third trimester (though earlier is ok too)

  19. Rachel Vann Avatar
    Rachel Vann

    I tested positive for GBS in my urine at my 12 week appointment, my midwife would like me to start antibiotics right away to try and get rid of it. I would rather institute your regime and have already started, but read that tested positive in urine means a more heavy colonization, which has scared me into thinking the infection will spread and cause a miscarriage. How fast does your protocol work? Thanks!

    1. Allison Stolz Avatar
      Allison Stolz

      I really, really would not rely on treating this naturally. If you are so heavily colonized that it has gone as far as the bladder, your baby is at high risk. Google “Wren Jones”. His mom was just like you with GBS in her urine in the first trimester, but decided to treat naturally instead of with IV antibiotics during the birth. They went on to have what seemed to be a perfect beautiful homebirth with a midwife, but baby Wren died 11 hours later of GBS sepsis.

  20. Sara Avatar

    I tested positive for GBS in my urine at my 12 week appointment, my midwife would like me to start antibiotics right away to try and get rid of it. I would rather institute your regime and have already started, but read that tested positive in urine means a more heavy colonization, which has scared me into thinking the infection will spread and cause a miscarriage. How fast does your protocol work?

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      Pretty quickly. I have a personal friend who tested positive at the same time and same way and was able to get rid of it and have an antibiotic free vaginal birth….

      1. Christina Avatar

        Hi Wellness mama!
        Your friend who tested positive in urine early on in preg did not do antibiotics during labor and baby was fine??
        I was tested at 6 weeks via urine. Problem is, the lab tech gave me an unsealed cup, and used her BARE hands to give me the cup and even had her fingers inside of it. :((
        I argued with my dr that I wanted a retest due to her negligence (at the time I didn’t argue with the lab tech as I didn’t know what they were testing my urine for, assumed proteins or sugars), and they were rude so I didn’t push the issue. Now, I’m wishing I had insisted on a retest early on.
        So that was at 6 weeks. Currently I’m 19 weeks, if my urine were to test clear now would that mean it’s no longer highly colonized up near my bladder etc and baby is not infected? A nurse tried to tell me that if it’s in my urine that early that baby is infected. ?
        My primary dr is a func medicine DO. He started me on the Desbio strep series back in July. It’ll take about six months to get thru it (I’ll be finished with it before delivery). He says it’ll build immunity in the baby too, not just me.
        Are you familiar with Desbio, and in particular their streptococcus series? Do you know anyone who has used it?
        Thanks and God bless you for what you do!!! <3

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