Yes, a person who is infected with chickenpox can carry the infection to someone else, including a pregnant woman.
Exposure to chickenpox or rubella by a nonimmune pregnant woman may be treated with an injection of immune globulin to help prevent fetal transmission.
Chickenpox does not affect fertility. Any woman can be infertile, but it has nothing to do with her chickenpox history.
A child/infant should not be around someone with chicken pox. If a child has already had the vaccination, they should be okay; however, vaccinated children have developed chicken pox. http://www.drgreene.com/21_510.html
Shingles is not contagious -- it can't be "caught" from someone else. People with shingles can give you chickenpox if you haven't had it. See related link below for information on transmitting shingles
A woman is pregnant for 38-40 weeks.
NO
yes, short women have babies every day
Yes, you can get pregnant. While on the medication, the pills help you control or reduce your chances of getting pregnant. However, how soon you might get pregnant differs from woman to woman.
Yes a woman with endometriosis can carry a baby to full term. Medically endometriosis can hinder the getting pregnant process. Consult your obstetrician about you level of endometriosis.
It is possible for a woman with a transplanted uterus to carry a pregnancy. Therefore, it is theoretically possible for a male-to-female transgendered person to become pregnant by in vitro fertilization; if a pre-op male-to-female transgendered person produces sperm, that person can become a father.
The person is in fact a transexual. It is a woman who has not yet had 'the operation'. Her partner is another woman and they have found out that the other woman can't have kids, so this one stopped taking the drugs, got pregnant by a sperm donor and is now pregnant.
No u silly person