No, it is not caused by an infectious organism, it is caused by your body's response to the pregnancy. If someone else is having morning sickness symptoms, and they are not pregnant, then you might want to avoid close contact with them until it is clear what is causing their nausea and vomiting.
However, if it is your husband who is having "morning sickness", then that is a condition that can be "caught", in a manner of speaking. Many husbands do get a psychosomatic illness ("sympathy" illness) along with their wives who have morning sickness. They may also have nausea and vomiting along with the pregnant wife if they are hyper-sensitive to the sight, sounds, and smells of someone vomiting. But it is not at all infectious in the usual sense.
Someone would throw up, as in puke every morning if they were pregnant and had morning sickness.
Yes, but it could also be something else. Morning sickness can happen at anytime of the day or last all day. Or all 9 months.
Not everyone gets morning sickness. If you do, it's not necessarily in the morning, either. (I had morning sickness with one child, but not the other. Both are boys.)
morning sickness
Not everyone gets morning sickness. Count yourself lucky.
No The father doesn't get "morning sickness", as there are no hormone changes to his body.
Possibly in the morning?
Morning sickness usually runs between the 6th and 12th weeks. And, it isn't necessarily in the morning
yes it is a form of morning sickness, not a common form in the 'pregnancy books and what doctors say' but yes it is a form of morning sickness. I had it with my first.
Because it is such a common occurrence, morning sickness is easily diagnosed in pregnant women.
Some people believe that intense morning sickness is a sign that they're pregnant with a boy, while mild morning sickness means a girl. Other people believe that getting sick in the morning is another sign of a boy, and morning sickness at night a girl.
Approximately 75% of pregnant women have some degree of morning sickness in early pregnancy.