Usually not, most women have less trouble conceiving - after they've done it once. Occasionally a woman will develop "secondary infertility" - for reasons usually unknown, after having no trouble conceiving initially - they become infertile. It is not common.
it can take up to 6months-8months longer if the child you want to adopt has a disability
If there is someone who has custody of a child and can no longer care for the child, they need to give the child to another family member. The local DHS office can help find family members to take care of the child.
I Took depo once in october 2009 and was supose to get it again in December but i didnt because i also wanted a child. its now July 2010 and i still cant conceive. someone told me it take up to 18 months to get it out your system
Normally lactating mother do not get periods till 3 months. Still u need to take precautions preventing next pregnanacy.I have the example as our mother in law casually mentioned that lactating mother do not conceive. By my wife did conceive even with out periods.So am blessed with first son and second son with a gap of 12 months 15 days and second child was weak and took more time to recoup.
Sex of the child is controlled by the chromosomes in the egg and sperm of the parents and not by a magnesium tablet.
smoking compromises your menstrual health and the healthy functioning of your reproductive system. Studies have shown that smokers take longer to conceive than non-smokers
If the second child is Rh+ and the mother did not take RhoGAM, there is a chance that the child will develop erythroblastosis fetalis and die before birth.
yes
Prenatal vitamins don't help you get pregnant; they help you to have a healthy pregnancy. On average, it takes six months to conceive. Some couples get pregnant the minute they have unprotected sex, and others take longer.
That depends on when they file for termination, whether the termination is granted and the child support agency to catch up. Usually, it's no longer than a month once the termination is approved, but can take longer if there is a court/agency backlog.
Yes. You have to legally support the child until she is 18; the only way you don't have to is if the court terminates the child support. You cannot (legally) decide yourself that you no longer have to take care of your child.
Forever. There are no longer stairs above the second floor.