No, in most states there is not a way to sure a mother for a hiding a pregnancy and running off. Fathers can court request paternity tests and visitation with the child however.
A molar pregnancy is an abnormally fertilized egg. Molar pregnancies occur when the fertilized egg does not have any of the mother's chromosones, or the father's chromosones duplicate.
If the mother is o- and its a first pregnancy then there are rarely any complications. Its during subsequent pregnancies when problems arise. If its a first pregnancy with an rh- mother then get all the info you can about an anti d injection and all the times you need to have it which is not only during pregnancy, its any time rh+ blood can mix with rh- blood and cause antibodies.
No.
blood is a sterile fluid so any infection that reach the blood is serious problem yes, blood infection affect pregnancy .because if any thing affect the mother it will affect the baby
If the mother becomes infected in the last three months of pregnancy, however, the prognosis is good and the baby may not even display any symptoms.
Pressing down too hard on stomach, and stress.
If mother is Rh positive there will be no problem. Problem can arise when mother is negative and baby positive.
yes. they have to pay a %medical cost and any income the mother receives while pregnant
The best thing would be to release the mother and the babies into the wild in a wooded area.
Yes of course. If you are obese for instance you risk the life of the baby and yourself.
They have to see how far a woman is at the time of pregnancy. they have to do numeric readings of pregnancy hormones. Determining a baby's healthy size. And any medication that the mother or baby has to take, and how much
A pregnancy with Down Syndrome would be the same as any other pregnancy. But, there's a chance that if the mother finds out that her child has Down Syndrome by having some testing done, she might become depressed.