buy the child what ever he/she needs like a bottle
Yes , the biological father will be held legally responsible for the support of his child .
No the father has no paternal rights until the baby is born.
A birth father is a genetic father of a child, as opposed to an adoptive father or stepfather.
No unless he adopted the child no
No
At a minimum, paternity would have to be established.
Too many people involved. Leave the birth certificate as it is. Let the biological father continue to pay child support. If the current man marries you and wishes to adopt the child, then that is another matter. Seek legal advice before doing anything to change the birth certificate. No. This would be fraud unless the child is adopted by your boyfriend.
midwife has to look after the mother and the child/children during and after birth. midwife has to look after the mother and the child/children during and after birth.
The name of the actual father of the child should go on the birth certificate. If you are not legally divorced, then your legal husband would be automatically considered to be the child's father by law. If the child has a different father, he can complete a voluntary acknowledgement of the paternity of a child, in which he signs that he is the child's father and is therefore put on the birth certificate and named as the legal father. The hospital will help with this after the baby is born.
No. The child's father is the child's father, no matter what relationship he has with the child. Birth certificates record facts, not relationships.
Unlikely. Your husband is the legal father of the child.
NO. In most states the father of the child must be present at the time of birth to sign the birth certificate as the father of the child. It could, in reality, be any man who would be willing to take legal responsibility for the unborn child. A child will only automatically get the father's name if the two parents are married. Even if the father pays child support, the mother is not obigated to change the child's last name to that of the father.