it will do kno harm to the baby, but you should ask a doctor. It depends on how bad the flu is.
If you have flue, after a few days you get better and recover.
If you are pregnant, after 9 months you have a baby.
It wont have effect on the pregnancy.
No. I had the flu while I was pregnant with my last child and he is fine. The main concern about having the flu and being pregnant is getting enough rest, fluids, and making sure your core body temp doesn't go to high.
Stress can and so can having the flu or getting sick.
The flu. One of the side affects of flu can be death.
When I got pregnant I had sore nipples but no flu like symptoms. Now I have the flu/cold and my nipples are sore (im not pregnant).
Only if you have had unprotected sex. Could be a flu bug.
you will get the flu
Severe acute respiratory syndrome is a viral respiratory disease. The initial effects of having SARS is having flu-like symptoms, a fever, cough and sore throat. If left untreated, you may develop a shortness of breath and eventually, pneumonia.
Yearly flu outbreak’s have a negative affect on the US economy
Clean hands Prevents spreading diseases like the flu and stomach flu.
http://www.cdc.gov/FLU/protect/keyfacts.htm
The flu vaccination should protect you from getting the flu. The flu vaccine is usually 70% effective.
Not really if they are otherwise healthy, especially if they get their flu vaccinations as recommended by the OB/GYN associations. They are, however, at higher risk of having complications, sometimes serious complications, once they have the flu. See the related questions below for more information about the importance of getting your flu vaccinations in pregnancy, and also who is at higher risk, besides pregnant women, for complications of the flu. Flu vaccinations not only protect you from getting the flu and risking the higher rate of complications of the flu in pregnant women, but also protect your fetus and newborn. Your newborn is without a mature and fully functioning immune system until 6 months old. Until then, the infant relies on your antibodies from breast milk and your antibodies from your blood during gestation to protect them from infectious diseases.