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No, a trans woman cannot give birth because she does not have a uterus.
No, a trans woman cannot get pregnant and carry a child to term because she does not have a uterus.
No transsexual woman can carry a child. The operation only creates a neovagina, not a uterus, fallopian tubes, or ovaries. Hopefully, that can come someday in the near future.
A birth mother is the woman who gives birth to a child.
A woman without a womb, or uterus, cannot give birth because the uterus is essential for embryo implantation and fetal development. Menstruation also requires a uterus, as it involves the shedding of the uterine lining. Therefore, without a womb, a woman cannot experience either menstruation or natural childbirth.
No, they do not. Only girls and women have it. The uterus is the place inside the woman where the baby will grow for nine months, before it is delivered. Men and boys do not need a uterus, because they do not give birth to a baby.
No, a woman cannot carry a baby to term if her uterus is gone, as the uterus is essential for housing and supporting the development of the fetus during pregnancy. Without a uterus, there is no structure to facilitate implantation of the embryo or sustain a pregnancy. In cases where a woman has had a hysterectomy, assisted reproductive technologies, like gestational surrogacy, may be an option for having a child.
The most common method of child birth is through the natural process of vaginal delivery. This is where the uterus contracts in what is called labor, and the end result is the fetus is pushed through the birth canal, the vagina. If there are problems, sometimes doctors perform a cesarean section, which is a surgical procedure that cuts the woman's abdomen open along with the uterus to remove the fetus. Once the fetus is outside the woman's body it is called a baby.
The easiest way (small fee for the document) is to apply to Vital Statistics to get the birth certificate of your husband's child. The other woman does not have to give the birth certificate if she chooses not to.
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Contraction refers to the muscles tightening around the uterus, pushing the baby down to the birth canal.
When a married woman gives birth her husband is assumed, legally, to be the father of the child and he has all the legal rights and responsibilities regarding that child. When an unmarried woman gives birth, the paternity must be established legally by the father signing the birth certificate or establishing his paternity through a DNA test. In the case of an unmarried woman, the woman who gave birth is a matter of record. The father's identity is not.When a married woman gives birth her husband is assumed, legally, to be the father of the child and he has all the legal rights and responsibilities regarding that child. When an unmarried woman gives birth, the paternity must be established legally by the father signing the birth certificate or establishing his paternity through a DNA test. In the case of an unmarried woman, the woman who gave birth is a matter of record. The father's identity is not.When a married woman gives birth her husband is assumed, legally, to be the father of the child and he has all the legal rights and responsibilities regarding that child. When an unmarried woman gives birth, the paternity must be established legally by the father signing the birth certificate or establishing his paternity through a DNA test. In the case of an unmarried woman, the woman who gave birth is a matter of record. The father's identity is not.When a married woman gives birth her husband is assumed, legally, to be the father of the child and he has all the legal rights and responsibilities regarding that child. When an unmarried woman gives birth, the paternity must be established legally by the father signing the birth certificate or establishing his paternity through a DNA test. In the case of an unmarried woman, the woman who gave birth is a matter of record. The father's identity is not.