You will have to check with your provider but most consider the first Dr appointment where the pregnancy is confirmed.
Estimated due dates and pregnancy time lines are calculated from the first day of your last period.
yes
There are some insurance companies that offer a 9 month waiting period for short term disability insurance. You want to make sure to apply well in advance of your conception date anyway, just in case your pregnancy does not go full term.
Fertilization or pregnancy.
Most insurance companies require full insurance coverage and not just for pregnancy. However, there are websites that assist if insurance is a financial burden. http://www.pregnancyinsurance.org/
Many health insurance policies have a maternity waiver. Meaning that pregnancy is not covered. ( Kind of a self inflicted injury type thing ) However, most companies will cover complications of pregnancy.
Your pregnancy date typically starts from the first day of your last menstrual period (LMP). This method is used because it's often difficult to determine the exact date of conception. Pregnancy is usually about 40 weeks long, calculated from the LMP date, which means that conception generally occurs about two weeks after that date.
Isn't teenage pregnancy actually when the girl carries the baby for nine months, and teenage conception just the same as any other conception, when they have sex?
From conception to the birth..depending on the expiration date on test....
Yes; pregnancy begins as soon as conception is successful.
Neither, actually. The date that is printed on all of the claims is the date of your last menstrual period, your LMP. This is the date that is used when claims are filed.
Pregnancy is the process of carrying a fetus for nine months. Birth is the process of delivering a baby. Conception is when the egg is fertilized.