Predicting a normal delivery typically involves assessing various factors such as the mother's health, the baby's position, gestational age, and the presence of any complications. Healthcare providers often use clinical examinations, ultrasounds, and monitoring of vital signs to evaluate the likelihood of a vaginal delivery. Additionally, considerations like previous birth experiences and maternal factors can also influence predictions. Ultimately, ongoing assessments throughout pregnancy help guide expectations for delivery.
Normal vaginal delivery.
no
There is no guarantee to any woman of a normal delivery. If you are carrying a single fetus, you will probably have a normal delivery.
Standard delivery - is normal postal delivery - as opposed to special, recorded or courier delivery.
Not really. Normal delivery is painful, but so is a C-section after the anesthesia wears off. But it takes a very long time to heal from a C-section and you can't do normal activities for weeks.
There is no direct opposite. The choice is normal labor (vaginal delivery) or surgical delivery.
there is no pathophysiology for NSD!!
Yes
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Normal delivery is birth of the baby emerging through the vagina into the outside world, as nature intended. Caesarean delivery is delivery of the baby by a surgical incision into the abdomen, then the womb, to extract the baby directly from the womb. It is so-called because it was supposedly the way Julius Caesar came into this world.
With "test tube babies" the only difference is that the eggs are fertilized in a lab, then implanted in the mother, or a surrogate. The same problems that can prevent normal delivery in a regular pregnancy can also prevent normal delivery in the case of test tube babies.