Pregnancy
Week-by-week guidance, symptom explanations, nutrition facts, and red-flag awareness for every trimester.
Spotting in Early Pregnancy — Panic or Normal?
Light spotting in the first trimester is common — it happens in 15-25% of pregnancies and is usually caused by implantation bleeding or cervical sensitivity. However, heavy bleeding with clots, severe one-sided pain, or dizziness are emergency warning signs that need immediate medical attention.
6 questions answered · Updated 2026-02-16
ሦስተኛ ወር ውስጥ የሚኖሩ ነገሮች ማንም የማይነግርዎት
የሦስተኛ ወር የብርሃን እግር, የምርጥ ዕውቀት, የተለያዩ ምስል, የእንቅልፍ እና የዳር የማስታወሻ ይወዳድር። እነዚህ በእርግዝናዎ የሚኖሩ የምርጥ ዕውቀት ይወዳድር፣ የምርጥ ዕውቀት ይወዳድር፣ የምርጥ ዕውቀት ይወዳድር፣ የምርጥ ዕውቀት ይወዳድር።
7 questions answered · Updated 2026-02-16
Braxton Hicks vs Real Contractions — The Actual Difference
Braxton Hicks contractions are irregular, painless-to-mild, and stop with rest or hydration — they're your uterus practicing for labor. Real contractions are regular, get progressively stronger, and don't stop no matter what you do. Use the 5-1-1 rule: contractions 5 minutes apart, lasting 1 minute each, for 1 hour.
6 questions answered · Updated 2026-02-16
Foods to Actually Avoid During Pregnancy (and Myths That Aren't True)
The real risks during pregnancy are raw or undercooked meat, fish, and eggs; high-mercury fish; unpasteurized dairy and juice; and deli meats unless heated until steaming. Many common fears are myths — cooked sushi, coffee under 200mg, and pasteurized soft cheeses are all fine. Alcohol is the only true zero-tolerance item.
7 questions answered · Updated 2026-02-16
5 የእምነት አስቀድሞ ምልክቶች የሚያውቁ የእንግዳ እንደሆነ ይወዳድሩ
የእንግዳ እንደሆነ ይወዳድሩ የእምነት አስቀድሞ ምልክቶች እነዚህ ናቸው: ከፍተኛ ራስ ክብደት ከእይታ ለውጥ (ፕሪክላምፕሲያ), ከፍተኛ የእንግዳ ወይም የእምነት አስቀድሞ ምልክቶች ይወዳድሩ። እነዚህ ምልክቶች የሕይወት ድርጊት ሊያደርጉ ይችላሉ - እንዲሁ ወደ ኤር ይሂዱ። ወደ እንደ ምርጥ ይጠይቃሉ።
6 questions answered · Updated 2026-02-16
First Trimester Week by Week — What to Expect (Weeks 1-13)
The first trimester spans weeks 1-13 and is a period of extraordinary development — by week 13 your baby has all major organs forming, a beating heart, and is about the size of a lemon. You may experience nausea, fatigue, and breast tenderness as hormones surge. Key milestones include your first prenatal visit (weeks 8-10), hearing the heartbeat, and the first-trimester screening.
6 questions answered · Updated 2026-02-16
ሁለተኛ ወር ከሳምንት ወደ ሳምንት — ምን እንደሚጠበቅ (ሳምንታት 14-27)
የሁለተኛ ወር (ሳምንታት 14-27) በእንቅልፍ ወቅት ይባላል — የምርጥ ዕድል ይወዳድሩ፣ ኃይል ይመለስ፣ እና የሕፃንዎን እንቅልፍ የመጀመሪያ ጊዜ ይረዳሉ። ዋነኛ የምርጥ እንቅልፍ ወቅት በሳምንት 20 የአናቶሚ ስካን እና በሳምንት 24 የሕፃን ዕድል ይወዳድሩ።
6 questions answered · Updated 2026-02-16
Third Trimester Week by Week — What to Expect (Weeks 28-40+)
The third trimester (weeks 28-40+) is the home stretch — your baby gains most of their weight, lungs mature, and the brain develops rapidly. You'll experience increasing discomfort as baby grows, but every week in the womb improves outcomes. Key milestones include the baby turning head-down, Group B strep testing at weeks 36-37, and recognizing the signs of labor.
7 questions answered · Updated 2026-02-16
Every Pregnancy Symptom Explained — The Complete Guide
Pregnancy symptoms are caused by dramatic hormonal shifts, increased blood volume, and the physical demands of growing a baby. Most symptoms like nausea, fatigue, and aches are normal and manageable with evidence-based strategies. Knowing what's typical versus what's a warning sign empowers you to advocate for your comfort and safety.
7 questions answered · Updated 2026-02-16
Your Prenatal Care Schedule — Every Test and Appointment Explained
Prenatal care follows a structured schedule — monthly visits through week 28, biweekly through week 36, then weekly until delivery. Key tests include first-trimester screening, the anatomy scan at week 20, glucose testing at weeks 24-28, and Group B strep at weeks 36-37. Each appointment monitors your health and your baby's development.
6 questions answered · Updated 2026-02-16
Pregnancy Nutrition — What to Eat, Supplements, and Hydration
Good nutrition during pregnancy supports your baby's development and your own health. Focus on folate-rich foods and at least 400mcg supplementation, 27mg of iron daily, 1000mg of calcium, adequate vitamin D, and 8-12 glasses of water. During nausea, prioritize whatever you can keep down — survival eating is completely valid in the first trimester.
6 questions answered · Updated 2026-02-16
Exercise During Pregnancy — What's Safe, What to Avoid
Exercise during pregnancy is not only safe for most women — it's strongly recommended. ACOG advises at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise per week. Benefits include reduced risk of gestational diabetes, preeclampsia, and cesarean delivery, plus better mood, sleep, and postpartum recovery. Key safe activities include walking, swimming, prenatal yoga, and pelvic floor exercises.
6 questions answered · Updated 2026-02-16
Labor Preparation — Signs, When to Go, Pain Management, and C-Section
True labor contractions get progressively closer, longer, and stronger — unlike Braxton Hicks, they don't stop when you rest or change positions. Go to the hospital when contractions are 5 minutes apart, lasting 1 minute, for at least 1 hour (the 5-1-1 rule). Pain management ranges from breathing techniques and hydrotherapy to epidurals, and about 1 in 3 births in the U.S. are cesarean sections.
6 questions answered · Updated 2026-02-16
Pregnancy Mental Health — Anxiety, Depression, Body Image, and Fear of Birth
Mental health challenges during pregnancy are common and treatable — up to 1 in 5 women experience prenatal anxiety or depression. Hormonal shifts, physical changes, fear of childbirth, and relationship stress all contribute. Seeking help is a sign of strength, not weakness. Therapy, support groups, and in some cases medication are all safe and effective options.
6 questions answered · Updated 2026-02-16
Medication Safety During Pregnancy — What's Safe, What to Avoid
Some medications are safe during pregnancy, some are dangerous, and many fall into a gray area. Acetaminophen (Tylenol) is the go-to pain reliever; avoid ibuprofen and aspirin (unless prescribed). Never stop prescribed medications without consulting your provider — untreated conditions can be more harmful than the medications used to treat them. Always check with your provider before taking anything new.
6 questions answered · Updated 2026-02-16
HIV and Pregnancy — Protecting Yourself and Your Baby
With proper antiretroviral therapy (ART), the risk of transmitting HIV to your baby drops to less than 1%. Routine prenatal screening catches most cases early, and treatment is safe and effective during pregnancy. Breastfeeding decisions depend on your viral load and your setting — both breastfeeding with viral suppression and formula feeding are valid choices. Your baby will receive prophylactic medication after birth and be tested over the first 18 months. You are not alone, and excellent support networks exist.
7 questions answered · Updated 2026-02-23
Pregnancy Myths Debunked — What Science Actually Says
Pregnancy is surrounded by well-meaning but scientifically unfounded advice. No food determines your baby's sex or skin color. Exercise is beneficial, not dangerous. Sex is safe in most pregnancies. You don't need to eat for two. Raising your arms won't cause cord wrapping. And while one heartburn study found a weak correlation with baby hair, it's not a reliable predictor. When in doubt, ask your provider — no question is too small.
7 questions answered · Updated 2026-02-23
Abuse During Pregnancy — Recognizing It, Getting Help, and Safety Planning
Abuse during pregnancy is more common than most people realize — it affects 3-9% of pregnancies and often escalates during this time. Abuse is not just physical violence; it includes emotional manipulation, sexual coercion, financial control, and reproductive coercion. If you're experiencing any form of abuse, it's not your fault, and you deserve help on your terms. Safety planning, trusted contacts, and confidential resources like the National Domestic Violence Hotline (1-800-799-7233) are available whenever you're ready.
7 questions answered · Updated 2026-02-23