Baby's Day Out

Introduction
Some people always bring along a travel guide when they go on a trip. They pore over the maps, study the local customs, and try to learn a bit of the native language. This additional knowledge makes their trip both more comfortable and more enjoyable.

You can think of Baby's day out information guide as your travel guide on your journey through the process of birth. Although the distance is short just a few inches from inside your uterus to the outside world and into your arms-the trip you take with your baby is indeed a new and wondrous journey. Like a travel guide, this session offers you detailed maps, an introduction to the local customs, and a smattering of the native tongue. In this session, the color illustrations are your maps; you will learn about the local customs and procedures that are related to your visits to the hospital; and you will be able to add terms like amniocentesis and placenta to your vocabulary.

Read this session before you visit with your practitioner. Take it with you to your doctor's or midwife's office and use the illustrations to enhance his or her explanations. In fact, your doctor might find the illustrations a helpful aid in answering your questions. Remember this session when you go to the hospital or birthing center so that the new place won't seem strange or frightening. Use this information to help you make the decisions you need to make to help ensure the kind of birth experience that you hope to have.

Like a traditional travel guide, the goal of this information is to help you feel less foreign and more familiar with new surroundings and the new experiences of pregnancy, labor, and delivery. You should know what the amniocentesis procedure will be like before you have one done. If your baby is breech, you should understand what that means and not become alarmed by the term. When you walk into the hospital birthing room, you should recognize the various pieces of equipment and what they are used for. Above all, you should feel neither frightened nor threatened by the new environment and experiences.

And, just as a travel guide cannot tell you exactly what you should see or do to have the best possible trip, this piece of information cannot tell you what you must do to have the best possible birth experience. That's because, like a trip itinerary, what's great for one person may be disappointing for another. Your journey toward becoming a parent is a deeply personal one. Use this information to understand your options and explore your preferences. Do you wish to minimize intervention during labor and delivery, or do the high-tech tools and equipment of the modern hospital provide you with a sense of security during an anxiety-provoking time? Use this information guide to decide what a good birth experience means to you. Then, don't hesitate to share your preferences with your obstetrician or midwife. Your practitioner will not know what you want unless you discuss it beforehand.

Unlike a traditional travel guide, this one intends that everyone wind up at exactly the same place: with a healthy baby and a healthy mother. Most of the time, no special effort is required to reach this outcome. Unfortunately, no one cannot predict which labors might be difficult or which babies might not easily withstand the strain. Above all, be flexible. It might turn out that your baby needs more intervention than you would have wished. That can be a disappointment, but may be less of one if you keep in mind that your deepest wish is for a healthy child.

This information section covers the following four territories: Pregnancy, Labor and Delivery, Common Obstetrical Procedures, and The Newborn. While the organization within each section is chronological, it is not necessary to read the chapters in a sequential order.

This info guide does not contain every possible situation encountered in pregnancy, nor is every possible obstetrical procedure described. Because mastering the practice of obstetrics takes many years of study and experience, no single book could encompass the entire subject.

The information is not intended to substitute for consultation with your own obstetrician or midwife. You can compare reading this information to working with an experienced travel agent in planning a lengthy and extensive excursion. Each pregnancy, labor, and delivery is unique, just as each baby is unique. Only someone familiar with every detail of your situation is qualified to make recommendations about your obstetrical management. However, this info-guide will provide you with detailed explanations of the most commonly encountered issues and obstetrical practices, which will allow you to participate as a full partner in any decision making that may be required.

The ultimate goal of a travel guide is to make your trip as easy and as enjoyable as it can be. This information guide shares this goal. Giving birth to a new life is nothing short of a miracle. Enjoy your part in this miracle to the fullest and celebrate your role in creating and nurturing the new life within you. Prepare to bring your child forth to share in the excitement of your world and the security of your love.

Pregnancy Check

Perhaps, your period is late, or maybe you have noticed some symptoms, and now you are wondering "Am I Pregnant?"

If you have had intercourse or intimate genital contact within the last several months, you could be pregnant. The chances rise dramatically if you are not using birth control, but it is also possible to get pregnant even if you are using birth control, especially if you are not using it regularly or exactly as prescribed.

The most common symptom of pregnancy is a missed period. Other pregnancy symptoms include breast tenderness, bloating and nausea. Symptoms are not reliable for diagnosing pregnancy, however, because many pregnancy symptoms are also premenstrual symptoms. If you are wondering "Am I Pregnant?", you must check a pregnancy test to find out.

Then chance of getting pregnant in any one cycle is 20%. That means that if you have had unprotected intercourse around the time of ovulation, there is a 20% chance that you are pregnant. It is also possible to be pregnant even if you are using birth control. It is rare if you are using a medically approved form of birth control, but it becomes more likely if you don't always use your method every single time, or take your birth control pills every single day. Withdrawal (the pull out method) is a very unreliable form of birth control. If that is your choice of birth control, your chance of pregnancy rises dramatically.

Keep in mind, the only way to answer the question "Am I Pregnant?" is to check a pregnancy test.

Remember pregnancy tests will not be accurate before the day that you expect to get your period.