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Scan picture, month 1

Pregnancy - Month 1

The beginning portion of what we consider the first month of pregnancy is actually your period until you ovulate. You are not actually pregnant during this time frame, but knowing the first day of your last normal period (LMP) we are able to more accurately calculate your due date. Conception usually occurs within 24 hours of ovulation, about 14 days before the start of your next period. The egg and the sperm meet in the outer third of the Fallopian tube and travel over the course of the next seven to ten days, down the tube to the uterus. Once in the uterus, the fertilized egg will implant into the fluffy, nutrient rich lining of the uterus. Immediately chemical signals are sent to your body that pregnancy has occurred. Ovulation will halt. Your period will not come. Your baby is called a blastocyst as it implants. The baby measures about 0.1-0.2 mm. At the end of the fourth week of pregnancy, the chorionic villi are formed. The yolk sac is helping to sustain the pregnancy until the placenta is fully formed. You might even begin to suspect you're pregnant.

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   Pregnancy

Get Your Baby Sleeping


Bringing a new baby into the world is a beautiful experience, but it can also be filled with a multitude of anxieties. One major source of that anxiety is in trying to figure out how to get your baby sleeping through the night. Hopefully this article will provide you with some important tips from the baby sleep book, Sleep Baby Sleep, and will get you started on your way to having a better sleeping baby and a well-rested house.

Behavioural Problems in Children


Any parent knows how annoying and stressful their children's bad behaviour can be, no matter what the circumstances. Fighting with their family, throwing temper tantrums, not doing as they are told and answering back their parents stand for just a small part of behavioural problems in children.

Parenting Issues


Welcome to our newest section, here we hope to be able to provide you with some requested information. As you may notice we do have a poll in place, the results of which are combined with other requests we receive. Information is then collated and passed on to our team of dedicated researches who are working valiantly to bring you all the information you require.

Bedwetting


Don't worry, bedwetting is surprisingly common. Around one in eight children starting primary school today still wet the bed regularly at night. Fortunately there is hope, as bedwetting becomes less common as children get older. Around 5% of 10 year olds (that's one in twenty) and 2% of 12 to 14 year olds (one in fifty) still wet the bed.

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