Pregnancy is nothing new. In fact, it has been going on since the birth of mankind (womankind? Man&woman kind? Childrenkind, that's the ticket!). With over six million pregnancies a year in the United States alone, approximately four million babies will be born. Whether from New York or a sleepy hamlet in the middle of Montana almost a million of these women will suffer some sort of complication during their pregnancies. Screening is important for more than the obvious reasons. Knowing you are pregnant early can help the fetus develop healthier than otherwise, as women are apt to stop their unhealthy habits sooner.
Women dealing with pregnancy are bombarded by facts from the moment they complete their screening procedure in a doctor's office. In this article, we shall take a quick and humorous look at some of the facts that doctor's sometimes neglect to mention to moms-to-be. Even the most jaded of women from New York may get a shock out of some of these facts. Here are three of the oddest pregnancy facts a woman should know:
Regardless of when screening is administered a woman can be pregnant for over a year! This is hard to believe but true. Even though doctors who monitor pregnant patients are likely to induce labor through a variety of ways if the pregnancy is taking too long, in the olden days a woman could routinely be pregnant for way over nine months. The record for a pregnancy is three hundred and seventy five days—and the baby weighed less than seven pounds. Look at it this way, if you are pregnant for over a year in New York that's just more time to scarf down pastrami sandwiches and milkshakes.
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