Can you have a healthy baby after a stillborn?

There is no reason to delay having another baby after a stillbirth, research in the Lancet suggests. Although women are often told to wait for a year before getting pregnant again, there is little evidence to back up this advice.
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Can you have a baby after a stillbirth?

You will probably ovulate and be fertile 2 weeks before your first period so you could become pregnant very shortly after the stillbirth. However, it is advisable to wait until any scars have healed (for example from an episiotomy or tear) and your cervix has re-closed, to avoid the risk of infection (for the mother).
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What are the chances of having a stillborn baby twice?

Yes. For most women, the chances of having another stillbirth are very low. Less than 1 in 100 women (less than 1 percent) who've had a stillbirth go on to have another stillbirth.
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Can you have a healthy pregnancy and have a stillborn?

Yes. Most women who deliver stillborn babies go on to have normal pregnancies and births. If the stillbirth was caused by a birth defect or umbilical cord problem, the chances of another stillbirth is slight. If the cause was an illness the mother has or a genetic disorder, the risk is somewhat higher.
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How does stillbirth affect the mother?

Women and their partners who experience stillbirth have higher rates of depression, anxiety and other psychological symptoms that may be long lasting. For many women, losing their child and the subsequent care they receive will impact their approach to life and death, self-esteem and even their own identity.
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What are the chances of having a baby after having a stillborn?



How long can an unborn baby survive if the mother dies?

Fetuses can survive for surprisingly long after their mothers pass away, depending on the state of the body. For example, if there is no more circulation in the mother, then she can no longer carry oxygen to the umbilical cord and the fetus will soon die.
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What should I do after stillbirth?

Tell your family and friends what they can do. You may want to spend time alone, or you may seek the comfort of family and friends. Try to eat healthy foods, get some sleep, and get exercise (or just get out of the house) to help you feel strong as you heal. Talk to your doctor about how you are coping.
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What week is stillbirth most common?

The highest risk of stillbirth was seen at 42 weeks with 10.8 per 10,000 ongoing pregnancies (95% CI 9.2–12.4 per 10,000) (Table 2). The risk of stillbirth increased in an exponential fashion with increasing gestational age (R2=0.956) (Fig. 1).
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How can I reduce the risk of stillbirth?

Reducing the risk of stillbirth
  1. Go to all your antenatal appointments. It's important not to miss any of your antenatal appointments. ...
  2. Eat healthily and keep active. ...
  3. Stop smoking. ...
  4. Avoid alcohol in pregnancy. ...
  5. Go to sleep on your side. ...
  6. Tell your midwife about any drug use. ...
  7. Have the flu jab. ...
  8. Avoid people who are ill.
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What causes a baby's heart to stop beating in the womb?

Long-term (chronic) health conditions in the mother (diabetes, epilepsy, or high blood pressure) Problems with the placenta that prevent the fetus from getting nourishment (such as placental detachment) Sudden severe blood loss (hemorrhage) in the mother or fetus. Heart stoppage (cardiac arrest) in the mother or fetus.
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Is pregnancy after stillbirth high risk?

In your pregnancy(ies) following a stillbirth you should be put into a 'high risk' group because you had a previous stillbirth. This usually means that you will get extra care and extra scans to carefully monitor your baby's growth and development.
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Does stillbirth affect fertility?

From my early reading, a few things were clear: stillbirth has profound and sometimes intergenerational effects on families; most parents who have a stillborn baby do conceive again; these parents have a higher risk of (recurrent) stillbirth than parents who have no history of stillbirth; and many parents go through ...
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What do you call a baby born after stillbirth?

A rainbow baby is a name coined for a healthy baby born after losing a baby due to miscarriage, infant loss, stillbirth, or neonatal death.
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What happens to your body after a stillbirth?

After a stillbirth, your body may start producing breast milk, which can cause discomfort and distress. Medicines (dopamine agonists) can stop your breasts producing milk. They cause few side effects and may also help you feel better emotionally, but they aren't suitable if you have pre-eclampsia.
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What is a sunshine baby?

"Angel Baby," "Sunshine Baby," and "Rainbow Baby" are terms that refer to babies born just before or after another baby is lost due to a variety of reasons. They help immediate family members move through the grieving process and find meaning in the loss.
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What is the difference between stillborn and stillbirth?

What Is Stillbirth? Stillbirth is the delivery, after the 20th week of pregnancy, of a baby who has died. Loss of a baby before the 20th week of pregnancy is called a miscarriage. A baby is stillborn in about 1 in 200 pregnancies.
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What causes multiple stillbirths?

In more than 1 of every 10 stillbirths, the fetus had a genetic or structural birth defect that probably or possibly caused the death. Infection. In more than 1 of every 10 stillbirths, the death was likely caused either by an infection in the fetus or in the placenta, or by a serious infection in the mother.
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Are stillbirths rare?

Stillbirth affects about 1 in 160 births, and each year about 24,000 babies are stillborn in the United States. That is about the same number of babies that die during the first year of life and it is more than 10 times as many deaths as the number that occur from Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS).
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What type of infections cause stillbirth?

In developed countries, ascending bacterial infection, both before and after membrane rupture, with organisms such as Escherichia coli, group B streptococci, and Ureaplasma urealyticum is usually the most common infectious cause of stillbirth.
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Can a baby survive a coffin birth?

If the fetal remains are found in a fetal position and are wholly within the pelvic cavity of the adult, the fetus died and was interred before delivery. The pregnant woman may therefore have died due to labor complications.
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What is a grave birth?

The authors of the study suggest that the burial offers a rare example of “post-mortem fetal extrusion,” or “coffin birth,” which occurs when gases build up inside of the body of a deceased pregnant woman and force the fetus out of the birth canal.
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What is the youngest person to have a baby?

1939: Lina Medina becomes the youngest confirmed mother in recorded medical history, delivering a son at the age of 5. The Peruvian child delivered a 5-pound, 8-ounce boy via caesarean section; her small pelvis made it impossible for the baby to pass through the birth canal.
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What is a butterfly baby?

Epidermolysis bullosa is a rare genetic condition that makes skin so fragile that it can tear or blister at the slightest touch. Children born with it are often called “Butterfly Children” because their skin seems as fragile as a butterfly wing. Mild forms may get better with time.
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What is a golden baby?

angel baby: a baby that passes away, either during pregnancy or shortly after. born sleeping: a stillborn baby. golden baby or pot of gold: a baby born after a rainbow baby.
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What is a rainbow baby?

A rainbow baby is a term for a baby that's born after the parents have a pregnancy loss. The name draws on the symbol of the rainbow, representing beauty after a dark time. Nearly one in four pregnancies ends in loss. That could be a miscarriage, stillbirth, ectopic pregnancy, or blighted ovum.
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