People do a lot of advice for pregnant women to keep the fetus healthy, but experts warn of the inaccuracy and validity of many of the opinions circulating.
According to the University of Melbourne, Australia, one of the common advice recommends that pregnant women eat enough for two people and this is not right.
Doctors recommend that a woman should maintain a normal and balanced diet, without increasing or reducing the amount of food usual before pregnancy.
Proponents of this idea claim that too much food ensures that the fetus is supplied with energy, but this is followed by a healthy diet, not doubling the amount.
If we all know that pregnancy takes nine months in most cases, doctors show that the duration is not necessarily accurate, and the source explains that the pregnancy usually reaches 40 weeks, ie to nine months and one week.
In another "fairy tale," some say that the movement of the child has been reduced within the uterus in recent months because of the large size, but this is not true.
Doctors say that the movement of the child increases in recent months and becomes more frequent for two reasons. The first is that the fetus becomes larger, and the second is that the fluid in the uterus is decreasing significantly, and thus the pregnant woman becomes more sensitive to movement.
While it is believed that women who are born through labor stimulation are more likely to have a caesarean section, doctors say this is not true either.
In some women, labor is stimulated when the doctor is likely to have a serious problem with maternal and fetal health, but this does not mean that the cesarean section is performed because the latter is for other reasons such as large fetal size or obstetric obstruction.
Many women now believe that regular tests can reveal much about fetal health, such as Down's syndrome. However, there are diseases that require advanced tests such as those known in the medical community as "free embryonic DNA" and allow diagnosis of fetal diseases such as cystic fibrosis .
The technique of "free embryonic DNA" is based on a sample of intravenous blood for the early detection of health problems.
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