Pregnancy & Birth
- A breech baby at the end of pregnancy
- A low-lying placenta after 20 weeks (placenta praevia)
- A third- or fourth-degree tear during childbirth
- Abortion care
- Air Travel and Pregnancy
- Alcohol and pregnancy
- An assisted vaginal birth (ventouse or forceps)
- Antenatal Care: routine care for the healthy pregnant woman
- Birth after previous caesarean
- Bleeding and pain in early pregnancy
- Blood transfusion, pregnancy and birth
- Cervical smears and pregnancy
- Chickenpox in pregnancy
- Chorionic villus sampling and amniocentesis
- Cord blood banking
- Corticosteroids in pregnancy to reduce complications from being born prematurely
- Early miscarriage
- Ectopic pregnancy
- Genital herpes in pregnancy
- Gestational diabetes
- Gestational Trophoblastic Disease (GTD)
- HIV in pregnancy
- Induction of labour – Information for people who use NHS services
- Obstetric Cholestasis
- Pre-eclampsia
- Preventing group B streptococcus (GBS) infection in newborn babies
- Recreational exercise and pregnancy
- Recurrent and late miscarriage – tests and treatment of couples
- Reducing the risk of venous thrombosis in pregnancy and after birth
- Shoulder dystocia
- Treatment of venous thrombosis in pregnancy and after birth
- Turning a breech baby in the womb (external cephalic version)
- Umbilical cord prolapse in late pregnancy
- Understanding how risk is discussed in healthcare
- When your baby dies before birth
- When your waters break early
- Why your weight matters during pregnancy and after birth
- Your baby’s movements in pregnancy