You can have your blood taken while you are pregnant. Sometimes they use a needle to remove fluids from your belly. This usually doesn't harm the baby.
You do not need to have the Depo Provera injection during menstruation. The health care provider should be able to advise you about when you should get the injection. If you have a negative pregnancy test, and can commit to retesting for pregnancy in three weeks, there's no reason that you shouldn't get Depo Provera that day.
Betnesol, or betamethasone, is a steroid injection administered during pregnancy when preterm birth is a possibility. The steroid injection helps to produce surfactant in the baby's lungs, allowing them to inflate without sticking together. Normally, babies do not make this surfactant on their own until around 32-35 weeks. If your doctors are recommending this injection for you, they should have detected something that tells them your baby is at risk for premature birth. You should ask for documentation of why this shot is being recommended for you and what your alternatives are. You haven't indicated any risk factors that would necessitate such an injection.
NO birth control. If you are pregnant you don't have to use birth control. Any pill could harm your baby. The pill is to PREVENT pregnancy and that door is all ready closed for you.
Yes, because the child will be positive, so the mother should take the injection made for this kind of situations, this injection will kill the Antibodies that may transform from the child to his mother. if the injection is not taken within a certain period the antibodies will spread in the mother's body, and this will affect the next pregnancy which will kill the next child or cause mental retardation.
Being anemic would make no difference to either pregnancy tests or pregnancy symptoms.
If the mother is o- and its a first pregnancy then there are rarely any complications. Its during subsequent pregnancies when problems arise. If its a first pregnancy with an rh- mother then get all the info you can about an anti d injection and all the times you need to have it which is not only during pregnancy, its any time rh+ blood can mix with rh- blood and cause antibodies.
Yes they can, they can break at any time during your pregnancy. If they do you need to go straight to the hospital as there is an open path for infection to the baby.
It is not bad to have a child with a man with A positive blood if you are type A negative. You will have a Rhogam injection during the pregnancy, which controls any risk in subsequent pregnancies.
It could be anything, but most commonly it is due to the goat just getting an injection. My doe just kidded and we gave her an injection and, at the site of the injection there is a large firm lump. However if you haven't given your goat any injections lately it would be best to take it to a vet.
There are pills you can take to "abort" the pregnancy, but heavy bleeding would be a 'side effect'. So if you're trying to terminate your pregnancy, there will ALWAYS be a side effect.
If it was an ectopic pregnancy, you would still show positive on a pregnancy test. Do you have any other pregnancy symptoms? I would not consider pregnancy unless you feel you may be pregnant from some other sign.
If she did break any laws, there is no record of it that might be public. It is highly unlikey that she would intentionally violate any just law.