From your first pregnancy calculator and due date predictions, we have you covered. Just The Facts, Baby will prepare you with the expert
pregnancy facts and advice you need to navigate your pregnancy in style. Here's how to look and feel your best and be prepared when your
new baby arrives.
From blood tests to glucose screening, here’s what to expect at your next prenatal appointment
Throughout your pregnancy, you’ll routinely find yourself being poked, prodded and pricked with needles, but you may not always know why. Because it’s easy to lose track of what you’re being tested for, here’s what to expect from prenatal appointments from your first trimester right up until your baby is born:
From morning sickness to breech babies, acupuncture may be the answer to your pregnancy problems.
Whether you're vomiting your way through your first trimester or are plagued by pregnancy-related aches and pains in your second and third, acupuncture may be the key to relieving your discomfort. Here's how it can help you have a happier, healthier pregnancy in each trimester:
From birth certificates and SIN numbers to passports and RESPs: here's how to tackle your newborn's paperwork.
Getting a photo that won’t be rejected by the passport authorities is just one of the challenges associated with newborn identification. Here’s what you need to know about your baby’s government paper project.
For most moms-to-be, working out has many health benefits. Here’s a look at the latest research on how exercise can improve your pregnancy.
It may be tempting to take a nine-month sabbatical from the Stairmaster when you’re pregnant, but exercise during pregnancy has many important health benefits: it decreases the risk of urinary incontinence and can help reduce some of the common discomforts of pregnancy, including backache, swelling and constipation.
The last thing any pregnant woman wants to hear is that there's one more thing she should give up. But a study published in The American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology found expecting mothers should monitor their caffeine intake, especially in early pregnancy.
The study followed more than 1,000 women throughout their pregnancies and found a substantial link between caffeine in early pregnancy and miscarriage rates. This wasn't the first study to find such a link, but it is getting more attention than past research.