Gazing upon your baby isn’t just sentimental, it’s a matter of safety. To keep a watchful eye on your baby when you’re not in the same room (such as during nap time), buy a baby movement monitor.
Feeling your baby's first movements, often described as flutters or bubbles, usually starts between 16 and 20 weeks of pregnancy. Fetal hiccups are normal in the womb and generally not a concern ...
Jennifer Lopez, Gwen Stefani and Nicole Kidman each own a kickTrak. But it’s no celebrity workout fad — it’s a portable fetal movement monitor. Counting kicks and other fetal movements gives expectant ...
Lydia Barkley was beautiful and perfect – a 3½-pound baby girl and her parents’ first born child. Danielle Barkley advocates now in honor of her daughter and other families whose babies were stillborn ...
Recent research that measured fetal movements in pregnant women has found that higher frequencies were strongly linked to greater maternal attachment. Paying conscious attention to these signals may ...
When Fernanda Sheridan was 38 weeks pregnant with her daughter Natalie, she noticed that Natalie started jerking a lot. “I didn’t think much of it. I thought that she was going to be a soccer player,” ...
Trying to describe what it feels like when a baby moves inside you is a bit like trying to explain what déjà vu feels like—vivid, strangely specific, and somehow completely elusive. For expectant ...
When Fernanda Sheridan was 30 weeks pregnant with her daughter Natalie, she noticed that Natalie started jerking a lot. “I didn’t think much of it. I thought that she was going to be a soccer player,” ...
Your baby’s movement may change from week to week during pregnancy, which is completely normal. These changes depend on your baby’s growth, sleep cycles, space in the womb and your daily routine. But ...
ABC News' Ginger Zee opens up about her own pregnancy experience. — -- ABC News chief meteorologist Ginger Zee is expecting her second child in February. While Zee, 37, wakes up early to report ...
A month-by-month development guide to an active baby. When you first set eyes on your scrunched-up newborn, it’s hard to imagine her even straightening her legs, let alone using them to sit, stand and ...