The nine-month journey your baby goes on before birth is nothing short of a miracle.These amazing 3D ultrasound pictures give a unique glimpse into the way your baby grows during pregnancy.Click through to see how your baby develops - and moves
Congratulations! You’re halfway through your pregnancy – although many women will go beyond 40 weeks or even have the baby a bit early.Everything you need to know about your second trimester. Check our live webchats board regularly for information
You’re 27 weeks pregnant!Make sure you are drinking lots of fluids - and grab a seat when you travel on busy buses or trains. Don’t be shy: push your stomach out on public transport so no one can ignore your bump, and ask others to give up
It’s Week 39 of your pregnancy, and there’s just a week to go! You may now be experiencing regular Braxton Hicks contractions, in preparation for the real thing.Everything you need to know about labourStrategies for coping with the pain
It’s week 8 of your pregnancy and amazing changes are taking place with you and your baby.Your baby She is prawn-shaped, with a big head and tail. Crack open the (non-alcoholic!) fizz - your baby is now a foetus, not an embryo, and is around 16mm
Congratulations it’s Week 40 of your pregnancy! Your baby is now waiting for the hormonal tip that gets things going, and your life is about to change forever!Everything you need to know about labourLooking after a newbornYour baby Only 5% of babies
Well into the final trimester of your pregnancy and feeling as though you've been pregnant forever? By this stage, most mums-to-be are feeling unwieldy, uncomfortable and desperate to meet that little person theyve been nurturing for so many months
pregnancy is considered to start from the first day of your last period, which means you'll be considered to be four weeks pregnant when you miss your first period.Your due date is not calculated from your fertile times or from when you had sex
fields include high-risk pregnancies and deliveries. Midwife Jenny hosts a monthly birth, pregnancy and baby webchat live on babyexpert on the last Monday of every month. Sign up to our weekly emails for full info, or visit our messageboard to find out
, stand up for a while. This will aid blood flow and help ease conditions such as varicose veins. This is also a good time to really ramp up your pelvic floor exercises. You’ll be glad of them following the birth.You may be starting to worry about