Product Description The OV-Watch Sensor Pack contains the specialized biosensor to be used only with the OV-Watch Fertility Prediction Device. This sensor is a non-allergenic device used by the watch to gather readings from your skin under sustained contact. Each Sensor is good for one cycle and should be replaced at the beginning of each cycle. SPEE01-01 contains a 1-month supply of sensors and English language instructions. The expiration date for an unopened sensor is published on the foil package and Sensor Box label.
When you are having problems trying to conceive and looking to find some answers, an important first step is to try to understand how your body works. The experts will tell you, you need to have regular sex throughout your menstrual cycle (several times a week). But do you know when the most fertile time is?
Your body is most fertile just before ovulation. Knowing when your body is about to ovulate will help you to time intercourse with your peak fertility.
So what are the signs that you are about to ovulate? The easiest way to identify…
A woman’s most fertile days to conceive is a period when a woman can get pregnant quickly. A woman can get pregnant when sperm comes into contact with the ovum. Each month a woman’s body discharges through the vagina. This is called menstruation. Right before the discharge, the ovaries will release an ovum, which travels through the fallopian tube to the uterus.
When a woman has intercourse and the sperm of her partner is in the uterus, then the egg and the sperm will meet and then fertilization begins. Your most fertile days to conceive are right before your…
Calculating a date of ovulation requires keeping track of cervical mucous changes, body temperature changes and the cycle days, as ovulation usually occurs during day 14 of a 28-day menstrual cycle… (more…)
From Publishers Weekly
Many of the growing number of books about adoption are essentially how-tos, guiding prospective adoptive parents through the emotional and legal thickets adoption requires. Rosenberg, a family therapist and professor of psychiatry at the University of Michigan, has written a more unusual work: a careful, scholarly examination of the psychological relationships involved in the strange three-way partnership of child, birth parents and adoptive parents. Each party, she points out, has its own set of priorities and anxieties, and she addresses these with imagination and empathy (she might have included more case studies, however, in…
I want to get pregnant in the beginning of May of next year. I run out of my birth control pills in mid-January so I will be charting my cycle starting then.
I plan to take my temperature and chart my cervical mucus for 3.5 months before trying to conceive.
Will this be enough time to get an idea of when I ovulate? What should I do?
*Continuing the discussion from the original post found here.
I had amenorrhea as an adolescent and I was put on the pill to get my menstrual cycle started. I now have regular periods but I was curious to know if my history would complicate conceiving a child? Thanks for your time!
*Continuing the discussion from the original post found here.
I had a baby 1/18/08 and I bled two and a half weeks after and then stopped. It is now 2/27/08 and I started my period. I was told that I should’nt have a period until at 2-3 months after childbirth but it’s only been a month and a half. Is something wrong with me or is this normal for some women.
*Continuing the discussion from the original post found here.