Type 1 Diabetes
Women who live with preexisiting Type 1, Type 2 or Gestational diabetes might think, or have been told, that they will have to have a Cesarean to deliver their babies. Is it true?
I never truly gave my diabetes the attention it deserved until I was planning for my first pregnancy. I gave birth to big babies and the nurses blamed my blood sugar control, but that was far from the truth
When you are a woman married to another woman, both of whom desire to carry a baby, the choice seems obvious. One wife can carry the first baby and the other can carry the next...easy right? But what if both wives are considered high risk? This was our dilemma, and here is our journey toward growing our family.
Being diagnosed as an adult with Type 1 Diabetes, Hashimoto’s Thyroid Disease and PCOS I didn’t see having my own children as a possibility, but dreams can come true!
Is it recommended that people who live with diabetes to take aspirin during their pregnancy? Our medical advisory board investigates.
My name is Kaeli and when I found out I was expecting whilie living with diabetes I was scared, but hopefully. And then I was diagnosed at 6 months pregnant with Covid.
Are women with Type 1, Type 2 and Gestational Diabetes at higher risk for Preeclampsia? This is a common question for women living with all forms of diabetes who are pregnant.
Many women who live with preexisting diabetes are hoping to carry to their due date at 40 weeks and often wonder if it is possible while living with diabetes.
PCOS is more common with women with both type 1 and type 2 diabetes. But manifestations of PCOS, meaning how it develops in an individual, are different in people who live with type 1 diabetes, type 2 diabetes, and women who live without diabetes.
Many women wonder if living with PCOS on top of pre existing diabetes will effect their chances of getting pregnant. Will PCOS prevent pregnancy?