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Expectant and Postpartum Moms
Reply to "Blood type changed during pregnancy"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Why do any pregnancy care then? Why do ultrasounds? If things don't work out and the baby or mom does it's just meant to be, right?[/quote] Because we have science. Again, your whataboutism doesn’t work here. [/quote] Science that develop the shot for rh incapability? That same science? [/quote] I don’t know why you can’t seem to understand that I’m not against people receiving the shot for Rh incompatibility once a child that is at risk has already been created. I’m not against modern medicine. I simply believe that Rh positive and Rh negative people are not meant to have children together.[/quote] What is the meaning of “meant”? What entity is decreeing this? [/quote] What I mean by that is that they’re incompatible. It has negative consequences that are only mitigated by Rhogam.[/quote] Just like a million other negative consequences of biology that are mitigated by science and medicine and technology. [/quote] If those negative consequences were easily avoidable, then I'd get your point.[/quote] A Rhogham shot is an easy way to avoid a dead baby. I got one for my second kid and it was painless and not particularly expensive as far as I remember. These shots are part of the (many) reasons, infant mortality has declined. And FWIW-my OBGYN did write my blood type incorrectly and I caught it, which was a big deal, because with what she inputted, I wouldn't have needed a Rhogam shot, and my baby would have been at risk. People need to get a basic understanding of biology to be good advocates for their children.[/quote] Here's the point that I've been trying to make. If you know that you're Rh negative then by avoiding having a child with an Rh positive person, you completely eliminate the risk of Rh incompatibility and the need for Rhogam altogether. If you avoid heavily drinking alcohol, then you reduce (but not completely eliminate as it has other causes) your risk of cirrhosis of the liver and the need for a liver transplant. I am all about trying to reduce or eliminate your risk (when possible) BEFORE you get to the point where you need medical intervention.[/quote] Jesus christ, lady, I sure hope you stay home in a box to prevent interacting with the world and never get sick or in any accidents, so that you never ever take antibiotics or go to any emergency room or do anything ever at all, because a[b] Rhogam shot is about as low-risk, cheap, one-and-done as you can imagine.[/b] You sound an awful lot like a eugenicist. [/quote] Nah. I agree with the pp on that. The Rhogam shot is made from human blood and carries the risk of contracting infectious diseases. I also doubt you'd be entitled to any sort of compensation if you did contract an infectious disease from it. If you're blessed enough to be able to avoid it then you definitely should.[/quote] Yes, you're being injected with blood products from complete strangers.[/quote] ... do you know how blood transfusions work?[/quote] There are people who only will consent to blood donations from those who never received a COVID vaccine, so, you know. There's a lot of interesting opinions out there. [/quote] I mean, they literally don't sort blood that way so those people are just choosing to die. I don't know why anyone would decline the Rh factor when there's such a high risk of serious issues if you don't.[/quote] Because the plethora of great marriage options means it's no biggie to sort out potential candidates based on their Rh factor, the size and shape of their ear canals (to mitigate the horror of an ear infection in their future child), whether or not they are flat-footed, and if their parents needed reading glasses. [/quote] Oh sh+t. No lie, I’m a Rh-, two-time Rhogam-using, flat-footed, reading-glass wearing, eustachian-tube-dysfunction-having woman here. Glad I reproduced before reading this thread! Also no lie, I have a flat footed child with chronic sinus disease who is a professional athlete. And two other delightful children. What an utterly bizarre person the eugenisist PP is. [/quote]
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