
The Full Prenatal Care Guide
6 min readUpdated April 01, 2025
6 min readUpdated April 01, 2025
Getting good healthcare during your pregnancy is important for both you and your baby.
Prenatal care helps boost your chances of having a full-term pregnancy and delivering a healthy baby. Plus, having regular visits to your healthcare provider offers a great opportunity to get answers to any questions you have about your pregnancy and the birth of your baby.
You've got plenty of options for your prenatal care. This guide helps you get a grip on the kinds of prenatal care available, laying out some choices you might have.
Keep reading to discover why prenatal care matters, how to pick a great prenatal healthcare provider, what to expect during visits, which tests might be suggested, and more.
What Prenatal Care Is and Why It’s Important
Prenatal care is the healthcare you receive while you're expecting. It involves regular checkups, which might include tests and exams, and gives you a chance to talk about what to anticipate during your pregnancy, labor, and delivery.
If you're curious why prenatal care is important, it's because it keeps you and your baby healthy and safe. With prenatal care, your healthcare provider can catch any health issues early on and address them. Plus, prenatal care gives you a chance to get tips on having a healthy pregnancy from your provider.
It's a good idea to see your healthcare provider as soon as you decide you want to have a baby. Taking care of your health and preparing for a successful conception helps put you on the path to a healthy pregnancy.
If you’ve just discovered that you’re pregnant and you didn’t get a chance to visit your provider beforehand, don’t worry. You’ll certainly still benefit from great prenatal care to help ensure you have a healthy pregnancy.
After you’ve selected a prenatal care provider, they'll set up your schedule. This includes planning the timing of your first prenatal checkup.
How to Choose Your Prenatal Care Doctor
Finding a healthcare provider is one of the most important decisions you’ll make in the early stages of your pregnancy.
You’ll want to choose a prenatal healthcare provider with a good reputation, of course, but it’s also crucial that they listen to you, care about your preferences, and respect you. The key is to choose someone you feel comfortable with.
Another thing to consider as you begin your search for a prenatal healthcare provider is where you want to have your baby. If you’d prefer to have your baby at a specific hospital or birthing center, or if you’re considering a home birth, make sure your provider supports your choice and can deliver your baby to the place you want.
Your current healthcare provider can give you recommendations for a prenatal care provider, and you may also want to ask parents in your circle for their opinions about their prenatal healthcare providers.
Your health insurance provider will also have a list you can check to help you find a prenatal care provider.
As you do your research, you’ll find different types of healthcare providers that can give you care during pregnancy, labor, and childbirth. Depending on your pregnancy and preferences, you may end up with one or a combination of the following:
Timing of Your Prenatal Checkups
As soon as you find out that you're pregnant, call your healthcare provider's office to set up an appointment. This first prenatal visit might take place as early as 6 to 8 weeks of pregnancy.
If you don’t have any risk factors that complicate your pregnancy, your prenatal care provider may recommend the standard schedule for checkups, which is:
Every 4 weeks until you’re 28 weeks pregnant
Every 2 weeks between 28 and 36 weeks
Once a week from 36 weeks until the birth of your baby.
If yours is a high-risk pregnancy or if a special circumstance arises, your healthcare provider may recommend scheduling additional tests or more frequent prenatal checkups.
Your provider will determine whether your pregnancy is considered high-risk by taking into account certain factors, such as if you
What Might Happen at Your Prenatal Care Visits
Most of your prenatal checkups will include:
During each of your visits, your healthcare provider will ask several questions and sometimes offer you various prenatal tests.
Between visits, keep a list of any questions or concerns you have, and be sure to raise them during your next prenatal visit.
Of course, if something is urgent or distressing, or if you experience a pregnancy symptom you think shouldn’t be ignored, you can reach out to your healthcare provider anytime at all.
Types of Prenatal Tests
Prenatal tests are various medical tests you’ll be offered throughout your pregnancy. Some prenatal tests will be done several times during your pregnancy, and some you’ll get only at certain times or under specific conditions.
Two primary types of prenatal tests are screening tests and diagnostic tests:
First Trimester Prenatal Care: Visits and Tests
During your first prenatal care visit, you’ll get a complete physical exam, have blood tests done, and get an estimate of your due date, which will let you know approximately how far along you are.
Your healthcare provider may prescribe you prenatal vitamins, such as a prenatal multivitamin that contains folic acid.
Folic acid is an important vitamin that can help protect your baby from neural tube defects and also from cleft lip and palate.
You might also be offered vaccinations, like a flu shot.
Your first prenatal care visit will include your healthcare provider taking a full health history, and you’ll be asked about your lifestyle and relationships, among other things. Be open and honest, because your answers help your provider determine how to provide you with the best prenatal care possible.
If you don’t feel comfortable sharing openly with your provider, consider finding one you trust.
During your first or second prenatal care visit, you may also have a pelvic exam, a breast exam, and a cervical exam, which includes a Pap test.
Your provider will also check your uterus. Some healthcare providers may do this via an ultrasound exam.
Near the end of your first trimester, your healthcare provider might use what’s called a Doppler to listen to your baby’s heartbeat. This is a thrilling moment as you finally get to hear that wonderful sign of life.
Here are descriptions of some tests and exams your prenatal care provider might recommend during the first trimester:
Second Trimester Prenatal Care: Visits and Tests
During your second trimester prenatal care visits, your healthcare provider will
Your healthcare provider will also continue to check your weight and blood pressure at every visit.
These prenatal tests, should you choose to have them, might be done during the second trimester:
Third Trimester Prenatal Care: Visits and Tests
At one of your prenatal visits, your healthcare provider may recommend you start doing kick counts (also called fetal movement counts) to track how often your baby moves. Your provider will explain how to do these, but you may find this Fetal Movement Tracker helpful.
You might be offered a Tdap vaccination, which is a vaccination that protects you and your baby against pertussis (also called whooping cough), an infection that's very dangerous for newborns, as well as tetanus and diphtheria.
Near the end of your third trimester, at around 36 weeks, you’ll start having weekly prenatal checkups. Your healthcare provider will continue to check your baby’s heartbeat and movement, as well as your blood pressure and weight gain.
Your healthcare provider will also check the position of your baby. If your baby is not facing head down — for example, if he’s in a breech position — your provider will discuss your options with you.
This prenatal test, should you choose to have it, is done during the third trimester:
Prenatal Care Cost
The extra expense of prenatal care can be overwhelming even if you have health insurance.
Fortunately, every state has a program to help with prenatal care. If you’d like to see what are the essentials for prenatal care and what no-cost or low-cost care you’re eligible for, start by contacting the U. S. Department of Health and Human Services or your local Health Department.
You might also find help through
FAQS AT A GLANCE
Your prenatal care doctor, midwife, or nurse will monitor your and your baby’s health throughout your pregnancy. Your healthcare provider will also give you tips on how to have a healthy pregnancy. Prenatal care visits usually include physical exams, blood pressure checks, weight checks, and various other tests like blood and urine tests. Your prenatal care may also include various screening and diagnostic tests, should you wish to have them.
The Bottom Line
Staying healthy during pregnancy, and helping your baby grow and develop, starts with good prenatal care. We hope our prenatal care pamphlet has helped you better understand the benefits of prenatal care and given you a rough idea of your prenatal care schedule for the coming weeks, months, and trimesters of your pregnancy.
Looking for more support and rewards during your pregnancy journey? Download the Pampers Rewards App to earn rewards for your purchases, access exclusive offers, and get helpful tips tailored to each stage of your baby's development.
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