Preconception Counseling
The more you understand your body and how it functions, the better equipped you'll be at taking care of yourself to achieve optimal health. We've included the Patient Education section on our website to provide you with valuable, practical wellness information which you can incorporate into your lifestyle to improve the quality of your life. We hope you will turn to these pages whenever you have a question about health related issues and urge you to contact our practice at any time to make an appointment with one of our doctors.
Education For Teens
- Your Changing Body: Puberty in Girls
- Birth Control- Especially In Teens
- Your First Period- Especially for Teens
- Your First Gynecologic Visit- Especially for Teens
- 21 Reason to See a Gynecologist Before Age 21
Labor, Delivery, & Postpartum
- MATERNITY MANUAL - /docs/Maternity-Manual-2.pdf
- How to Tell When Labor Begins
- Postpartum Care
- First Trimester
- ScreeningPrenatal Visits
- Childbirth Settings
- Postpartum Depression
- High Risk Pregnancies
Special Procedures
- Question & Answers about Dilation & Curettage
- Question & Answers about Loop Electrosurgical Excusion Procedure
- Information about Endormetrial-Ablation
- Information about a Hystorectomy
- Question & Answers about Dilation & Curettage
Women’s Health
- Facts and Questions about Menopause
- Facts and Questions about Osteoporsis
- It’s Time to Quit Smoking
- Managing High Blood Pressure
- Cholesterol & Women’s Cardiovasular Heath
Gynecologic Problems
- How to Prevent Sexually Transmitted Infections (STI’s)
- Breast Screening, Mammography & Breast Self Awareness
- Urinary Tract Infections (UTI’s)
- Perimenopausal Bleeding & Bleeding after Menopause
- Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS)
- Urinary Incontinence
- Disorders of the Vulva:Common Causes of Vulvar Pain & Burning
- Human Papillomavirus (HPV Infection)
- Uternine Fibroids
- Premenstral Syndrome (PMS)
- Information about Endometriosis
Pre-conception counseling involves meeting with a doctor (typically an obstetrician or gynecologist) prior to becoming pregnant. If a woman or couple are planning to have a child, experts suggest initiating this sort of counseling approximately three to six months prior to attempting conception. This allows enough time for mental and physical preparation and to identify and treat any underlying problems.
These counseling sessions primarily exist to identify any undetected illnesses or risk factors that could cause problems for both the mother and the fetus. Risk factors may include smoking, alcohol consumption or certain prescription or recreational drugs that can interfere with the fetus' growth and development. Potential obstacles are addressed in questionnaires about the woman's family history and current lifestyle. They include questions about the woman's health, prior pregnancies, medical conditions and genetic background.
Laboratory tests such as blood work and urinalysis can identify other problems, such as anemia or a kidney infection, of which the woman may have been unaware. Other tests may include pelvic examination, screenings for sexually transmitted infections, and a mental health assessment.
After the counseling is completed, the doctor will discuss the results and any recommendations for lifestyle changes to allow for the greatest level of safety and success in conception and fetal development.