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Late Prenatal Care

What It Means and How We'll Take Care of You

A guide for patients starting pregnancy care after the first trimester

What Is "Late" Prenatal Care?

Late prenatal care means starting pregnancy visits after 20 weeks of pregnancy, or missing early appointments in the first trimester.

Typically, prenatal care begins around 8-10 weeks of pregnancy. But starting later is common for many reasons.

It's never too late to start.

Why Early Care Is Recommended

These things are important, but we can address many of them even when care starts later.

Why Does This Happen?

Many patients start care later. Common reasons include:

Life Circumstances

• Didn't realize pregnancy early
• No health insurance
• Transportation challenges
• Work or childcare conflicts

Healthcare Barriers

• Difficulty scheduling appointments
• Language or cultural barriers
• Fear or past negative experiences
• Didn't know where to go

Your care team is here to help, not judge.

Your First Visit: What We'll Ask

To give you the best care, we need to learn about your health:

Catch-Up Testing: What Happens Next

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First Visit
Full exam
Blood tests
Ultrasound
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Initial Testing
HIV, syphilis
Blood type
Anemia screen
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Baby Assessment
Growth check
Anatomy scan
Heart monitoring
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Regular Visits
Every 2-4 weeks
Ongoing monitoring

We'll compress early testing into your first few visits.

Confirming Your Due Date

Ultrasound dating is most accurate before 20 weeks. After that, measurements are less precise.

If you start care after 20 weeks:

What this means: We may have a 2-3 week window for your due date rather than one exact date. This is okay—we'll adjust your care plan based on the best available information.

Screening Options: What's Still Available?

Test Type What Happens if You Start Care Late
First-trimester screening
(11-14 weeks)
Not available after 14 weeks. Other tests can check baby's health.
Cell-free DNA testing
(from 10 weeks on)
Still available at any point in pregnancy.
Anatomy ultrasound
(18-22 weeks)
Can be done if you start care before 22-24 weeks.
Diabetes screening
(24-28 weeks)
We'll do this test as soon as possible if you start care later.

Important Health Screenings

We test for conditions that can affect pregnancy, regardless of when you start care:

Blood Tests

• HIV and syphilis
• Hepatitis B
• Blood type and antibodies
• Anemia (low iron)
• Immunity to rubella

Other Screenings

• Gestational diabetes
• High blood pressure
• Urinary tract infections
• Group B strep (later in pregnancy)
• Baby's growth and position

We'll test for all of these during your first visits.

What We Watch for More Closely

Late prenatal care is associated with higher risk for some complications. We monitor for:

Important: These risks don't mean complications will happen. Regular monitoring helps us catch and treat problems early. Most pregnancies with late care have healthy outcomes.

How We'll Monitor Your Pregnancy

More frequent visits help us make sure you and baby are healthy.

Typical visit schedule when starting late care:

More visits may be needed based on your specific health and baby's growth.

What You Can Do to Have a Healthy Pregnancy

Starting Now

• Take prenatal vitamins daily
• Attend all scheduled appointments
• Tell us about any symptoms
• Ask questions—we're here to help

Healthy Habits

• Eat balanced meals
• Stay hydrated
• Avoid alcohol, tobacco, and drugs
• Get enough rest and movement

Every step you take from now on helps your baby.

You're Not Alone

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Your healthcare team is here to support you—not judge you. We understand that life circumstances vary. Our goal is to work together to give you and your baby the healthiest pregnancy possible from this point forward.

Resources we can connect you with:

Remember These Key Points

It's never too late to start prenatal care
We'll do catch-up testing at your first visits
More frequent monitoring helps ensure healthy outcomes
Your care team is your partner, not your judge

Starting today, we're going to work together to give you and your baby the best possible care.