If the proportion of pregnancies ending in miscarriage is 15%, then the probability of two consecutive miscarriages is 2.25% and the probability of three consecutive miscarriages is 0.34%. The occurrence of recurrent pregnancy loss is 1%.
The same study found that pregnancies from men older than forty years are 60% more likely to end in miscarriage than the 2529-year age group.
Of women who seek clinical treatment for bleeding during pregnancy, about half will go on to have a miscarriage.
Women pregnant from ART methods, and women with a history of miscarriage, may be monitored closely and so detect a miscarriage sooner than women without such monitoring.
It also shortens the duration and heaviness of bleeding, and is the best treatment for physical pain associated with the miscarriage.
People who have not experienced a miscarriage themselves may find it hard to empathize with what has occurred and how upsetting it may be. This may lead to unrealistic expectations of the parents' recovery. The pregnancy and miscarriage are hardly mentioned anymore in conversation, often because the subject is too painful. This can make the woman feel particularly isolated. Inappropriate or insensitive responses from the medical profession can add to the distress and trauma experienced, so in some cases attempts have been made to draw up a standard code of practice.
Source: Wikipedia > Miscarriage
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