Pregnancy

High-risk pregnancy — when it gets more special

"High-risk pregnancy" sounds threatening — and applies to a large share of all pregnancies, often just because of one tick in the maternity record. Here is what the term really means and what care then looks like.

a large share of pregnancies
Affected
closer monitoring, not drama
Means
covered
Extra visits
prenatal centres nearby
Network

What "risk" really means

The catalogue in the maternity record is deliberately broad: age over 35, previous caesarean, multiples, diabetes, hypertension, previous miscarriages or preterm births, obesity — a single tick formally makes a "high-risk pregnancy". It is an administrative term, not a prognosis. The vast majority of these pregnancies proceed completely normally — they are simply watched more closely.

What changes in your care

  • Closer appointments and additional ultrasounds — covered, because medically justified
  • Targeted diagnostics depending on the risk: Doppler of vessels, growth checks, earlier glucose testing, more frequent CTG
  • A constant contact person: with us, a familiar face accompanies you throughout — precisely when more appointments are due, that counts
  • Clear escalation paths: we cooperate with the region’s prenatal centres and maternity clinics; when specialised diagnostics are needed, we arrange the appointment instead of leaving you alone with a referral

Work ban & everyday life

Whether sport, travel or work are possible depends on the specific risk — blanket bans help no one. We issue an individual work ban (Beschäftigungsverbot) when your workplace or condition requires it; continued pay is then regulated by law, you suffer no financial disadvantage. Raise workplace strains early — much can be solved with the employer before a ban is needed.

Frequent questions about high-risk pregnancy

I am 36 — is my pregnancy automatically dangerous?

No. The age tick means statistically slightly elevated probabilities for individual complications — it says nothing about your specific pregnancy. The answer is closer observation, not worry.

Does insurance pay for the additional examinations?

Yes. Everything medically prompted by a documented risk is covered — extra ultrasounds, Doppler, more frequent CTGs included.

Do I have to give birth in a clinic — or is a birth centre possible?

That depends on the specific risk. In some constellations a clinic with a paediatric unit is clearly advisable; in others more is possible than you think. We discuss it honestly and early — the choice remains yours.

After a miscarriage: when to try again?

Medically, after an uncomplicated miscarriage there is usually nothing against the next attempt as soon as you are ready — waiting does not lower the risk of recurrence. More important than the calendar is that you feel ready; we talk about that too.

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A tick in your maternity record?

Let us put into context what it concretely means for you — usually less than the word suggests. And where more is needed, we are prepared.

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