The role of maternal and child handbook: To give birth to a baby in Beijing, a Beijing maternal and child health record must be established, generally referred to as the maternal and child health handbook. All pregnant women who give birth in Beijing must first establish this file. In many hospitals, it is also necessary to apply for a maternal and child health manual first.
Materials required for handling the maternal and child handbook: the husband and wife's ID card, marriage certificate, household registration book, B-ultrasound fetal heart embryo bud or a good pregnancy certificate. The requirements of Beijing community service center are different. It is recommended that pregnant mothers consult the community center near their home in advance.
Extended data:
Precautions:
1. Both parties are registered in this city, with the woman's account as the main one, one party is a collective account, and the other party is a local account, with the woman's account as the main one. Both parties are registered in other places, with the address of the woman's residence permit/card as the main address. When both parties are collective accounts, the woman's account is the main one.
2. Household registration in this city: the original ID card, household registration book, marriage certificate and B-ultrasound list of both parties (embryo buds with fetal heart after 6 weeks).
3. The woman's collective household registration book, the man's household registration book in Dongxiaokou District: the original ID cards of both parties, the household registration book, the marriage certificate B, and the super-birth list (the embryo with fetal heart after 6 weeks).
4. Married to Beijing: original ID cards of both parties, husband's household registration book, marriage certificate and B-ultrasound list (embryo with fetal heart after 6 weeks).
5. Foreign hukou of both parties: original ID cards of both parties, residence cards of both parties, and B-ultrasound list (embryo bud with fetal heart after 6 weeks).
Baidu encyclopedia-maternal and infant health archives