Under normal circumstances, pregnant women can recover after giving birth to their children for two years, and regeneration will not have much impact, so they can have a third child after two years. Some pregnant women give birth by caesarean section. If they are pregnant again, it may have a certain impact on the wound. Before you get pregnant, you'd better go to the hospital for a more detailed examination. After the results come out, if the doctor thinks that she can get pregnant again, she can get pregnant. During pregnancy, pregnant women must pay more attention to their physical condition and ensure a balanced diet. It is suggested that after a normal production, the birth interval should be more than 2 years and less than 5 years. The optimal birth interval has not been clearly defined, which is closely related to the result of the previous pregnancy. Moreover, women with different pregnancy outcomes have different optimal birth intervals, so follow the doctor's advice. Being pregnant again in a short time will have an impact on both the mother and the child: the mother's body is not fully recovered, which increases the risk of miscarriage, abortion and anemia, and may also increase the risk of premature rupture of membranes and obstetric complications. Insufficient recovery of maternal nutritional reserves, such as folic acid deficiency, and folic acid is an indispensable substance for fetal growth and development. If the mother lacks folic acid, it will affect the growth and development of the baby's nervous and skeletal systems. For newborns, shorter pregnancy intervals will increase the risk of premature delivery and low birth weight. Nowadays, women generally give birth late, and the first thing they have to face when the interval is too long is to become an elderly woman (medically, women over 35 are generally called elderly women).
Note: Generally speaking, re-pregnancy more than 60 months after delivery is considered as a longer pregnancy interval. A long interval between pregnancies is associated with an increased risk of preeclampsia and dystocia. Especially when the interval between pregnancies is more than 5 years, it is recognized as a risk factor for preeclampsia (pregnancy-induced hypertension with or without systemic organ damage), which is harmful to mothers. At the same time, at this stage, the risk of fetal chromosomal abnormalities will increase, and the risk of chromosomal diseases will increase with the increase of mother's age. In addition to fetal malformations caused by chromosomal abnormalities, the risk of other congenital structural malformations has also increased, including anencephaly, hydrocephalus and cardiac malformations.