What is changing this week

Glucose screening often happens between weeks 24 and 28.

  • Use week 24 as a conversation anchor, not a diagnosis of exact fetal age.
  • Keep your clinician's due-date estimate and care plan as the source of truth.
  • Save medication, symptom, screening, and exposure questions for the next visit or call.

What to ask your care team

Make screening feel like a routine check, not a personal grade.

  • Ask which parts of glucose screening window matter for your personal history.
  • Ask when the next visit, lab, vaccine, screen, or ultrasound is expected.
  • Ask which symptoms should trigger a same-day call for your practice.

When not to wait

Educational reads cannot triage urgent symptoms. Niva keeps warning-sign language conservative so you can escalate when something feels wrong.

  • Call your care team for severe pain, heavy bleeding, fainting, trouble breathing, severe headache, or symptoms they told you to report.
  • In late pregnancy, ask promptly about decreased fetal movement, fluid leakage, or regular contractions before your care team expects them.
  • Use emergency services if symptoms feel severe, sudden, or unsafe.