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The gravida/para/abortus (GPA) system, or sometimes just gravida/para (GP), is one such shorthand. [ citation needed ] For example, the obstetric history of a female who has had two pregnancies (both of which resulted in live births) would be noted as G 2 P 2 .
Patient identification: Patient Name, Gravida Para, Patient ID Number, Date of Admission, Ruptured Membranes [6] Time: It is recorded at an interval of one hour. Zero time for spontaneous labour is time of admission in the labour ward and for induced labour is time of induction. Fetal heart rate: It is recorded at an interval of thirty minutes.
[19] [22] Therefore, during a second pregnancy a woman would be described as gravida 2, para 1 and upon live delivery as gravida 2, para 2. In-progress pregnancies, abortions, miscarriages and/or stillbirths account for parity values being less than the gravida number.
P1002 is a woman who has given birth once and has two living children (twins). P2001 is a woman who has delivered twice but now only has one living child (it may have died after childbirth or when it was 20 years old). A gravida 2 Para 1 is a woman who is pregnant now and has had one child.
A more recent trend in the United Kingdom has been the replacement of the kick chart with jewelry-based counters. A pregnancy bracelet is a wearable form of kick counter. The bracelets available work on similar principles: the baby kicks, the mother moves a marker. The idea is that this is more practical than using a pen and paper.
Dea Gravida, a term that has been applied to these types of figures by modern archaeologists, translates to "pregnant goddess." [2] The term gravida comes from the Latin word gravidus and is used to describe a woman who is pregnant. Tyria is a reference to Tyre, where many such figures have been found. [3]
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La donna gravida (or simply La gravida; Italian for "The Pregnant Woman") is an oil on wood portrait by the Italian High Renaissance artist Raphael. It was painted between 1505 and 1506, during Raphael's stay in Florence , Italy .