Sentences with phrase «go into labour at»

It is for this reason that you might wish to go into labour at 37 weeks, a few more weeks to the finish line.
From now onwards you may go into labour at any time and you should be prepared for this.
Ese reportedly delivered a baby girl on Thursday morning at the Government House Clinic after she went into labour at her Police Officers Mess temporary residence.
January Jones almost went into labour at a New Kids on the Block concert.The 37 - year - old actress is a massive fan of the 90s boy band, but had to sit...

Not exact matches

This time round, although I had some Braxton Hicks contractions as early as 34 weeks, I didn't go into labour earlier and so was able to arrive at the hospital on the scheduled date in a calm state of mind for the surgery.
It's been just over a week since I went into labour and we've survived our first few nights at home with our little menace — Jacob.
When my older children announced that they didn't want to be packed off when I went into labour, and the midwives were happy for them to be around, I knew I should try and prepare them for birth at home.
If you are at high risk of going into premature labour, your health care provider can take special precautions to ensure the best outcomes for you and your baby.
Waiting to have a baby is the worst so here are some things you can do at the end of pregnancy to make it easier for your body to go into labour on its own.
My second pregnancy was twins, and I went into labour naturally at 40 weeks.
Sometimes it can delay by a few days, which usually makes a woman desperate to go into labour since if it delays further, it means staring at having a C - section.
The idea of encroaching into enemy territory because your own supporters have nowhere else to go is at the heart of the hollowing out of Labour.
2) Association with the Lib Dems — this was always going to make it into something of a referendum on Nick Clegg and makes it very hard to have a coherent Yes movement when Labour supporters of AV are furious at the Libs and they in turn are arrogantly insulting to Labour.
At the end of it, after a night none of us saw coming — though the warning signs were there — Labour had gone into reverse.
At present Labour is losing support to the SNP in Scotland, to UKIP in its English and Welsh heartlands and, in the light of Corbyn's half - hearted support for Remain, may well see the support of disappointed middle - class pro-Europeans shift towards the Liberal Democrats (who have pledged to go into any future election committed to reversing the decision to leave the European Union).
The more seats a party or grouping has, the more chance it has of forming a government - with 198 seats out of 646 the Conservative Party could only form a government if significant numbers of other MP's decided to back them, as happened in 1924 when there was a situation that the Conservatives didn't want to form a coalition with either other main party and equally the Liberals didn't want a coalition with Labour and the Liberals and Conservatives saw it as an opportunity to allow Labour into government but in a situation in which legislation was still reliant on Liberal and Conservative votes and they could be brought down at the most suitable time, supposing the notional gains were accurate and in the improbable event of the next election going exactly the same way in terms of votes then 214 out of 650 is 32.93 % of seats compared to at 198 out of 646 seats - 30.65 % of seats and the Conservative Party would then be 14 seats closer towards a total neccessary to form a government allowing for the greater number of seats, on the one hand the Conservatives need Labour to fail but equally they need to succeed themselves given that the Liberal Democrats appear likely to oppose anyone forming a government who does not embark on a serious programme to introduce PR, in addition PC & SNP would expect moves towards Independence for Scotland and Wales, the SDLP will be likely to back Labour and equally UKIP would want a committment to withdraw from Europe and anyway will be likely to be in small numbers if any, pretty much that leaves cutting a deal with the DUP which would only add the backing of an extra 10 - 13 MP's.
«The Liberals have walked away from progressive politics» — Not what Blair, Blunkett, Straw, Reid, Burnham, Abbot, Harris or the half dozen others said at the time; they said you shouldn't make a deal and that it was better for Labour to go into opposition.
But the absence of Conservative MPs at the final vote forced two Labour MPs into the strange scenario of having to act as tellers for the «no» vote against their own motion in order for the vote to be able to go ahead at all.
He formed an alliance with Chuka Umunna at shadow BIS to block Labour from going into the election supporting a referendum (it feels relevant at this point to note that this was because Alexander believed that Labour was not in the right shape to win a referendum after decades of built - up anti-immigration sentiment).
Labour went into the 2010 general election without a credible economic policy because of disagreements at the top of the party, Alistair Darling admitted today.
I thought the ballot would allow Brown to be deselected at the next party conference, but I'm not sure how the labour party democracy works Could that mean that effectively the Labour Party could go into the next election with a caretaker until that conference takes labour party democracy works Could that mean that effectively the Labour Party could go into the next election with a caretaker until that conference takes Labour Party could go into the next election with a caretaker until that conference takes place?
If the agreement on party funding isn't also implemented at this point, then Labour will go into the next election either: having to ask the unions for enormous discretionary donations to fund the campaign, rendering pointless the process started yesterday, or fighting an election with a fraction of the funds available to the Tories.
Each time it went into coalition, the other party was irrevocably damaged by the experience, he said, adding that Labour was in freefall after joining the Tories in the anti-independence coalition Better Together, and the Lib Dems had been permanently harmed by coalition at Westminster.
He told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme: «What I have done following Michael Howard's election is to pledge a # 2m fighting fund to go directly into the marginals, into the constituencies that we have to win in order to significantly reduce [Labour's] majority at the next election or even go for the win.»
The lights went out at the Labour leadership hustings during a question about energy supply plunging the room into darkness.
It's been just over a week since I went into labour and we've survived our first few nights at home with our little menace — Jacob.
And yet, for all the hard work laboured into the visuals, Ready at Dawn have made the classic error of focusing on visuals over gameplay, and to such a degree, that one wonders what exactly was going through their minds when designing the game.
The technical virtuosity and lengthy labour that goes into his works are completley at the service of the viewer's perceptive and interactive experience.
There is excellent «continuity of care,» which ensures that mothers see the same midwives at appointments and, by the time they go into labour, have established a good relationship.
In August 2001 I decided to turn the ongoing labour unrest in B.C. at the time into a fanciful column called Why we should go on strike.
I went into labour with Sprog 1 at the local Malaysian restaurant, Kuali (great roti).
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