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Week 35

Week 35: Head Down

Baby is about the size of Honeydew melon (462mm head-to-heel)

Baby development

Most babies have settled into a head-down (cephalic) position by now. The kidneys are fully developed, and the liver can process waste products. The baby is plumper, with fat filling out the arms and legs. The reflexes are coordinated — the baby can grasp, orient to light, and respond to sounds. Weight is approximately 2.4kg (5.3 lbs).

Your body

If the baby drops into the pelvis ('lightening'), you may breathe easier but feel more pelvic pressure and need to urinate more frequently. The cervix may begin softening (effacing) in preparation for labor. You may notice increased vaginal discharge or the mucus plug beginning to loosen.

What is important now

In Denmark, Midwife Visit #4 occurs. In Germany, Group B Streptococcus (GBS) testing opens as a self-pay option (weeks 35-37). The baby's position is important — if still breech, discuss options (External Cephalic Version, optimal fetal positioning exercises).

Common symptoms

lightening breathing reliefincreased pelvic pressurevery frequent urinationincreased vaginal dischargedifficulty walking
Important to watch
  • heavy vaginal bleedingemergency services
  • regular contractions every 5 minutescontact provider or hospital

Wellness this week.

Nutrition

Final growth and birth preparation

  • Iron-rich foods (baby building iron stores for first 6 months of life)
  • Begin eating 6 dates daily (evidence suggests this supports cervical ripening)
  • Adequate protein for final growth
  • Raspberry leaf tea (from 36 weeks — some evidence for uterine toning)

Exercise

Movement

Gentle movement and optimal fetal positioning exercises

WalkingBirth ball sittingHands-and-knees positioningPelvic floor exercises

Sleep

7-9 hours (total with naps)

Position: Left side; accept that sleep is challenging

· If baby has dropped, you may actually sleep better due to less diaphragm pressure

· Rest in whatever position works — sleep quality matters more than quantity

Mental wellness

Mindfulness

If your baby is breech, know that many babies still turn in the coming weeks. ECV is an option. Trust your care team.

Your baby is positioned for their journey into the world — all reflexes ready, all senses alive.

Appointments

Your timeline.

Week 6

29 weeks ago
  • routine

    Checkpoint 1 — Mutterpass may be issued upon heartbeat confirmation

View week →

Week 9

26 weeks ago
  • routineWeeks 912

    Checkpoint 1 — Screening Ultrasound

View week →

Week 19

16 weeks ago
  • routineWeeks 1922

    Checkpoint 2 — Screening Ultrasound

    Choice between a basic biometric scan or detailed organ scan. Measures head circumference, abdominal circumference, femur length, and checks placental position.

    GoalAssess fetal anatomy and growth, check for structural abnormalities, and verify placental location.

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Week 24

11 weeks ago
  • routine

    Checkpoint 1 — GDM Screening

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Week 28

7 weeks ago
  • routine

    Checkpoint 1 — GDM screening

  • routine

    Checkpoint 2 — Rhogam if Rh-negative

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Week 29

6 weeks ago
  • routineWeeks 2932

    Checkpoint 3 — Screening Ultrasound

    Third and final routine ultrasound. Assesses fetal growth, position (cephalic/breech), amniotic fluid volume, and placental function.

    GoalConfirm appropriate growth trajectory and baby's position for delivery planning.

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You are here

Week 35

This week
  • self pay igelWeeks 3537

    Checkpoint 1 — GBS Testing — Self-pay/IGeL

    Rectovaginal swab to screen for Group B Streptococcus colonization. If positive, IV antibiotics are given during labor to prevent neonatal infection.

    GoalIdentify GBS carriers to enable prophylactic treatment during delivery.

Week 36

Next week
  • self pay

    Checkpoint 1 — GBS Screening available

View week →

Week 42

In 7 weeks
  • routine

    Checkpoint 1 — Induction recommended

View week →

Safety: Heavy vaginal bleeding or regular contractions every 5 minutes before 37 weeks are emergencies. Contact your hospital immediately.

Your journey, your rhythm.

Track your pregnancy week by week with gentle, personalized guidance.