You're probably familiar with the scene. Pulling the little box out of the drug store bag, ducking into the bathroom, and then waiting and staring at a little plastic stick waiting for it to change.
There are many ways to find out if you’re pregnant. One is to wait and see. For those of us who are a little less patient, there’s the take-home chemistry kit known as a pregnancy test. But how do a ...
In the wake of a bust on an illegal medical lab in California involving a dozen government agencies, the Food and Drug Administration is warning consumers not to use at-home pregnancy tests made by ...
The FDA said it cannot confirm the performance of the tests. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is warning consumers not to use certain pregnancy, ovulation and urinary tract infection tests. At ...
PregaTips on MSN
How to understand dye stealer pregnancy test results
A dye stealer pregnancy test occurs when the positive line appears darker than the control line. This happens as hormone ...
BabyCenter on MSN
What does a faint line on a pregnancy test mean?
The results of a home pregnancy test aren't always black or white (or clearly blue or pink!). If you see a faint line on a pregnancy test, especially if you took the test correctly, you're probably ...
False claims about a Plan B morning-after pill being hidden in over-the-counter pregnancy tests are resurfacing on social media. The posts allege that if you split open the contents of a pregnancy ...
Diagnosing endometriosis could soon be much easier thanks to a new at home-test that can detect a biomarker for the disease in period blood. The pregnancy-like test created by researchers at the ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results