If the contractions are regular at night but disappear during the day without other symptoms, you can continue to wait for delivery. When there are symptoms such as redness and vaginal discharge, you should consult the doctor and be hospitalized for delivery if necessary. When contractions occur regularly at night but disappear during the day, they are considered to be pseudocontractions, and if there are no other symptoms, you can continue to wait for labor under close monitoring of fetal movement. However, if there is redness, vaginal discharge or worsening abdominal pain, consult a doctor promptly. When the pregnancy is full-term, you can be prepared for delivery, but if you are not full-term, you need to rest appropriately, and follow the doctor’s instructions to give ritodrine to suppress contractions and dexamethasone to promote fetal lung maturation and other fertility preservation treatments. During pregnancy, it is important to have regular checkups, fetal heart rate monitoring and ultrasonography to assess the condition of the fetus, and to strictly count the fetal movements, so that you can self-evaluate the condition of the fetus in the uterus. When there is redness, irregular abdominal pain, premature rupture of membranes, etc., it is necessary to go to the hospital, and under the guidance of the doctor, fetal heart rate monitoring and ultrasonography, etc., and if necessary, it is necessary to be hospitalized to wait for delivery. When there are regular contractions at night but disappear during the day, you can go to the hospital and be treated under the doctor’s guidance.