Do I need to obsess about bleeding after pregnancy?

Sufferer, female, 28 years old, 12 weeks early pregnancy. Description of the case: 7 weeks of pregnancy, intrauterine pregnancy, with fetal heart and germ. There has been a little vaginal retention of fresh blood, followed by lying flat, which is a brown discharge, and then occasional pink discharge. Both progesterone and HCG were checked and were normal. The fetal heartbeat and fetal buds were always present and growing. The NT ultrasound, A-function test, hepatitis B and more than 20 other tests are all fine. I went home to lie down again, and felt no discomfort until 13 weeks, and did not want to throw up. When I saw the brown blood, I panicked! I want to ask the doctor for help, what tests do I need to do? I would like to have a phone consultation afterwards! (I have taken two boxes of Drospirenone tablets in the meantime) Help wanted: Please give me some advice on treatment, do I need surgery for my current condition? Do I need to see a doctor? What preparations should I make before the consultation? The sufferer’s case was fine, but the questions she asked made me confused: “Do I need surgery?” “What other tests do I need to do?” The sufferer was very suspicious and anxious, expecting a good result and fearing that something bad would happen. Although there was nothing bad at the moment, she always felt that something was wrong but couldn’t say what it was. She didn’t need to do anything, but she felt that she should do something else, but she didn’t know what it was. My answer is a bit more drastic: First of all, you have to be clear whether you intend to have the child or not. If you intend to, then you should not think so much, I really do not understand, you anxious about what? I really don’t understand what your anxiety is about, or what your anxiety can do? One thing is very clear, whether the fetus is good or not is its own business, not your business, not my business, if it is good, you can not mess it up, if it is not good, we can not do anything to make it better. I’m even more surprised that you’re asking if you need surgery. Is it already clear that it’s stillborn? Or is it already clear that it is a lethal or disabling malformation? Or is this fetus endangering your life? If neither, what makes you think about doing the surgery? I don’t understand what other tests you are considering. I don’t know what you can find out by doing a test now! I can only tell you that the regular prenatal checkups should be done on time, do not ask what to do here, the obstetrics clinic card doctor there every time you go according to the process, what to do are planned, do not worry about you. The first time I saw a fresh blood, to now coffee-colored blood, obviously in the better. People want to be anxious, it is you who want to be anxious. A person who is not anxious is not anxious even if she knows she will go to the torture chamber tomorrow. (Refer to the article “Can you bleed even in a normal pregnancy? Does vaginal bleeding affect the baby?”) There was a billionaire who had inexhaustible money, and he was so fat that he always felt superior to his neighbor’s long-time worker. (In fact, the rich man is too fat, there is no discomfort, and the long worker is too tired to work, there is no serious illness.) Many people’s mindset is like this, the doctor told her 1, she thinks the doctor should tell her again 23456. but she does not know whether there is 23456, just think there should be. Instead, the doctor only came up with 1. The doctor doesn’t know if there is 23456, or perhaps there is no 23456 at all, or the known conditions at hand are not enough to articulate 23456 clearly. In fact, in most cases, it is enough for us to know only 1. When the doctor takes the initiative to tell you about 23456, there is certainly nothing good about it. Sometimes, under the patient’s constant pressing, the doctor reveals some words related to 23456789, maybe these words are not yet causally related to 1, not even a dime, but the patient is anxious!