Often, people who have an “unplanned” pregnancy take a pill or an X-ray without knowing they are pregnant, only to find out they are pregnant after their menstrual period. While being happy, there is a nagging question: Is there any effect on the baby after taking pills or taking x-rays in early pregnancy? If you ask this question to your doctor, different doctors will give you different answers, some of them will tell you to abort, some of them will tell you in a very vague way, so you will not know what to do. So how do you look at taking pills or taking x-rays in early pregnancy? There is a lot of clinical evidence that the use of medication or X-rays before the 4th week of pregnancy, i.e. 28 days after the first day of the last menstrual period, has only two effects on the baby in the womb: the first result is that the baby receives all the negative effects and miscarries spontaneously. The first result is that the baby receives all the adverse effects and miscarries naturally; the second result is that the baby is not adversely affected and grows normally. What is the reason? Because before the 4th week of pregnancy, the sperm and egg are just combined. At this time, the fertilized egg only undergoes simple cell division, which increases the number of the same cells, but it has not yet differentiated into different cells, nor has it differentiated into tissues and organs. In addition, the embryo has a self-correcting function in the process of cell division. If the cell division goes well, the fetus will grow up healthily, and if the cell division does not go well, the baby will be eliminated naturally.