Can you induce labor at seven months?

Induction of labor without medical indication cannot be performed at seven months. Our current laws prohibit non-medical indications for inducing labor beyond 28 weeks, and if you want to have an induced labor in the seventh month of pregnancy, you must have an indication for inducing labor before you can do so. Indications may include both the mother and the fetus. The mother may have severe hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, or combined heart disease or diabetes, and may be unable to continue the pregnancy. For the fetus, the mother has severe hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, or heart disease or diabetes, and cannot continue the pregnancy. For the fetus, the mother has stillbirth, or the fetus has severe malformations, such as hydrocephalus or anencephaly. If the above indications are present in the seventh month of pregnancy, then labor can be induced under the advice of a physician. If the seventh month of pregnancy is already in the middle or late stage of pregnancy, and if there is no indication of the necessity of inducing labor such as those mentioned above, labor may not be induced.