I am not exaggerating when I say “miniature bomb”, but I am referring to “ectopic pregnancy”, which is often referred to as “ectopic pregnancy”. What is a miniature? It is small, the pregnancy tissue plus the surrounding fallopian tubes and other tissues is only 2-3cm, which is “small” compared to the average woman’s body of about 160cm in height. What is a bomb? The most common complication of ectopic pregnancy is intra-abdominal hemorrhage. Whether the ectopic pregnancy is miscarried or ruptured, it can lead to severe intra-abdominal hemorrhage, although the patient and her family will not see how much blood has come out, but it is true that the blood has come out into the abdominal cavity, and the blood is no longer in the patient’s cardiovascular circulatory system, which can lead to shock and even death in severe cases. Although with improved medical care, most people can be seen and treated promptly and death rarely occurs, even its rare occurrence has to be a cause for alarm for medical personnel, for all women, and for all women’s families. Another layer of the bomb is that these women are of childbearing age, and as the backbone of their families and society, the impact of an ectopic pregnancy, especially when serious adverse complications occur, can be enormous for the family and for society. Therefore, everyone, including women themselves, their friends and relatives, their families, and medical personnel at all levels, needs to be alert to this “mini-bomb” that can endanger women of childbearing age at any time. “We can’t stop the bomb from being placed, but we must do our best to stop the bomb from exploding. We can’t stop the bomb from being placed, but we must do our best to stop it from bursting.