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A healthy baby will move 50 times an hour or more in many cases. Monitoring his or her movements can be an easy way to check in on your baby's health as the pregnancy progresses.
These kicks, punches and shifts were once thought to be random movements, but doctors and psychologists are now finding that fetuses behave much like infants. Heidelise Als, a Harvard University psychologist, has discovered that fetuses often engage in tactile stimulation, touching their hands to their face, to each other, clasping their feet, or handling their umbilical cords.
Doctors have also observed fetuses licking the uterine wall and walking around the womb by pushing off with their feet....
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