Generally if you are a low risk pregnancy with no other indications of abnormalities or issues, you should only have 3 'routine' scans during your pregnancy.
One usually around 7 weeks, to determine viability of the pregnancy, and determine approximate age (Dating Scan)
The second at 12-4 weeks in conjunction with a series of blood tests in order to ascertain risk of deformities etc such as Down Syndrome (NT Scan)
The thrid at 20 weeks, which is used to ensure the correct for development of limbs, and ensure there are no defects such as spina bifida, heart problems, and quite importantly the position of the placenta.
There are many many benfits to having hte scans - and NONE are obligatory - they are always optional, although some women may need them for other reasons to ensure all is well if there is histpry of abnormalities or recurrent miscarriage, placenta issues etc etc.
Many people like to know the sex of the baby, many parents want to know if there are abnormalities, as for some it can affect the viability of the pregnancy and quality of life issues. they can also inidcate conjoined twins, as they did with my first pregnancy, which again has massive impact on how the pregnancy proceeds and how the birth will unfold.
Needing to know the cord is around baby's neck, or that its legs have not formed properly, or tht abdominal wall is not developed correctly, that you are in fact having unexpectedly twins, or triplets (as one of our members found out last year)...all these things are important for parents, your care providers, or both, to know of in advance - and the defects/abnormalities and developmental aspects are exactly what obstetric ultrasound has been developed for - and it has saved many lives, and helped many parents make informed choices about their pregnancies.
Ultrasounds are not handed out willy nilly nor treated as some sort of game. The need to regular ultrasounds occurs, but not in normal, low risk pregnancy.
As for the notion that early routine ultrasound leads to more induced labour due to 'post-term dates' as ine of those articles suggests, I have never had an Ob/Midwife or GP for that matter, take an ultrasound date over my own dates - but I know my dates. I think there is no substitute for women knowing their own bodies, their cycles...The only way you can be 'bullied' by anyone during your pregnancy is if you are not arming yourself with enough information.
Another article you posted is 7 years out of date, and contains some information that is not referenced.
(I have issues with biased data with no referencing)
Anyway, in answer to your questions - there are MANY reasons why routine ultrasounds are considered by both parents and care providers to be necessary and for those in high risk groups and with family history or fetal issues, they are more than necessary.
As for having no or little effect of feotal outcome, I think that is hugely inaccurate - an ultrasound cannot CHANGE your baby, and nobody proports that is does. What it CAN do is identify serious (and not so serious) issues with a feotus and gives both parents and caregivers a basis on which to make informed care and pregnancy decisions.
I am yet to see anyting that condemns it as UNsafe either, and since it has been in use since 1958 in obstetrics, I would expect that anything that would even remotely be considered 'dangerous' as having been espoused somewhere by someone.
Only you and your husband can make the decision that you will have a further scan - you should not need anymore, so that will be 2 for the pregnacy - sounds fairly "cautious' to me (as you point out the Cochrane suggests caution - not the complete disuse of them). But you also need to remember that it is your husband's baby also, so you two need to find some way to meet in the middle on this issue. So good luck! I hope you can find an outcome that works for both of you and all is well with bubs and the rest of your pregnancy.
[ETA - there have been issues as to whether the sound waves affect the baby - in terms of can they hear it? Is it uncomfortable for them? etc, but I have not seen any evidence to suggest that this is or isn't the case - there was a thread on it not so long ago on BB too if you want to look for it]



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