• Wugmeister
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    323 days ago

    You get a bit of a dose of cosmic radiation while flying. It won’t turn your baby into the Thing or give them the ability to catch on fire or turn invisible, but it could still damage the baby at a vital stage of their development.

    • @bleistift2@sopuli.xyz
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      413 days ago

      I don’t buy that explanation. Why would that dose of radiation be more harmful to a more developed fetus?

      The crew just doesn’t want to deal with a mother spontaneously giving birth, and the airline doesn’t want to deal with the paperwork of taking off with n passengers and landing with n+1. And no-one wants to find out the nationality of a baby born over the Atlantic.

      • @FrChazzz@lemmus.org
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        3 days ago

        Correct. As a father of four and who moved across an ocean when one of them was six months in utero it has more to do with concerns that changes in air pressure might induce early labor.

        Edit: I realize this post reads like I abandoned my family when one of my kids was six months away from being born. I didn’t. But it’s a funny enough mistake that I’m not changing it.

      • @uuldika@lemmy.ml
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        63 days ago

        And no-one wants to find out the nationality of a baby born over the Atlantic.

        That actually sounds incredibly fun, as a law nerd!

      • TachyonTele
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        13 days ago

        Multiple people have given you actual answers that are all a part of it.

        Do you thing the airline industry has no experience with this type of situation or something?

    • @Grindl@lemm.ee
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      33 days ago

      That’s not it at all. It’s mostly the acceleration and turbulence that can potentially damage the fetus, the same reason they shouldn’t ride rollercoasters.