See Also
MayoClinic.com offers basic to in-depth information about pregnancy and getting pregnant. Most useful is information about how home pregnancy tests (HPTs) work and how best to use them to get accurate and reliable results.
WebMD offers many tools and resources to learn about pregnancy, including detailed descriptions of how home pregnancy tests work, how to use them, what can affect test results and other frequently asked questions.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) offers some answers to frequently asked questions about home pregnancy tests.
EmedicineHealth provides informative text and graphics on fertility, pregnancy and home pregnancy tests.
The Food and Drug Administration provides information on how home pregnancy tests work and how to use them as well as tips on how to use home pregnancy tests "wisely" and explanations of how HPTs can claim they are more than 99 percent accurate.
WhatToExpect.com includes information on how home pregnancy tests work and how to optimize the accuracy of the tests.
BabyCenter.com offers answers to some frequently asked questions about home pregnancy tests in both English and Spanish.
For general information about all things related to pregnancy, check out About.com's Guide to Pregnancy and Childbirth. (Note: ConsumerSearch is owned by About.com, but the two don't share an editorial affiliation.)
For information on the history of home pregnancy tests, check out this exhibit at the National Institutes of Health.
Finally for a look at the humorous side of pregnancy testing, check out PeeOnAStick.com. Self-confessed home-pregnancy-test enthusiast Megan Clarke has assembled some interesting facts on how tests work, as well as photographs of test results and a discussion about digital tests.
Clearblue Easy (Swiss Precision Diagnostics)
e.p.t (McNeil-PPC)
Fact Plus (Swiss Precision Diagnostics)
First Response (owned by Church & Dwight Co., Inc.)
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