You're describing rhesus syndrom. I had that with my youngest son. It's when the mother had rh neg blood, and the baby has rh positive blood so the mothers body detects the fetus as something that is harmful. It fucking sucks. But, that specific issue doesn't care about the sex of the the baby.
The above cited sentence gives the cause, the place that did the research, and the place the research was published. If you cared to read it rather than just saying you don't agree, you could.
Male baby and the immune system is about inflammation.
While women didn't exhibit differences in blood cytokine levels based on fetal sex, we did find that the immune cells of women carrying female fetuses produced more pro-inflammatory cytokines when exposed to bacteria. This means that women carrying female fetuses exhibited a heightened inflammatory response when their immune system was challenged, compared to women carrying male fetuses," said Amanda Mitchell, a postdoctoral researcher in the Institute for Behavioral Medicine Research at Ohio State's Wexner Medical Center and principal investigator of the study.
Inflammation is a critical part of the immune response involved in wound healing and responses to viruses, bacteria and chronic illnesses. However, excessive inflammation is stressful to the body and can contribute to sickness-related symptoms, such as achiness and fatigue. While more research is needed, the heightened inflammation observed among women carrying female fetuses could play a role in why women tend to experience exacerbated symptoms of some medical conditions, including asthma, when carrying a female versus a male fetus.
The male babies are more prone to adverse events due to being in the womb while the mothers immune system works hard.
Johns Hopkins researchers report that fetal mice — especially males — show signs of brain damage that lasts into their adulthood when they are exposed in the womb to a maternal immune system kicked into high gear by a serious infection or other malady. The findings suggest that some neurologic diseases in humans could be similarly rooted in prenatal exposure to inflammatory immune responses.
This was known before covid, and they still forced those shots on pregnant women. I'm not defending them, I'm pointing out that by sweeping this under the rug they get away with the harm they did intentionally.
You're describing rhesus syndrom. I had that with my youngest son. It's when the mother had rh neg blood, and the baby has rh positive blood so the mothers body detects the fetus as something that is harmful. It fucking sucks. But, that specific issue doesn't care about the sex of the the baby.
The above cited sentence gives the cause, the place that did the research, and the place the research was published. If you cared to read it rather than just saying you don't agree, you could.
Rhesus syndrom, which I just told you I experienced for myself.
https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/rhesus-disease/#:~:text=Rhesus%20disease%20is%20a%20condition,anaemic%20and%20develop%20newborn%20jaundice.
Male baby and the immune system is about inflammation.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/02/170210131226.htm
The male babies are more prone to adverse events due to being in the womb while the mothers immune system works hard.
https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/news/media/releases/immune_system_overdrive_in_pregnant_women_puts_male_offspring_at_special_risk_for_adult_brain_disorders_mouse_study_suggests_
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5558889/
This was known before covid, and they still forced those shots on pregnant women. I'm not defending them, I'm pointing out that by sweeping this under the rug they get away with the harm they did intentionally.