Prenatally, when I joined we were expected to do all of our own prenatal care and work directly with an OB/GYN, who often actually invited us to be part of the actual delivery.
However, as time has progressed, anything to do with women's health issues tended to be outsourced. It's now considered pretty standard that we outsource almost immediately upon pregnancy. It actually causes a number of issues and problems when you are still actively doing unusual work that needs that occupational medicine oversight. That isn't the job and responsibility of the civilian sector. This is where one of our gaps happens. I think we lose a lot of our women unintentionally because we're not always overseeing that occupational level while they're pregnant. When they're pregnant they're over there.
I'll allow my colleague to talk about child care.