In 2009, TLC released a TV show called “I Didn’t Know I was Pregnant” revolving around stories of women who didn’t realize they were pregnant until they moment of childbirth. While this may sound ridiculous, doctors say this is more common than people might think.
Here, Sermo physicians from around the world share their professional insights, perspectives, and personal experiences treating patients who didn’t realize they were pregnant :
“Had a young woman who played D1 soccer in college, played a game during the week, flew home that weekend delivered healthy full term infant on way to ER I was working in. She was obviously physically fit, lean how could anyone not know?” – Family Medicine
“Every obstetrician on the planet with more than 10 year’s experience, has delivered at least a dozen of these.” – General Surgery
“My daughter works with a college educated woman in her late 20’s from a solid middle-class background who came back from her doctor one day stricken looking and told her coworkers that she had just been diagnosed as 7 months pregnant. She is thin, gained no weight, got her period every month and had no clue. As bizarre as that sounds, it happens!” – Pathology
“Seen it about a dozen times myself. Usually in someone with hx of irregular menses, chronic alcoholic/drug user, obese. Not that uncommon.” – Obstetrics & Gynecology
“As a resident, I saw a very obese woman in the ER, with 12 hours of crampy abdominal pain.
Her water broke during the ER exam and she rapidly delivered after arriving on OB. She denied she could be pregnant, until the baby was delivered.” – Family Medicine
“I had a 31 yr old who arrived in the ER complaining of stomach pain. She delivered 2 hours later.” – Family medicine
“I’m 62 years old. The patient honest to goodness had an intact hymen. She was terrified of exams, and even more so of the whole birth process. It was a zoo to get her delivered.” – Obstetrics & Gynecology
“In my previous life as an ambulance EMT, ran a call where a women thought she was having a bowel movement an delivered her unknown pregnancy right into the toilet. When we got there the baby was still in the water. He was a little cold but otherwise fine.” – Internal Medicine
Everyday thousands of Sermo member physicians from diverse backgrounds and experiences exchange knowledge with each other. Sermo is the original medical social network that empowers today’s physicians. Over 1 million fully verified physicians across more than 150 countries come to our platform to talk with peers, participate in paid medical studies, solve challenging patient cases, contribute to the world’s largest database of drug ratings – and enjoy a few laughs along the way.
Interested in more? Check back any time and follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn for the latest and greatest in physician insights.
Are you a physician or healthcare practitioner? Explore the many benefits of joining Sermo’s medical community and sign up for free today.