LOS ANGELES โ YouTuber Jesse Ridgway and his wife, Ashley, shared that they terminated their pregnancy following a Down syndrome diagnosis. What happened online afterward has shocked the couple, but Jesse said he is hopeful that sharing their experience may help other couples feel less alone.
The YouTuber, whoโs been a content creator for 20 years and has more than 4.3 million subscribers on his main channel, shared a video on his personal YouTube channel recently that featured he and his wife receiving the results of an amniocentesis โ a test for certain genetic abnormalities, chromosomal conditions, and fetal infections โ and the results were consistent with Trisomy 21, or Down syndrome.
After the couple read the results, Jesse said that theyโd discussed beforehand whether theyโd consider terminating the pregnancy. โI know this is traumatic for the whole community. Now that we have a definitive result, weโll talk with the counselors, and weโre gonna have some hard conversations,โ he said. Both Jesse and Ashley were emotionally distraught and crying throughout the video.
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Jesse told The Los Angeles Times over a phone call late last week, with Ashley beside him as she recovered from her procedure, that sharing the diagnosis online happened accidentally. The couple was in the middle of a gender reveal video when they spotted the preliminary markers for Trisomy 21 on the same report.
โWe were filming and ready to celebrate with our audience and we were blindsided,โ he said. โWhat do we tell people? How do we navigate this? I reverted to being honest, and yes, that led us to the last 48 hours.โ
Last Wednesday, Jesse posted a lengthy statement that disclosed the coupleโs decision to terminate the pregnancy. Ashley reposted the statement to her own Instagram.
โThis week, my wife and I made the very difficult decision to terminate the pregnancy due to Trisomy 21,โ the since-expired Instagram story read.
Jesse continued that the decision was โnot made lightlyโ and said he appreciated the messages of support he and Ashley received. โI know some of you may be very disappointed to hear this news. We are devastated. This has been extremely traumatic for both of us, especially Ashley. She underwent the procedure earlier this week and is on the mend. Thankfully, everything went smoothly, but emotionally we are drained.โ
The YouTuber continued the series of posts explaining: โWhen I first confronted this news, I was shocked but optimistic. โฆ I signed on to be a parent, come what may โฆ but I just didnโt fully understand what Down Syndrome entailed. Once we made it public, it became clear that MOST people donโt know what Down Syndrome entails (and no, itโs not the same as Autism).
โ50% of babies with DS have heart defects. 75% will have hearing challenges. Over 50% will have vision problems. Impaired immune function, developmental disabilities, learning disabilities, delayed physical development, poor muscle tone, structural issues with face, decreased lifespan, etc. โฆ Sadly, the list is long, feel free to look it up โฆ Down Syndrome isnโt a โblessingโ, it is objectively shโ from a health perspective. I didnโt realize just how rough it is for the child, let alone the family.โ
According to the National Institutes of Health, about 6,000 babies are born in the U.S. each year with the condition, affecting about 1 out of every 700 babies. โ(W)ith appropriate support and treatment, many people with Down syndrome lead happy, productive lives,โ the agency notes, but there are often significant lifelong health challenges and risks.
Ashley had the abortion last Monday. Jesse said he spent the beginning of the week tending to her, and on Wednesday he crafted the post to explain what the couple had decided and why.
โI put it out there for my audience, and then it took on another life. Because itโs a contentious topic, I figured there would be some level of like flak or differing opinions, but to see what itโs become has been pretty shocking,โ he said. โThere are a million abortions every year, and Iโm just shocked that one couple deciding to abort for Trisomy 21 is mainstream news. This is happening every day, and itโs just not talked about.โ
Jesse said that his and Ashleyโs DMs had been flooded not only with messages of support but also dozens of confessions from strangers who had been through the same experience. And while the supportive messages felt โvalidating,โ Jesse said the couple had received a โtremendous amount of death threats. People saying weโre murderers.โ
According to Healthline, nearly 100% of women in Iceland who receive a positive test for Down syndrome terminate their pregnancy. In Denmark, 98% are terminated, in France 77%, and in the United States itโs 67%.
When the Ridgways had finished filming the results of the amniocentesis, they debated whether they should share the video. They said they didnโt even want to watch the tape.
โBut I kept coming back to, there are so many people out there like us dealing with these things, and nobodyโs talking about it,โ he said. โI think if we share this, it will have a net positive for other people, and they can feel more comfortable and less shame confronting these things. โฆ I hope other people can see that, that there is some value in this, but I canโt push it any more than I have. People are going to cast their judgments.โ
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