A girl who has given birth aged 11 is believed to be the youngest ever mother in the UK with a family unaware she was pregnant, according to reports.
The youngster, who was 10 when she became pregnant, gave birth earlier this month and both mother and baby are healthy, the Sun states.
Now social services are investigating the circumstances surrounding the pregnancy and speaking to her family who were unaware of the pregnancy, the newspaper adds.
A source told The Sun: ““It has come as a big shock. She’s now being surrounded by expert help. The main thing is that she and the baby are OK.
“There are questions around why people did not know. That is very worrying.”
The previous youngest mother is said to be Tressa Middleton when she gave birth in 2006, aged 12, but she was forced to give her up after confessing the child’s dad was her brother, who raped her.
Tressa Middleton was Britain’s youngest mum when she had a daughter in 2006.
The record for youngest parents was a father aged 13 and mother, aged 12, when they had a child in 2014.
Puberty normally begins around 11 for girls but it can span from eight to 14, with weight playing a factor.
There is a higher risk of problems developing when younger children are pregnant including premature labour, infections and pre-eclampsia.
There was a reported case in 2017 of another girl in the UK giving birth aged 11 but no further details emerged.
Tressa pictured with her second child Arihanna has said how happy she was after the problems with her first baby.
The youngest mum in the world was a Peruvian girl called Lina Media who was only five years and seven months old when she gave birth in May, 1939 to a boy called Gerardo.
Her parents thought she had a tumour but when she was taken to hospital, she was found to be seven months pregnant.
The case of the 11-year-old UK girl who recently gave birth has reignited discussions about child pregnancies and the broader social implications involved. While the girl and her baby are reportedly healthy, this situation has raised serious concerns regarding how such an event could go unnoticed and the potential vulnerabilities that allowed this to happen.
Social services have now stepped in, launching an investigation into the circumstances surrounding her pregnancy. Their focus will likely center on the girl’s home life, how the pregnancy went undetected, and whether any safeguarding protocols were missed. Authorities will also be tasked with providing ongoing support to both the young mother and her child, ensuring their physical and emotional well-being in the coming months and years.
Cases like this are extraordinarily rare, yet they highlight the complexities of child development and the early onset of puberty, which can occur as young as eight years old. Puberty is typically accompanied by biological changes that make pregnancy possible, though this doesn’t minimize the risks involved when children so young give birth. Young mothers are more prone to complications such as preterm birth, low birth weight, and infections, which could have lasting impacts on both the mother and the baby’s health.
The news of the 11-year-old’s pregnancy has drawn comparisons to other high-profile cases in the UK, such as that of Tressa Middleton, who became Britain’s youngest mother at age 12 in 2006. Middleton’s case was especially tragic due to the circumstances of her pregnancy, which resulted from rape by her brother. Though Middleton gave her first child up for adoption, she has since gone on to build a family and has spoken about the emotional toll her early motherhood took on her.
Globally, the youngest known mother in recorded history was Lina Medina, a Peruvian girl who gave birth at just five years old in 1939. Her case, though extraordinary, underscores the medical possibilities of early pregnancy, though such events are extremely rare.