Pregnant in Nursing School....

It was my second year of my four year BSN program. My very first set of actual nursing clinicals. The ones where we actually went somewhere, and that was a LTC. I was excited, scared, and every other emotion all combined. I was actually more emotional than I pictured myself. I was so emotional I was nauseated. I was exhausted. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

On our third clinical day I went to watch a nurse do a dressing change. Wound care, how exciting! I was absorbing information like a sponge. Then, suddenly it all hit me. The nausea, the exhaution, the weakness all came at once. I excused myself, walked out of the room into the hall, slid down a wall, and passed out. I remember a nurse coming up to me and asking if I was okay, and my clinical instructor being called over the intercom. "Great," I thought. Here I am, in a facility where I should be helping, and learning, and I'm being surrounded by staff. I came back to, alert and oriented, Vitals WNL, BS a little low but not critical. Then, my clinical instructor asked the golden question... "Could you be pregnant"

Well, I could. I'm married, and along with that comes the, ummm... "act" that causes pregancy. But I couldn't be. The doctors said so. It would take "medical intervention" and we had been unsafe for 5 years. "I'm not pregnant, there's no way." To which my clinical instructor said "call your husband, have him pick you up, and stop by the store and pick up a pregnancy test."

Well, okay. I still thought there was no way I was pregnant, but what could I do? She would ask the next day about the results, and I didn't want to lie. So, off to the store we went. My husband took a friend to the clinical site to pick up my car and took the test.

I follow the instructions, wait the period of time and look at the test. Whew.... two lines...that means...wait a minute, I look at the directions again. I look at the test. The directions. The test. I'm pregnant. When my husband comes home I have him verify there are indeed two lines.

I'm scared. I gave up a decent job to go to nursing school. My husbands work was erratic. We didn't have health insurance. Most of the time we didn't even have an extra five dollars. What will we do? My mind goes on a brain storm? Quit nursing school and find a job. Work part-time and go to nursing school. What can we sale? What will we have to buy?

Fast forward four years.... today. My son was born during the summer, but I slowed down nursing school and worked any job I could find that would fit within daycare hours. Americorps, tutoring, at the daycare itself. It took five years to complete my four year degree, but it was completed. We had to used Medicaid for my pregnancy and son, but we have health insurance now. We were on food stamps for awhile, but can afford our own food now.

So many people didn't know how I could "do it"- go to nursing school and have a baby. I didn't know how those who worked full-time or spent hours partying or in their sorieties could do it. Things just came together. Sure, there were days and nights I was exhausted. Days I left the daycare in tears because I didn't want to leave my baby. Days I counted out change for milk. However, no matter what the challenge that arose I chalked it up to being a bad day and pressed forward.

I graduated last May. I had a job before graduation because I worked in the hospital as a student nurse and did my practicum on the floor I wanted. I also graduated with a 3.94. Inducted into Sigma Theta Tau. Passed NCLEX in 75 question and 30 minutes.

Today, my son doesn't have to go to daycare anymore. Between my husband's schedule, my schedule, and his preschool schedule, there isn't the need. I don't have to count change for milk anymore. I don't have to pray that my gas tank makes it one more day. In fact, we are taking our first family vacation to Disney in a couple of months.

Don't let anyone tell you that having a baby during nursing school is impossible. It's hard and tiring. Some days it seemed like the end would never come- but it did. And it was well worth the wait. I wouldn't change a thing.

I think it's great you made it work. While your story is encouraging, not everyone can do it. Either the student drops out, the baby suffers, or both. I would not encourage anyone who has a choice to do it. I'm watching my nursing classmates drop like flies between semesters, and several of them dropped because of pregnancy/birth.

Well this WAS an encouraging post :(

Thank you so much for sharing your story! You have given us all new hope and wonderful inspiration!! Many blessings!

I think it still is a pretty inspiring thread, just because one or 2 people have to say something negative doesn't mean it has to be true. look at all of us who did do it. And my baby did not suffer because of it. She was perfectly healthy and well taken care of in the time I had to be in school. I also didn't suffer. I kept my GPA above a 3.5 and kept my job and all of that. It all turned out just fine. You can do anything you set your mind to. :)

Thanks for sharing. I started nursing school saying that I wasnt going to get pregnant but 3 semesters in, I was pregnant with my first child. I had her in the middle of our peds/maternity semester. I only missed 2 days of clinicals but was able to make up the hours because I had taken so many childbirth/ infant education classes. It seemed that everyu semester after that there was somebody pregnant. You wouldnt believe how many of my classmates had babies in the last semester.

I has been hard espeically now that Im about to sit for NCLEX. With the support of my hubby and family, my daughter is always with family, healthy and happy. The only thing I wish I could have is more sleep.

Congrats to all the new and growing families out there.

I certainly wouldn't advocate for students to get pregnant during school. It is hard, but it can be done. I found that those that planned babies during nursing school had all their ducks in a row and had everything figured out before even becoming pregnant. The two I know that purposely had babies had other children, didn't want their babies too far apart, and didn't want to be pregnant their first year of nursing.

The other camp, my camp, was the "oopsie babies" Most of the girls in my class made it through even though their prgnancies were unplanned. A couple did quit, or fail, but I doubt their pregnancy was the sole reasoning. It's a tough pill to swallow, but chances are the poor decisions they made in getting pregnant would have affected their outcome in nursing school anyway (thinking of the girls that went out drinking all the time, slept around, and ended up pregnant).

I will say I did not see one person that was determined not make it through. Granted it took some people 6-7 years for a 4 year degree. But the end result is what matters.

I'm not sure how you see that the baby suffers, but to each their own. I realize there are people that believe woman should be barefoot and pregnant and stay at home while their children are young. I'm not one of those, and that is a whole other issue that I won't debate in this post. However, I will assure you that my child is very well rounded and did not suffer from the choices I made.

I agree luvbag. Neither I nor my babies suffered. It is solely determination and, what in the long run, will be best for your family. My nursing job is benefiting my family now so it was worth it. Just don't give up...

I hear u sister. While I was doing my pre reqs I was pregnant. It was a shock and I was unprepared for it but somehow I still ended up with pretty decent grades at the end of the semester. I still laugh and say that even after I had the baby I was in the delivery room studying for my upcoming test. Tommorrow I start the first day of class for nursing I ,and I am totally excited. My son will be 1 years old next month. Thank god for a patient and well mannered baby. Also thank god for my wonderful husband who helps me whenever I need him. When I graduate this degree will be as much his and it is mine.

I was trying to get pregnant for 3-4 years and was told buy EVERY doctor that it would NEVER happen. We even tryed invetro and this to did not work. In my last year of my 4 years I went into my clinicals vommiting over and over at every thing!!! My doctor said that the invetro had worked and I was pregnant!! The best moment of my life!

I WENT INTO LABOR AND my water broke durning my OB FINAL... My class amte were so excited to deliver my baby. I went accros the street to have my daughter after 23 hours of labor (Durning wich my instucter came and orally finished my exam!!!!) My daughter was born 8lbs and happy. 9 months later We used invetro and meds to get pregnant and have baby girl #2. After the girl were 2and 3 we had Baby #3 and I worked for 15 years in Nursing My last child was born in 2006 and He is 31/2and Great. The doctors were very wrong when they said I would not conceive.!!! Thank GOD

Melinda

I am in pre nursing right now and 6 mo pregnant with my 2nd child. Ive wondered multiple times EVERY day how im gonna see the end when Ive passed everything and finally have my BSN. Reading your post has encouraged me alot! Seeing someone elses story and not just telling myself that there are others making it all the time in the same situation is a great inspiration!

Thank you for sharing!! :)

mindy1234- After I took the home pregnancy test I went to Planned Parenthood the next day, just to be really, really sure. I still wasn't quite convinced. When the nurse asked why I didn't think I could get pregnant, I told her it was because the doctors had said so. They said that without medical intervention I would not get pregnant. Her response...

"don't ever let anyone tell you that you can't get pregnant"

Oh, and medical intervention? I lost 80 lbs right before getting pregnant. I guess my doctors didn't have the heart to say, lose some weight. Instead, they wanted to prescribe.

Specializes in Advanced Practice, Home Care, Med-Surg,.

I was pregnant in Nursing school, both times, for my ADN and that daughter is now 13 and for my MSN and that daughter is now 4 1/2! I thank them for my success!