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Montana Brown had miscarriage after falling pregnant while on pill - Daily Mail

Montana Brown had miscarriage after falling pregnant while on pill - Daily Mail

Montana Brown had miscarriage after falling pregnant while on pill - Daily Mail
Oct 28, 2020 2 mins, 12 secs

Montana Brown has revealed she fell pregnant last year while she was taking the contraceptive pill.  ?

The Love Island star, 24, said 'it wasn't that awful' because she 'naturally miscarried' as she warned her fans to take extra precautions to avoid unwanted pregnancies.

Candid: Montana Brown, 24, has revealed that she fell pregnant last year, despite taking the contraceptive pill, but insisted: 'It wasn't that awful, because I naturally miscarried!'.

Speaking on her YouTube channel with friend Carms London, Montana made the revelation when explaining her experience of being on the contraceptive pill.

To be fair it wasn't that awful, because I naturally miscarried, but I was actually on the pill when it happened and I was so confused.'.

'Then I got a clear blue test and it was like "four to five weeks pregnant" and I was like: "Brilliant!",' she said sarcastically. .

To be fair it wasn't that awful, because I naturally miscarried, but I was actually on the pill when it happened and I was so confused,' said the reality star.

At the end of the YouTube video, the Love Islander warned her fans that the contraceptive pill isn't 100 percent effective in preventing pregnancy.

Unwanted pregnancy: 'I got a clear blue test and it was like "four to five weeks pregnant" and I was like: "Brilliant!",' said Montana sarcastically.

'These pregnancies fail from the outset and were never destined to succeed.' Most miscarriages like this happen by eight weeks, although bleeding may not start until three or four weeks later, which is worth remembering in subsequent pregnancies.

A simple blood test, which may need to be repeated several times, can reveal whether or not this is the problem.'One negative test does not mean that a women is okay,' warns Mr Roy Farquharson, consultant gynaecologist who runs an early pregnancy unit at the Liverpool Women's Hospital. 

Often pregnancy can be a trigger for these disorders, so a test should be done as soon as possible,' he adds.But it can easily be treated with low dose aspirin or heparin injections, which help to thin the blood and prevent blood clots forming - a recent trial also showed that women do equally well on either

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