Jackie Chan is a legendary Chinese actor who’s known for his action movies and martial arts moves.
But the 64-year-old’s other claim to fame is that he was, apparently, born three months overdue, spending a total of 12 months in his mother’s womb.
After first making the unbelievable claim somewhere early in his career, the Hong Kong-born actor has been quizzed on it multiple times, always insisting that it’s true.
In a 2010 interview with UK talk show host Jonathan Ross, when asked if it was true he was born after “12 months in the womb” he replied, “yes”, adding he was a “huge baby”.
According to Chan, his parents couldn’t afford the surgery (a cesarean section) to have him delivered and even considering selling their son to pay the medical bill, but were convinced by friends who loaned them the money to keep him.
Now, we know what you’re thinking, because it’s exactly what we were thinking: “is this actually possible to be born three months overdue? Surely not?”
Well, according to Melbourne-based obstetrician Dr Joseph Sgroi it is “highly unlikely” Chan’s claims are true.
“It’s highly unlikely that you would have a pregnancy that would go beyond 10 or 11 months. Highly unlikely,” he told Mamamia.
“It may just be that his mum had irregular periods and she might have thought that she was three months more pregnant than that she actually was,” Dr Sgroi suggested.
He added that there isn’t a lot of data on babies being born extremely overdue. That is because, in Australia, along with most developed nations, it’s just not allowed to happen.
What happens when a baby is overdue?
To help us understand why Dr Sgroi first explained that the concept of “term” being 40 weeks isn’t medically correct.
Top Comments
No idea. But I have a 26-weeker 663gms at birth, who just turned two and he is my miracle boy! He stayed in hospital before coming home for longer than he was in womb...
His poor mum if it’s true!