The Little Couple alum Jen Arnold is weighing in after influencer Jesse Ridgway’s wife, Ashley Ridgway, terminated her pregnancy after a Down syndrome diagnosis.
“Prenatal consultation has become one of the most important spaces in modern perinatal medicine,” Arnold, 52, wrote via Instagram on Friday, June 12. “The goal of prenatal consultation is not to steer families toward a decision, but to help them make one with clarity and support.”
Arnold works as a neonatologist, where she often does prenatal consults to tell parents about unexpected pregnancy complications.
“As our ability to diagnose fetal conditions expands — and as fetal interventions and prenatal therapies continue to evolve — families need more than information alone,” she explained. “They need careful, compassionate, non-directive guidance that helps them understand prognosis, uncertainty and options in a patient and family centered way.”
Arnold continued, “As a neonatologist, and as someone with a disability, I believe those conversations must also include the dignity and lived experience of disabled people. Better prenatal medicine should mean better support and better counseling — not more fear, and not language that implies some lives are less worth living. As fetal medicine advances, our ethical responsibility to communicate with balance and humility grows too.”
Jesse, 33, announced earlier this month that his wife, 31, recently got an abortion.
“My wife and I made the very difficult decision to terminate the pregnancy due to Trisomy 21,” he wrote in a social media statement, noting the fetus was diagnosed with Down syndrome. “The choice was not made lightly. … I 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.”
Jesse added at the time, “We made a difficult decision that we believe in the long-run will be beneficial for our family. Thankfully, we had a choice. It will take a little time to move on, but we are excited to try again in the future and hopefully have a better outcome.”
Jesse and Ashley’s decision sparked widespread online backlash.
“[This conversation] calls for honesty and care,” Arnold, who is living with skeletal dysplasia, stated on Friday. “A prenatal diagnosis of Trisomy 21 … can bring fear, uncertainty and a lot of questions for expectant parents. Families deserve accurate, compassionate and nondirective counseling as they make deeply personal decisions.”
Arnold further clapped back at online commentary that individuals with Down syndrome have “less meaningful” lives.
“People with Down syndrome are not diagnoses, they are people,” she stated. “Their lives are full of relationships, joy, challenge, dignity, humanity, just like anyone else’s.”
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