Snoop Dogg’s daughter, Cori Broadus, gave birth to her daughter three months early after revealing her pregnancy was “high-risk.”
“The princess arrived at 6 months 🥹👶🏽🎀,” the CHOC founder announced via Instagram Friday alongside a photo of her newborn’s foot.
“I’ve cried and cried, I’ve compared and compared, blaming myself because I wasn’t able to give her all that she needed. But no matter what God always shows me that He got me!”
“Baby girl came at 25 weeks today and she’s the best!! Thank You God for getting me this far,” Broadus added.
The 25-year-old businesswoman also shared that her newborn was in the neonatal intensive care unit, which is for babies who are born prematurely.
Broadus also shared a photo of herself via her Stories undergoing a C-section, saying it was a “success”
In follow-up slides, the entrepreneur explained she went to see her doctor on Thursday thinking she “had a bad case of gas” but learned she “was developing ‘HELLP SYNDROME’ which is very severe and can even cause death if untreated.”
Broadus claimed that if she “would’ve waited a few more days it would’ve been really bad.”
According to the Cleveland Clinic, HELLP Syndrome is a pregnancy complication that affects the liver and blood system.
In December, Broadus announced that she and her fiancé, Wayne Deuce, were expecting their first child together after keeping the news under wraps for three months.
“This baby is so unplanned, but we are soooooo blessed,” she told E! News.
The new mother shared that her lupus diagnosis made her pregnancy “high-risk” and doctors were “very concerned” for her.
“I’m just excited to love on my baby girl and make her feel like she’s the prettiest in the world,” she gushed. “My mom and dad were so excited, their baby girl is having a baby … My dad was hoping for a grandson, though.”
During an exclusive interview with Page Six last month, Cori shared that Snoop Dog and her mom, Shante Broadus, hadn’t given her much parenting advice aside from “just do your best.”
“There’s no rule book and understanding that our parents aren’t perfect,” Deuce chimed in. “They’re human too. Their journey is still going. We tend to forget that when we are young, so just trying to understand that.”
Read the full article here