A woman gave birth to her baby in the front seat of her Ford Mondeo - after getting stuck in traffic on the way to hospital.
Demi Clark, 22, was 40 weeks pregnant when she began getting cramps, indicating she was going into labour.
Demi jumped into the car with her partner Daniel Moy, 32, and her mum Maria Clark, 41, and they sped off to Sunderland Royal Hospital.
But on the way the family, from Whiteleas, South Shields, got stuck in traffic crossing Sunderland Bridge.
At the same moment Demi began getting strong contractions and felt the urge to push.
In standstill traffic, Demi had no choice but to labour in the front seat while Maria, who had no medical training, helped deliver from the back seat.
Baby Delilah, Demi's third child, was born weighing 7lbs 13oz.
She had to be wrapped in a jacket until they finally arrived in hospital by ambulance.
Delilah spent some time in hospital before being discharged - and is now at home with her family.
Demi, a stay-at-home mum, said: "It was crazy and a blur - I can only remember little bits when I look back now.
"I remember seeing my partner running through traffic waving his arms asking for help.
"When I started contracting I couldn't help it, I needed to push - and I could already see the head coming out.
"Delilah just flew out after that - it was all over in five minutes!
"The car was a mess afterwards but we laughed about it - it just feels so surreal that I actually gave birth in a traffic jam."
Demi, also mum to Dryden, three, and Raven, one, woke up on April 8 with cramps and lost her mucus plug soon after.
The family jumped in the car but on the way, they got stuck behind roadworks and lorries transporting heavy goods.
Demi tried to ignore the contractions growing stronger as Maria, a painter and decorator, encouraged her not to push until they arrived.
But eventually, in standstill traffic, she had no choice - so whipped off her pants and began to give birth.
Demi said: "I had one leg on the door and I was leaning on the hand break, and my hand was on the driving seat.
"As I was pushing, I was trying to take my jacket off because I needed something to wrap her in.
"My mum was in the back seat and she had to climb over me to get out to help because the back doors had child-locks on."
After the birth another driver who was also stuck in traffic called an ambulance for them.
Demi was blue-lighted to hospital, where she delivered the placenta.
Because baby Delilah swallowed some blood during birth she had to stay in the neonatal unit for eight days until she could feed normally.
She was discharged on April 14 and has been loving getting to know her older siblings.
Demi said: "The first births were nothing like this - it happened so quickly.
"Delilah was the easiest of them all - and I gave birth to her in a car!
"Mum has no medical background but she has nine children herself so she knows something about birth.
Demi Clark, 22, was 40 weeks pregnant when she began getting cramps, indicating she was going into labour.
Demi jumped into the car with her partner Daniel Moy, 32, and her mum Maria Clark, 41, and they sped off to Sunderland Royal Hospital.
But on the way the family, from Whiteleas, South Shields, got stuck in traffic crossing Sunderland Bridge.
At the same moment Demi began getting strong contractions and felt the urge to push.
In standstill traffic, Demi had no choice but to labour in the front seat while Maria, who had no medical training, helped deliver from the back seat.
Baby Delilah, Demi's third child, was born weighing 7lbs 13oz.
She had to be wrapped in a jacket until they finally arrived in hospital by ambulance.
Delilah spent some time in hospital before being discharged - and is now at home with her family.
Demi, a stay-at-home mum, said: "It was crazy and a blur - I can only remember little bits when I look back now.
"I remember seeing my partner running through traffic waving his arms asking for help.
"When I started contracting I couldn't help it, I needed to push - and I could already see the head coming out.
"Delilah just flew out after that - it was all over in five minutes!
"The car was a mess afterwards but we laughed about it - it just feels so surreal that I actually gave birth in a traffic jam."
Demi, also mum to Dryden, three, and Raven, one, woke up on April 8 with cramps and lost her mucus plug soon after.
The family jumped in the car but on the way, they got stuck behind roadworks and lorries transporting heavy goods.
Demi tried to ignore the contractions growing stronger as Maria, a painter and decorator, encouraged her not to push until they arrived.
But eventually, in standstill traffic, she had no choice - so whipped off her pants and began to give birth.
Demi said: "I had one leg on the door and I was leaning on the hand break, and my hand was on the driving seat.
"As I was pushing, I was trying to take my jacket off because I needed something to wrap her in.
"My mum was in the back seat and she had to climb over me to get out to help because the back doors had child-locks on."
After the birth another driver who was also stuck in traffic called an ambulance for them.
Demi was blue-lighted to hospital, where she delivered the placenta.
Because baby Delilah swallowed some blood during birth she had to stay in the neonatal unit for eight days until she could feed normally.
She was discharged on April 14 and has been loving getting to know her older siblings.
Demi said: "The first births were nothing like this - it happened so quickly.
"Delilah was the easiest of them all - and I gave birth to her in a car!
"Mum has no medical background but she has nine children herself so she knows something about birth.
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FunTranscript
00:00All right, I'm Daniel, I'm Delilah's dad, Demi's partner.
00:04I'm Demi, Delilah's mum.
00:06And I'm Maria, Delilah's nana.
00:08Four days over, Ju, weren't you? Yeah.
00:10And Ju had to go for a sweep that afternoon.
00:13Midwife was going to offer her a sweep.
00:15And I'd rang her in the morning to see what time it was going to be
00:18and whether she was going to accept it.
00:20And she was like, I don't think I'm going to last that long
00:23because I'm starting to get little pains.
00:25And I was like, I'm going to have to go for a sweep.
00:28And I was in my work clothes, and I was like, what do I do?
00:32And she was like, Mum, I'm going to come for you now.
00:34This was at about ten o'clock, wasn't it?
00:37And she was saying if she could manage the pain she was getting,
00:40she says it was just like cramp.
00:43I think it came to mind for a quarter past 11.
00:47And she says, right, we'll make our way to the hospital.
00:49We rang delivery suite to tell them she was on her way.
00:53And we got to the bridge, and she couldn't hold on any longer.
00:56And I had to climb out of the back, over the front, round the side.
01:02And the next thing you knew, baby was delivered.
01:04While baby was being delivered, Danny was in panic mode,
01:08trying to get help off the police who were doing a convoy,
01:11which was why the traffic was at a standstill.
01:14They could only radio through for help, couldn't actually help her.
01:18And then baby was born, and all of a sudden,
01:23And then baby was born, and armed response turned up,
01:27because they were the nearest people available.
01:30And luckily, his wife was a midwife,
01:34so we FaceTimed her to make sure we'd done everything right,
01:37baby was warm and covered up.
01:40And there was a passerby in the car behind,
01:44who asked what was going on,
01:48and asked if Demi's had a baby.
01:51And she was like, well, I don't know what to do, I can't help.
01:54I was like, can you please just ring, we're an ambulance.
01:57So she went back to her car to phone the ambulance.
02:00And by the time the ambulance came,
02:02we then got carted off to hospital,
02:03blue flashing lights, didn't we?
02:06I was scared, to be honest, because she was going into labour.
02:10I was asking police for help, and they said they couldn't help us.
02:12They wouldn't give us a first aid kit,
02:14they wouldn't give us a fall blanket for the baby.
02:16I come back to the car, by this stage, the baby's out.
02:19I had nothing to put the baby in, so I had to take my hoodie off,
02:22wrap the baby up in my hoodie.
02:24I then got back out of the car,
02:26went over to another police car that was there,
02:28and they still wouldn't give us nothing to help.
02:29So they radioed in for the other police to come and help.
02:32You just went into pure panic mode, didn't you?
02:34I went into panic mode, I didn't know what to do, to be honest.
02:37It was crazy, absolutely crazy.
02:40They're just like, ma, my head's out, she's coming.
02:44But because she's in a car seat,
02:47all the blood and water and everything was pooling.
02:51So when baby's head come out, until the body was delivered,
02:54her head was actually in that.
02:57And then when the body was delivered,
02:58obviously that was the only time that I could actually physically get her
03:01and bring her up to DEMI.
03:04So because her head was there for a little while,
03:06she swallowed quite a bit.
03:09So she was in special care for the first week.
03:12She was a fighter.
03:17She was a fighter.
03:18She was a fighter.
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