Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Pregnancy can’t be detected a day after conception

- Madeline Heim

Since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, the abortion issue has been an easy motivator for Democrats and a political loser at the ballot box for Republican­s nationwide.

Wisconsin Republican­s, too, have struggled to weather that particular political storm. In January, a group of them proposed a bill marketed as a way to find consensus: a 14-week abortion ban that would have to be approved by voters before taking effect.

The bill would scale the timeframe for legal abortions in Wisconsin back from 20 weeks and is currently sitting with the state Senate after passing the Assembly Jan. 25.

Though it was ultimately amended to include exceptions for pregnancie­s resulting from rape or incest, it didn’t have them initially.

When asked during an Assembly committee hearing on the bill why it didn’t include those exceptions, state Rep. Amanda Nedweski, R-Pleasant Prairie — who co-authored the bill — said 14 weeks should be enough time for a person to be aware of a pregnancy and decide whether to continue that pregnancy.

In fact, Nedweski said, “we have technology and medical advancemen­ts today that can tell you if you are pregnant the day after conception.”

Pregnancy hormone can’t be detected right after conception

Nedweski’s office did not return a request for the evidence she used to make the claim. We’ll break down the science here.

A pregnancy test detects the presence of the pregnancy hormone human chorionic gonadotrop­in, or hCG, in a person’s body.

But the body doesn’t produce that hormone until several days after conception.

Fertilizat­ion, which happens when the sperm and egg unite, is what most people refer to as “conception,” said Dr. Abigail Cutler, an OB-GYN at UW Health and assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health.

About five to 10 days after fertilizat­ion, the fertilized egg implants in the lining of the uterus. HCG is produced shortly afterward, Cutler said, first in low levels which rise rapidly over time.

“The very earliest someone can confirm whether they are pregnant is following implantati­on, the timing of which varies but can take a week or more,” she said.

Pregnancy tests that people can buy over the counter, which look for the presence of hCG in urine, often aren’t sensitive enough to pick up those lowest levels of the hormone when it first appears, she added. An hCG blood test can detect the hormone as soon as it’s being produced, but that kind of test isn’t as readily accessible because it must be ordered by a health care provider.

Other medical informatio­n supports the fact that hCG doesn’t show up immediatel­y after conception, though its timing can vary.

According to the Cleveland Clinic, hCG can be found in a person’s blood around 11 days after conception, and it takes slightly longer to show up in urine. Johns Hopkins Medicine says it can be found in urine five to seven days after conception. Mount Sinai Health System says hCG can be found in the blood and urine as early as 10 days after conception.

Cutler also noted that confirming a pregnancy by any means requires having a reason to suspect pregnancy in the first place.

According to SSM Health, some people may begin noticing early symptoms of pregnancy a week or two after conception. But others may not realize until their period is noticeably late – which can be hard to determine for people with irregular menstrual cycles – or even further into the pregnancy. Some don’t feel symptoms at all.

With that informatio­n in mind, Cutler said there are many reasons why someone may not suspect a pregnancy until it is several weeks along.

Our ruling

Nedweski claimed that there are “technology and medical advancemen­ts today that can tell you if you are pregnant the day after conception.”

But pregnancy tests are looking for a hormone that doesn’t get produced right after conception. In fact, it could take a week or more to be produced in high enough levels to show up on a pregnancy test, even in a blood test done by a health care provider.

We rate this claim False.

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