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7.30 in the morning, a familiar face turned up. As seems to be the case fairly regularly, we didn't have an obstetrician last week and so it was left to us to run the ante natal clinic. I saw a 27 year old who was almost9 months pregnant. She was well, had no abdominal pain or bleeding. Her BP and sugar were normal and the baby was moving, with a heart rate of 150. She had been scanned a month before, and the obstetrician at the time had documented her due date as 3 days from when I saw her in clinic. I organised an appointment for them to see the obstetrician the following week but advised them to return should anything happen in the meantime and we would organise transfer to an obstetrician if necessary for delivery.She hadn't felt the baby move for 3 days when she arrived this morning and when the obstetrician arrived within a few minutes there was no heartbeat on USS. She delivered a term stillborn girl after induction with misoprostol.Despite long discussions with the obstetrician, I can't dispel this dreadful, heavy feeling of responsibility. I can't stop thinking about what else could I have done in the clinic. I have been reassured that there is nothing more I could have done in this environment, especially with my minimal background training in obstetrics.It turns out, that for some reason the previous obstetrician, who has now left, changed the estimated date of delivery based on a late ultrasound and that this lady was perhaps at 41 weeks when I saw her in clinic. Maybe if I had questioned his dates I would have thought about the risk of her being overdue. Perhaps if there had been