I drank the ‘Starbuck’s pregnancy drink’ to speed up my stalled labor


These mommies-to-be are spilling hot “pregnancy drink” tea. 

With bellies full of delayed babies and hearts set on evicting the little ones out of their wombs as soon as possible, expectant moms are rushing to Starbucks for a tea rumored to induce labor. 

“When you’re 39 weeks [and] four days with no signs of labor so you get the Starbucks ‘Pregnancy Drink’ and hope for the best,” penned mom of four Mika Laidler, from California, in the captions of her trending TikTok testimonial.  

In the clip, the then-hugely pregnant brunette is seen guzzling the famed cafe’s venti passion tea lemonade with four pumps of raspberry syrup.

The concoction, now unofficially known as the #StarbucksPregnancyDrink — a hashtag that’s lapped up over 6.7 million TikTok views — has achieved viral acclaim amongst anxious mamas who hope the red refresher will jumpstart the birthing process.  

And while most full-term babies typically make their world premieres at 40 weeks, some pregnancy-exhausted women like Laidler are willing to eat, drink or do whatever it takes to kick the kid out a few days shy of their due dates. 


(Left) Mika Laidler, a mom of four from California, drinking the TikTok-viral "Starbucks Pregnancy drink" at 39 weeks and four days pregnant. (Right) Laidler postpartum only eight hours after drinking the Starbucks tea.
Expecting moms like Mika Laidler are buying the viral “Starbucks pregnancy drink” in hopes that it will induce labor.
TikTok/mikalaidler

However, the “Starbuck’s pregnancy tea” wasn’t the first viral remedy for stalled labor.

In 2017, carrying cuties flocked to Hawthorne’s New York Pizza & Bar in Charlotte, N.C., for the hut’s heralded Buffalo Wing Pizza, more popularly know as “the inducer” — a gooey pie slathered in mozzarella cheese, buffalo sauce and chicken — hoping the spicy snack would speed up their labor. Two years later, a Minnesota-based burger joint welcomed “an influx of pregnant women,” who were all seeking its “Labor Inducer” burger, which came complete with an angus beef patty, honey-cured bacon, peach caramelized onions, spicy mustard and Cajun remoulade on a pretzel bun. 

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Although there’s little science that proves downing peppery bites or gulping fruity beverages actually makes baby come faster, virtual pregnancy hub WhatToExepect.com does list spicy foods, Balsamic vinegar, dates and raspberry leaf tea as items “commonly thought” to induce labor. 

“Red raspberry leaf tea has been said to boost blood flow to the uterus and thereby trigger contractions,” according to pregnancy pundits on the site. “No study has proven these claims, however, and experts say that the lack of quality data makes this tea a risky bet.”


Expecting mom Miah Amorr drinking the TikTok-viral Starbucks pregnancy tea.
Although there is little scientific evidence proving the efficacy of drinking raspberry tea for labor, women online are eagerly giving it a try.
TikTok/miahamorr

Mother to be suffering from morning sickness late into her pregnancy.
For years, women in late-stage pregnancy have ingested a number of foods and drinks in effort to induce labor.
Getty Images

A screen shot of the TikTok-viral Starbuck pregnancy drink.
Under the hashtag #StarBucksPregnancyDrink, moms-to-be between 38 and 40 weeks are trying to induce early labor with the drink.
TikTok/marissa_grimes1

Expecting mom Marissa Grimes drinking the TikTok-viral "Starbucks pregnancy drink."
The Starbucks drink has received mixed reviews from pregnant women on social media.
TikTok/marissa_grimes1

Meanwhile, an April 2023 report from the American Pharmacists Association referenced two 2021 studies on the effects of raspberry tea in late-stage pregnancy — the analyses found little to no link between the drink and labor activation. 

Luckily for Laidler, however, Starbucks’ raspberry-flavored libation fully delivered. 

“Update: Drank the ‘Pregnancy Drink’ from Starbucks, and 8 hours later [I] gave birth at 39 weeks and four days,” she said in a TikTok clip shared immediately after the footage of her sipping the lauded tea. 

In her follow-up post, which she titled “Labor Hack,” Laidler is fresh out of delivery, drinking water in a hospital bed. 

“It really worked!,” she wrote in the video’s caption, along with tags “#RasberryLeafTea,” #StarbucksDrinks” and “#LaborHacks.” 

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But some members of Laidler’s online audience, who, tried their hand at the hack weren’t as lucky. 

“I’ve been drinking mine everyday and walking baby still not coming. [It’s] been 2 weeks,” groaned an exasperated mom-to-be. 

“I drank it daily for two weeks, and he was like, ‘Nah I’ll stay’ then labored for 13 hrs before he decided to meet the world,” another woman chimed. 

One lady, however, claims to have shared Laidler’s success. 

“Drank it and my water broke less then 4 hours later,” she gushed, “and let me tell you I didn’t believe it before.”

The Post has reached out to Starbuck’s reps for comment about he brand’s latest viral sensation.



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