A WOMAN with two vaginas, two cervixes and two wombs only found out she had the condition – known as Uterus Didelphys – five years after giving birth to her daughter. Elizabeth Amoaa, 35, of Walsall, had been diagnosed with endometriosis and uterine fibroids and told by doctors that she was very unlikely to be able to conceive. However, in 2010 Elizabeth fell pregnant and she gave birth to her “miracle baby”, daughter Rashley, with scans completely missing her rare gynecological condition. The mother-of-one was eventually diagnosed in 2015, but after losing another baby due to her complaint in 2017 she set up speciallady, an organization dedicated to educating women and young girls on gynecological conditions and menstrual hygiene.