
Credit: SKY News
A certain type of public figure exists just outside the spotlight; they are not well-known enough to be followed everywhere, but they are noticeable enough that people pay attention when they speak candidly about a challenging topic. With a poise that feels earned rather than forced, Emily MacDonagh Andre occupies that space. In addition to being a best-selling children’s author, mother of three, and practicing NHS physician, she is also, almost coincidentally, Peter Andre’s wife. In headlines, that final section usually appears first. Most likely, it shouldn’t.
Over the past few weeks, Emily, 36, has shared two important health revelations with her more than 760,000 Instagram followers. The first occurred in late March 2026 when she announced to her audience that she had been diagnosed with shingles while sitting on her carpet at home in a pink jumper. She did this with the cool, collected demeanor of someone who has previously given patients bad news. She reported experiencing strange sensations and a strange pain beneath her arm. A few days later, a rash appeared on one side of her back. The description is instantly recognizable and unpleasant to anyone who has had shingles, which is the reactivation of the chickenpox virus along nerve pathways. She claimed not to have anticipated it. That’s the problem with shingles. No one ever does.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Emily MacDonagh Andre |
| Date of Birth | 1989 (age 36) |
| Nationality | British |
| Profession | NHS Doctor (MBChB BSc), Author, Health Influencer |
| Spouse | Peter Andre (married 2015) |
| Children with Peter | Millie (12), Theo (9), Arabella (born April 2024) |
| Stepchildren | Junior Andre, Princess Andre (Peter’s children with Katie Price) |
| @dr_emily_official (761.5K+ followers) | |
| Recent Health Issues | Rare hernia (post-partum, 2024), Shingles (March 2026) |
| Notable Work | Bestselling children’s author; Charity Ambassador for Caudwell Children, Perinatal Mental Health Partnership |
| Age Gap with Peter | 16 years |
| Reference | Hello Magazine – Emily MacDonagh |
The more startling disclosure, however, was made soon after when Emily candidly discussed what transpired in the weeks after the birth of her youngest daughter, Arabella, in April 2024 on Peter Crouch and Abbey Clancy’s podcast, The Therapy Crouch. She sustained a severe and uncommon hernia. She talked about having bowel movements. When Arabella was only a week old, she had surgery after doctors warned her that it was almost a true emergency. It is not what you would expect to hear discussed so bluntly in a celebrity podcast format: a newborn being taken from her arms, an operating room, her husband standing nearby, looking more terrified than she had ever seen him. That may be precisely why listeners reacted so strongly to it.
Peter acknowledged that he had never seen her like that before, even though he hardly ever sounded shaken in public. He remarked, “This was terrible, but you’ve taught me not to be so worried.” You really went through it. That admission carries weight because it comes from someone who is married to a doctor, who is probably more knowledgeable than most about handling medical anxiety. Whatever transpired during those post-birth days seems to have been genuinely terrifying in a way that neither of them was able to quickly get over.
The surgeon seemed to have the answer to the question of whether Emily would have more children. She remembered being asked directly, declining, and being informed that getting pregnant again would prolong the hernia repair and lead to major complications. She said that was sufficient for her. “A hundred percent done.” It’s important to note that she didn’t say this with obvious regret or sadness; rather, she said it in the manner of someone who has completely come to terms with something. The risk has already been evaluated by the doctor in her. She loves her three children and is a mother. This concludes the chapter.
Emily MacDonagh is intriguing because of the way she has consciously created a public persona that complements her marriage rather than runs alongside it. Before she met Peter, she obtained her medical certification. After becoming a celebrity-adjacent figure, she continued to work for the NHS. She is a children’s book author. She works as a charity representative for organizations that support perinatal mental health and child disability, two unglamorous but equally important causes.
She has more than 760,000 followers on Instagram, where she shares family photos, health advice, and the kind of direct medical communication that is surprisingly uncommon from someone in her position. The shingles video, which featured her sitting on her carpet, describing the illness and advising fans to watch out for symptoms, felt more like a quick phone consultation than a celebrity revelation.
It’s difficult to ignore the public’s tendency to undervalue her. More column inches are devoted to the 16-year age difference between her and Peter than to her medical career. Instead of discussing what it truly takes from a person daily, her role as stepmother to Junior and Princess Andre, Peter’s children with Katie Price, is discussed in terms of tabloid dynamics. She appears to be mostly unaffected by everything, which could indicate either true composure or excellent media management. If she’s telling the truth, it’s probably both.
She is currently recuperating from shingles, raising three children, including a two-year-old, practicing medicine, and seemingly responding to inquiries about potential future pregnancies with the sharp clarity of someone who has already moved on. Emily Andre’s upcoming chapter will likely be more intricate and fascinating than the headlines suggest.

