CASABLANCA, Morocco
A Malian woman has given birth to nine babies in what could become a world record. Halima Cissé had been expecting to have seven newborns: Ultrasound sessions had failed to spot two of her babies.
"The newborns (five girls and four boys)
and the mother are all doing well," Mali's health minister, Dr. Fanta
Siby, said in an announcement about the births.
The babies were born in Morocco, where Cissé
was taken for specialist care in late March.
Her multiple-fetal pregnancy has been closely
watched in Mali, where the government helped pay for her medical evacuation to
Morocco. Camera crews recorded her arrival.
Cissé, 25, gave birth by cesarean section –
and doctors were surprised to find two more babies than expected, the health
ministry said. The agency's announcement of the successful births was welcomed on social media in
Mali, but some also urged the government to improve the standard of medical
care in the poor West African country, noting the expense of such evacuations.
Professor Youssef Alaoui, medical director of
the private Ain Borja clinic in Casablanca, Morocco, where Cissé gave birth,
said the babies were born at 30 weeks. The newborns weighed between 500 grams
and 1 kilogram (about 1.1 to 2.2 pounds), he told journalists in Morocco.
The babies are expected to spend at least “two to three months” in incubators.
Cissé is in intensive care, but her condition is stable, Alaoui said, explaining that she suffered a severe hemorrhage related to the expansion of her uterus. During her stay at the clinic, doctors sought to delay the birth for weeks, to give the fetuses additional time to develop.
The clinic has deployed a
team of around 30 staff members to aid in the mother's delivery and care for
her nine children, Alaoui said.
During childbirth, Cissé's husband, Adjudant
Kader Arby, remained in Mali with their daughter, according to the BBC.
Arby told the network he's "very
happy" that his wife and the nine babies are doing well. In the excitement
over their births, he added, "Everybody called me! Everybody called! The
Malian authorities called expressing their joy. I thank them. ... Even the
president called me."
The current world record for the number of
live births is eight – a mark set by Nadya Suleman of California in 2009,
according to Guinness World Records.
But that feat also sparked controversy as medical experts and the public
debated the use of fertility treatments to produce octuplets. Suleman's eight
children were delivered nine weeks premature, also by C-section.
A Guinness World Records representative told NPR that "we are yet to verify this as a record as the wellbeing of both the mother and babies are of top priority." The organization said it's looking into the possible new record, employing a specialist consultant for the case.
Halima Cissé and husband Adjudant Kader Arby |
It's not publicly known whether Cissé's
pregnancy resulted from fertility treatments, as Suleman's did. Alaoui told The Associated
Press that he does not know of her receiving such treatments.
The use of in vitro fertilization and other treatments, such as
drugs that induce ovulation, have been linked to
a boom in multiple births in the decades since 1981 when the first baby in the
U.S. was conceived with an assist from reproductive technology.
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