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    Surrogate mother delivers fivefold joy

2005-04-29 06:57

PHOENIX: A surrogate mother hoped to give a childless couple a baby of their own. On Tuesday, she gave them five.

Teresa Anderson, 25, delivered quintuplets - all boys - by Caesarean section. One of the babies was born with a defective heart; the others were said to be doing fine.

"Quintuplets are very, very difficult to carry," said Anderson's obstetrician, Dr. John Elliott. "To do that for someone else is extraordinary."

Elliott said Anderson was able to walk into the delivery room on her own, something he'd never seen before.

"She's happy. She's smiling now. She's relieved," said Anderson's husband, Jerad, several hours after the surgery at Banner Good Samaritan Medical Centre.

The babies were delivered in just 5 minutes and were named Enrique, Jorge, Gabriel, Victor and Javier by their genetic parents, Luisa Gonzalez and Enrique Moreno.

Gabriel was the largest, at 1.81 kilograms; Javier the smallest, at 1.57 kilograms.

Anderson had agreed to carry the couple's child and was to receive US$15,000 she hoped would help her own family.

Five embryos were implanted to increase the chances that at least one of them would take hold.

After discovering all five embryos were developing, Anderson declined to accept any payment from the couple because of the expenses they will face.

A hospital spokesman said he did not know how the medical costs were being covered but believed they were part of the surrogacy agreement. For Gonzalez and Moreno, the births were the culmination of more than a decade of trying to start a family.

"We were always looking for just one," said Moreno, who immigrated from Mexico 16 years ago.

"If it's five, it's for a reason."

Gonzalez said she began to cry when she saw the first baby, Enrique, delivered.

"I've been waiting for this for a long time," she said.

Moreno is a landscaper, and Gonzalez will be a stay-at-home mother.

The couple said they are not sure how they will handle the financial burden of the new brood in their three-bedroom suburban Gilbert home.

"We'll do the best we can. I know God will help us," said Gonzalez. Javier was taken to Phoenix Children's Hospital because the left side of his heart was underdeveloped and could not properly pump blood. He was reported in stable condition.

Dr John Stock, the pediatric cardiologist who diagnosed his heart problem, said children with the defect must either undergo a series of operations to fix the problem or get a heart transplant.

Javier's small size means surgery is the only real option for his survival. Doctors are hoping he will have time to grow in the next few days or week before the first surgery.

The babies were born in the 33rd week of Anderson's pregnancy, a week earlier than planned because the mother was experiencing elevated blood pressure and other complications.

A full-term pregnancy is 40 weeks. Anderson, a nursing student, and her husband, a postal carrier, have two children.

(China Daily 04/29/2005 page7)

                 

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