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Russian woman gives birth to
quintuplets in Oxford
Reported November 15, 2007
LONDON (Reuters) - A Russian woman has given birth to
five healthy quintuplet girls at an Oxford hospital after defying Russian
doctors who suggested she abort some of the foetuses.
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"They're very well. All five," Lawrence Impey, a doctor at John Radcliffe
hospital in Oxford, told BBC radio on Thursday.
Giving birth to quintuplets can be dangerous and historically it has been
rare that all five children survive.
The couple were advised in Russia to abort some of the foetuses, but decided
to give birth in Britain instead, where their medical costs were said to be
paid by a Russian charity.
The babies were born 14 weeks early last Saturday.
Impey said the biggest of the babies was just under a kilogram in weight,
but they were all now out of the most intensive form of care and could
return to Russia in the next four to five months.
"The principle risk is that they're born so early that they don't survive.
And in this case she got to a time when they have survived," he said.
"Throughout most of the pregnancy, I don't think she really thought that she
was going to end up with five live little babies, and to be fair, we didn't
think that either.
"So everybody's absolutely thrilled but, of course, most of all, her and her
family."
(Reporting by Peter Graff; Editing by Tim Castle)
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