60-year-old Calgary mother welcomes twins - Action News
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Calgary

60-year-old Calgary mother welcomes twins

After undergoing in vitro fertilization in India, a Calgary woman who tried for decades to have a child has given birth to a pair of baby boys at the age of 60.

Ranjit Hayer tried for decades to have a child, enduring multiple miscarriages, surgery, even the trauma of being robbed by a fertility doctor. Finally, after a successful IVF treatment, the Calgary woman gave birth to twins at age 60.

She is believed to be among the oldest Canadian women to give birth.

Hayer'sboyswere deliveredseven weeks prematurely by C-sectionat Calgary's Foothills Hospital on Tuesday morning, CBC Radio's The Current reported Thursday. The mother is recovering in intensive care, while the twinsare in the neo-natal intensive care unit.

'I always said there should be a baby. I had my heart set on it. I wanted a baby.' Ranjit Hayer, new mother

One of the babiesisbreathing with thehelp of special equipment, while the other boy is in the special care unit. Doctors say both are doing well.The twins will be kept in hospital until they reach a specified weight and can breathe on their own.

"My mind was always uneasy. I always said there should be a baby. I had my heart set on it. I wanted a baby," Hayer said from her hospital bed through a Punjabi translator.

"I used to say to my husband, 'Go ahead, marry someone else. You have earned so much.'

"He used to say to me, 'There's nothing wrong with you. If God wants to give us kids, he will.'"

Case raises ethical questions

Hayer'scase especially her age has raised many ethical questions about how far to push the frontiers of medical science, even from the Calgary specialist who helped her.

"We can do so much but the question is, should we do it just because we can do it?" said obstetrician Colin Birch, who was excited by the challenge but says he has yet to reconcile the social implications.

"It all sounds very fine when this age group isn't it fantastic what medical technology can do, how we're stretching the boundaries and everything else but there's so much more involved in this. It's not just having the babies and being born," he told CBC.

"There's not just one generation gap here, there's two generation gaps. They're really what would be like the age of grandparents."

Hayer, who is originally from India, tried for years to get pregnant with her husband, but she miscarried three times.

AfterHayer became a permanent resident in Canada,anobstetrician gynecologist diagnosed a problem withHayer's womb and recommended surgery. She had theoperation in Calgarybut she still couldn't conceive.

Woman got pregnant through fertility treatment in India

About 10 years ago, the couple paid a doctor in India for in vitro fertilization, but he took off with their money.

The couple spent years working and saving up their money in Canada. After being turned down for IVF in this country because of her age, Hayer returned to India for the treatment using donor eggs last year and got pregnant with triplets.

'I couldn't imagine if I was 65 having two five-year-olds running around crazily. The energy to do that is incredible.' Dr. Colin Birch

"I thought it was a joke because the referral said 60-year-old patient with triplets, and I thought one of my colleagues or somebody's just playing jokes with me or up to mischief, and then actually the patient turned up in my office," Birch recalled.

One of Hayer's embryos had to be terminated for medical reasons and the pregnancy with twins left her with high blood pressure and diabetes.

She also had a condition called placenta previa where the placenta is attached to the bottom of the uterus and covers part or all of the cervix and can cause severe bleeding. Hayer spent the last four weeks in hospital so doctors could deliver the babies at a moment's notice if necessary.

Hayer began tohemorrhage this weekso Birch performed an emergency C-sectionto deliver the twins. The bleedingwas so severe he had totake outthe woman's uterus. Hayer was admitted to the intensive care unit, where sherequired blood transfusions to stabilize her condition.

Debate in medical community

The cutoff age in Canada for IVF is between 45 and 50 years old.

Glenys Godlovitch, who chairs the health research ethics board at the University of Calgary, said there are many situations where patients return to Canada for care, after choosing to pay for treatment elsewhere.

"We need to think of this as the broader context, not just the individual circumstances here, as to what obligation is there in the Canadian health-care system or on the Canadian taxpayer to support the after-care for people who've received an initial intervention, at cost, somewhere outside of Canada," she said Thursday.

There are also the social implications of raising children when the parents may not live long enough to see them grow up.

"I couldn't imagine if I was 65 having two five-year-olds running around crazily. The energy to do that is incredible," said Birch.

With files from Dr. Brian Goldman