Indian father Mohinder Singh Gill, 79, and his wife Daljinder Kaur, 70, hold their newborn baby boy Arman at their home in Amritsar on May 11, 2016 ©Narinder Nanu (AFP) |
Doctors in
India on Wednesday raised ethical and health concerns after a woman gave birth
to her first child in her 70s, following two years of IVF treatment.
AFP report continues:
Daljinder Kaur gave birth
last month to a healthy boy after falling pregnant by her 79-year-old husband,
following fertility treatment at a northern Indian clinic.
Kaur said the couple,
married for 46 years, were overjoyed at finally having their first child after
enduring years of taunts in a country where infertility is sometimes seen as a
curse from God.
"I feel blessed to
be able to hold my own baby. I had lost hope of becoming a mother ever,"
Kaur told AFP from her home in Amritsar city.
"I used to feel
empty. There was so much loneliness."
Daljinder Kaur says she
feels "full of energy" after giving birth to a baby boy at the age of
70 ©Narinder Nanu (AFP)
|
Kaur put her age at about
70 -- a common scenario in India, where many people don't have birth
certificates -- while the clinic said in a statement that she was 72.
But fertility expert
Sunil Jindal raised questions about the future of a child born to elderly
parents, as well as health issues for the mother.
"There are ethical
issues. In my opinion it is unfair to do such a procedure on a woman who is
over 60," Jindal told AFP.
"The sheer fact that
a woman in her 70s has to carry the weight of a child in her womb for nine
months is stressful.
"Then the question
comes how are the parents going to look after the baby? That is also quite a
task."
The clinic, in the
northern state of Haryana, told AFP the couple's baby was conceived using
Kaur's egg and her husband's sperm after two previous unsuccessful attempts.
But Britain's the
Guardian newspaper on Wednesday quoted the clinic's doctor saying donor eggs
were used. The doctor declined to comment to AFP on Wednesday, saying it was
not ethical of him to do so.
In vitro Fertilization
(IVF) ©iv, jfs (AFP)
|
Gynaecologist Anshu
Jindal, based in Meerut not far from the capital, said she tried to discourage
women over the age of 60 from undergoing fertility treatment -- for the sake of
both mother and child.
"According to me it
is not an age to have a baby. It will take a toll," she told AFP.
The clinic's doctor told
AFP on Tuesday that tests showed Kaur was medically fine to carry the baby
through pregnancy.
The
case is not the first in India -- a 72-year-old woman from Uttar Pradesh state
reportedly gave birth to twins in 2008, also through IVF.
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