Woman, 55, Has Triplets for Daughter
By
Kristen Gelineau
Associated
Press
posted:
28 December 2004
RICHMOND,
Virginia (AP) _ A 55-year-old woman acting as a surrogate for her daughter gave
birth to triplets Tuesday.
The two boys and one girl were delivered
a month and a half prematurely by Caesarean section at Bon Secours St. Mary's
Hospital. Surrogate mother Tina Cade experienced "mild complications,''
which the hospital said is not uncommon for such surgery.
Cade carried her own grandchildren for
her oldest daughter, Camille Hammond, who suffers from endometriosis, a
condition that affects the lining of the uterus and makes it difficult to
become pregnant.
Hammond and her husband, Jason, both
doctors at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, had tried for four years to
become pregnant. Cade approached the couple with the idea of carrying their child
and began hormone treatment last winter to turn back her biological clock --
she had already entered menopause -- and prepare her for pregnancy.
Months later, she was implanted with
three test-tube embryos.
The babies were not due until
mid-February, but doctors decided to perform a C-section because Cade was
having excessive swelling and because of concerns about her heart.
The infants were in intensive care. The
boys weighed 4 pounds, 9 ounces (2.07 kilograms), and 3 pounds, 12 ounces (1.70
kilograms); the girl weighed 4 pounds, 10 ounces (2.10 kilograms). Their names
were not released.
Camille Hammond said she was
"overwhelmed'' when she saw them. "The three words I have to
summarize my experience ... is `God is good,''' she said.
Jason Hammond said his mother-in-law was
resting and "doing fantastic.'' He added, "We are so excited. We are
really blessed.''
The National Center for Health
Statistics said 12 children were born in 2002 to women ages 50 to 54 who
carried triplets. The center does not maintain statistics for women 55 and
over.
Cade is director of multicultural affairs at the University
of Richmond.