Photo: (Gazette photo by David Lee Hartlage) The Grady Quadruplets (now 11 years old)
She was in her late 40s and wanted just one baby.
The new case could add to concerns about Kamrava's practice and about whether the fertility industry needs more regulation.
In fertility medicine, any pregnancy greater than twins is considered a poor outcome because of the danger it poses to the mother and the babies. Quadruplet births are rare, with an average of 14 sets born in California each year, according to state records.
"However, that worked under a natural process of fertilization and incubation. There are serious questions about whether it works in an era of scientifically enhanced procreation."
The woman in the latest case arrived recently at Good Samaritan Hospital in Los Angeles for unspecified treatment but was transferred last week to County-USC Medical Center because she lacks insurance. Doctors placed her on bed rest until the birth of the babies, which could be two or three months from now.
The California Medical Board has said it is looking into the octuplets' case to determine whether a doctor may have violated any standards of care. Read more...
Source: The Los Angeles Times By Kimi Yoshino, Jessica Garrison and Alan Zarembo
February 13, 2009
0 comments:
Post a Comment