Hello good people,
What do we have here? Woman has 8 kids without a father in the picture on top of 6 she already had! What a social scam and the best in history. Now before you get mad at me just think about it. 6 kids, living on mom and dads couch, $160, 000 dollars in public assistance after being disabled from work and the taking some of the money for invetro fertilization from eggs from a friend and having 8 more kids. Smooth move and I think she thought it out. She may get the free diapers from companies like Johnson and Johnson, formula, transportation, medical bills paid for all on a few minutes of painful work. I take my hat off to her for getting through it but damn is it really worth it? At least george Foreman and his wife have several kids (not twins) but they are a old school normal family. I guess the millineum way of doing things is "no man just a tube and get paid", I hope she has alot of help and the kids don't suffer in anyway and grow up to lead normal healthy lives. Hopefully they make it...Good Luck and God Bless!!! She is going to need it!!!
Mr. Lovettelli Has spoken And You Will Listen!!!
Here is the actual story.
BELLFLOWER, Calif. (Jan. 27) - Just think: eight cribs, eight highchairs, eight strollers (or maybe four double-strollers), and far too many dirty diapers to count.
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Doctors described the six boys and two girls as a feisty bunch who made their entrance kicking and crying and seemed to be doing remarkably well, despite arriving nine weeks premature. They ranged in weight from 1 pound, 8 ounces, to 3 pounds, 4 ounces.
"We were fortunate that this patient was extremely strong, very courageous and able to handle these births," said Dr. Karen E. Maples, who is chief of service for obstetrics and gynecology at Kaiser Permanente Bellflower Medical Center and delivered Baby No. 8.
The chances of delivering eight babies naturally are "unbelievably rare," said Dr. Richard Paulson, director of the fertility program at the University of Southern California.
"They are doing amazingly well at this time," said Dr. Mandhir Gupta, a neonatologist who was part of the team of 46 doctors, nurses and others who took part in the cesarean section delivery. But he added: "I won't be able to comment on chances of survival because we've never had eight babies born at 30 weeks before."
The odds of survival drop off dramatically in multiple births, particularly if there are more than three babies. The risks include breathing and eating difficulties and growth problems because their lungs and other systems are often underdeveloped. They also may have hearing or vision problems and learning disabilities as they mature.
In fact, the risks in multiple births are so high that when a woman is pregnant with more than three babies, doctors routinely recommend "selective reduction," or aborting some of them. But Dr. Harold M. Henry, director of maternal-fetal medicine for the hospital, would not discuss what took place in this case.
"That's the biggest test," Gupta said. "We want to make sure that they start tolerating and digesting the milk."
The mother reacted calmly to the news, said Dr. Jalil Riazi, an anesthesiologist. "Her question was, 'Really, an eighth baby? How did we miss that baby?'" he said.
The world's first live octuplets were born in 1967 in Mexico City, but all died within 14 hours, according to Encyclopedia Britannica.
"It's wonderful watching them be together. They are happy to have each other. They're doing their homework right now," Nkem Chukwu said Monday.
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