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Health See other Health Articles Title: Mom welcomes 'miracle' baby after 13 miscarriages in 10 years Mom welcomes 'miracle' baby after 13 miscarriages in 10 years Rachel Paula Abrahamson 4 hrs ago The path to parenthood wasnt an easy one for Laura Worsley. Over the course of 10 years, Worsley suffered 13 miscarriages including one at 20 weeks. It never got easier, the finance assistant from Kenilworth, England, told TODAY Parents. Each loss was absolutely devastating. When Worsley, 35, became pregnant for the 14th time, she was afraid to get attached. I thought to myself, Ill lose this baby just like I always do, so whats the point? Worsley told TODAY Parents. But the 14th and final attempt was different. © Laura Worsley TODAY, product courtesy of merchant site After a decade of heartbreak, Worsley and her husband, Dave, welcomed their daughter Ivy on Sept. 12, 2018. Shes our miracle baby, Worsley told TODAY Parents. Sometimes Ill look at her and it doesn't feel real. I cant believe Im Ivy's mom." Worsley knows she wouldnt be holding Ivy in her arms had it not been for Professor Siobhan Quenby and the Biomedical Research Unit at University Hospital Coventry and Warwickshire. It was fertility specialist Quenby who diagnosed Worsley with Antiphospholipid syndrome, also known as "sticky blood syndrome," which can cause miscarriages. Quenby also discovered that Worsley had Chronic Histiocytic Intervillositis, a rare condition that uses the body to attack the placenta. Once doctors understood what was happening, Worsley was given medication to strengthen the lining of her uterus and a high dose of the steroid prednisolone to suppress her immune system. The goal was to get Worsley past the 24-week mark in her pregnancy, when babies have a chance of surviving. She made it even further than her team expected. At 30 weeks, Worsleys water broke and Ivy was delivered via C-section, weighing 1 pound, 7 ounces. It was terrifying to see her so small with breathing tubes, she told TODAY Parents. But now, at 9 months old, Ivy is healthy and thriving. Shes still tiny for her age, Worsley told TODAY Parents. But shes smiling and giggling and grabbing everything in sight. Worsley is making her story public to bring others hope. I had given up on the idea that I would ever be a mother, she told TODAY Parents. Miracles can happen." Poster Comment: Miracles can and do happen. But can you imagine the medical expense over all these miscarriages? Perhaps the socialist system they have in Britain now picked up the tab. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: BTP Holdings (#0)
I dont find this womans choice to get pregnant admirable. Once she knew she had a problem, she should have just adopted a healthy baby. Instead she produced thirteen dead babies and a premie.
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