Molly’s birth is believed to have set a new record – one previously held by her elder sister Emma – the longest known to have given birth to a frozen embryo. Not that records matter for Gibson.
“We were too excited to have children,” Tina Gibson said with Emma on Tuesday. “With Molly, we are the same way. It’s just kind of funny – here we are going again with another world record.”
Using an old fetus
Before Emma and then Molly made the record, little was known about the viability of the old fetus. And when she finds out that Emma’s fetus has been frozen for so long, Gibson worries that her age will reduce her chances of becoming pregnant.
But the president and medical director of the center, Dr. Jeffrey Keenan assured him that this would have no effect on the age of the results. She said in a release that the births of both Emma and Molly are proof that the fetus should not be abandoned because they are “old”.
The center’s lab director and embryologist Carol Sommerfeldt said in a release, “It certainly depends on the technology used in all those years and the ability to preserve the embryo for future use under an uncertain timeframe . ”
Questions still remain regarding the age of difference in successful fetal births, but the Center says Gibson girls are born positive examples of the use of older fetuses.
The birth of the epidemic was a bright spot during the epidemic
The second embryo adopted by Gibson was not molten until February and transferred to Gibson’s uterus by February. Gibson said she learned that she had become pregnant with Molly just days before Kovid-19 was declared an epidemic.
“That was definitely a small spark of joy for 2020,” she said.
Born in late October at 6 pounds, 13 ounces, Molly lit up her family’s world. Although she and her sister are medical Marvels, Gibson said what still surprises her most is the fact that they are both.
“Every single day, my husband and I talk about it,” she said. “We’re always like, ‘Can you believe that we don’t have one little girl, but two little girls? Can you believe that we are the parents of many children?”
“You think during pregnancy that I’ll just get accustomed to it, but I’m still completely blown away that they belong to us,” she said.
Correction: An earlier version of this story listed the wrong first name for the president of the National Fetal Donation Center. He is Dr. Jeffrey Keenan.
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