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Doctors optimistic about health of Malian woman’s nine babies
21 May 2021, 15:34
Halima Cisse gave birth to the nonuplets in Morocco after being flown there for specialist treatment.
A Malian woman’s nine premature babies are being closely monitored in a Moroccan clinic, with medical staff working around the clock to stabilise their health.
Halima Cisse, 25, gave birth to the nonuplets: five girls and four boys, earlier this month in Morocco after the Malian government flew her there for specialist care. The babies weighed between 1.1 pounds and 2.2 pounds at birth.
Reports show that only two other sets of nonuplets have been recorded since the 1970s, but the babies all died within days.
“It is a pride for all of Morocco,” said Youssef Alaoui, director of the Ain Borja Clinic in Casablanca, where the newborns are being treated. “Now the challenge is to get these babies out in good health.”
One doctor said Ms Cisse’s nonuplets are stable but fragile.
“They are very immature babies. They have deficiencies in everything — at the level of the lungs, the head, the heart,” said Khalil Msaif, the clinic’s paediatric neonatologist.
But there’s also a quiet sense of optimism from staff on the babies’ future.
“Since the birth, we are in week three and the condition of the babies is stable. Most of the babies have had a good period without any problem. We hope that all will be well,” Msaif said.