Birth and baby linkage
Just a few birth and baby links from readers:
Can you imagine delivering a 17-pound baby? What kind of prenatal diet was this mama on anyway?
This was a beautiful story of two conjoined twins who share a heart and a liver. They were never thought to live much longer than the delivery, but they are still alive at two days after the birth. (Thanks to reader, Katie, for the link.)
Can you imagine delivering a 17-pound baby? What kind of prenatal diet was this mama on anyway?
This was a beautiful story of two conjoined twins who share a heart and a liver. They were never thought to live much longer than the delivery, but they are still alive at two days after the birth. (Thanks to reader, Katie, for the link.)
And finally, the best for last, here's an incredible story on the world's tiniest baby ever to survive. It's just beyond words. Amazing! (Thanks, Mary Jo!)


6 Comments:
Did you see the look on the baby's face in the next bed? lol!
It's amazing to see a baby so small.. we have friends who delivered/lost a baby at 24 weeks. The amazing thing is that a few weeks ago they met a little one who was born at the same time and was the same gender and had the same name. She ran right up to the man and chattered away to him. God delivers healing in such amazing ways!
The article said the mom only ate potatoes, tomatoes, and one other thing I can't remember. She said they are poor so they eat a very simple diet. My doula friend wondered if the mom is diabetic.
I read she said she was poor and their diet consisted of potatoes, tomatoes and something else starchy. She probably has GD....since she lives in siberia, it is unlikely they test for it.
I watched a video my grandmother taped once about many sets of conjoined twins. It is sad!
Did you see this story of two baby girls born together, but that are not twins?
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/femail/article.html?in_article_id=484562&in_page_id=1879
Every one of those sweet babies is a miracle! I'm so glad the mom of the twins has gotten some time with them.
The big baby might just 'average out' and not be so big in the future. And the tiny little girl who survived...what a cutie!
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