Close X
Thursday, October 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

This B.C. Couple Hoping For One Baby Gets One-In-50-Million Triplets Surprise

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Oct, 2015 12:03 PM
    SALMON ARM , B.C. — A British Columbia couple who've waited years to become parents are expecting three babies at once — identical triplets, which doctors say come along only once in 50 million births.
     
    For Mahalia Meeuwsen and her husband Mike, just having one baby seemed like a miracle.
     
    Meeuwsen, 42, is 30 weeks pregnant with identical triplet girls — conceived naturally without the use of fertility treatments.
     
    “To look on the ultrasound and see the three of them growing, to see their hearts beating, it is simply amazing,” the mom-to-be said. “And to know how rare this is, it’s staggering.”
     
    Meeuwsen said all the babies appear healthy.
     
    “There are so many complications and so many worries and yet, every appointment we’ve heard nothing but good news, so my plan is to just try and stay calm and each day they grow a little bit more."
     
    Meeuwsen was admitted to hospital for bed rest on Monday morning.
     
    Doctors are hoping the triplets will continue to grow in their mother’s womb until a C-section on Nov. 16, when they will be at 34 weeks gestation. A normal singleton pregnancy is around 40 weeks.
     
    The couple from Salmon Arm married in 2005 with hopes of becoming parents. By 2011, they were still waiting and visited a fertility clinic to try and discover the cause of the infertility.
     
    “They really found nothing,” Meeuwsen said. “It was simply termed unexplained infertility. We looked at options like in-vitro, but we decided not to go that route.”
     
    A month later, Meeuwsen was pregnant, but an ultrasound a month later detected no heartbeat.
     
    “That was devastating to us but, at that point, we just decided we were not going to be parents and were going to love our furry kids, our English bulldog, and that would be that.”
     
    However, in April, Meeuwsen was experiencing some unusual symptoms she chalked up to early menopause — until a call from her doctor's office confirmed she was pregnant.
     
    “I thought I was too old, so it was pretty shocking.”
     
    Then an ultrasound revealed what medical staff thought was twins.
     
    Two weeks later, the shock multiplied.
     
    “I had another ultrasound and the tech goes, ‘There’s a heartbeat here and here and here.’ And I thought he was joking,” Meeuwsen said. “But, he showed me — and there they all were. I was dizzy.”
     
    When they brought her husband in for the news, they propped him up between the bed and the wall.
     
    “They figured he’d need something to lean on,” Meeuwsen said with a laugh.
     
    “Just look at that stroller," she said showing the $1,500 purchase. It’s like a train.”
     
    The expenses will multiply for the couple while their babies remain in a neonatal intensive care unit, perhaps in Kamloops, where the new parents would have to stay in a hotel.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    HIV-AIDS Experts Call For Governments Worldwide To Commit To Immediate Treatment

    HIV-AIDS Experts Call For Governments Worldwide To Commit To Immediate Treatment
    VANCOUVER — Experts on HIV-AIDS gathered in Vancouver are calling on political leaders worldwide to take action to help end the global epidemic.

    HIV-AIDS Experts Call For Governments Worldwide To Commit To Immediate Treatment

    Latest Wildfire Alert Affects 80 Properties North Of West Kelowna Near Bear Creek Provincial Park

    Latest Wildfire Alert Affects 80 Properties North Of West Kelowna Near Bear Creek Provincial Park
    WEST KELOWNA, B.C. — Crews are keeping a close eye on a wildfire near West Kelowna, B.C., after the blaze prompted an evacuation alert for 80 properties near Bear Creek Provincial Park.

    Latest Wildfire Alert Affects 80 Properties North Of West Kelowna Near Bear Creek Provincial Park

    Senate Report Says CBC Should Find New Ways To Pay For Productions, News

    Senate Report Says CBC Should Find New Ways To Pay For Productions, News
    OTTAWA — A Senate committee is calling on Canada's public broadcaster to publicly disclose how much employees make and ensure non-executives aren't getting paid more than their peers in private broadcasting.

    Senate Report Says CBC Should Find New Ways To Pay For Productions, News

    Musician Ryan Lewis Joins HIV-AIDS Conference To Speak About Charity

    Musician Ryan Lewis Joins HIV-AIDS Conference To Speak About Charity
    VANCOUVER — Musician Ryan Lewis is in Vancouver, rubbing shoulders with a different kind of celebrity — some of the world's leading HIV-AIDS experts.

    Musician Ryan Lewis Joins HIV-AIDS Conference To Speak About Charity

    Technology Used In Hunt Of A Different Kind For North Atlantic Right Whales

    Technology Used In Hunt Of A Different Kind For North Atlantic Right Whales
    HALIFAX — Scientists are preparing to deploy an arsenal of high-tech gadgetry into the Atlantic Ocean to try to track down one of nature's biggest, but most elusive creatures in a whale hunt of a different kind.

    Technology Used In Hunt Of A Different Kind For North Atlantic Right Whales

    Newfoundland And Labrador To Examine Potential Hydro Sales To Ontario

    Newfoundland And Labrador To Examine Potential Hydro Sales To Ontario
    Natural Resources Minister Derrick Dalley says the commitment was made today with Ontario Energy Minister Bob Chiarelli at the 2015 Energy and Mines Ministers' Conference in Halifax.

    Newfoundland And Labrador To Examine Potential Hydro Sales To Ontario