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Australia's oldest first-time mother gives birth to daughter | Australia's oldest first-time mother gives birth to daughter |
(about 11 hours later) | |
A woman from Tasmania has become Australia's oldest first-time mother at the age 63. | A woman from Tasmania has become Australia's oldest first-time mother at the age 63. |
The baby girl was delivered at 34 weeks through a Caesarean operation in Melbourne on 1 August. | |
After years of failed IVF procedures, the new mother, whose partner is 78, conceived using an embryo sourced from an overseas donor. | After years of failed IVF procedures, the new mother, whose partner is 78, conceived using an embryo sourced from an overseas donor. |
She and her daughter are recovering at a private hospital in Melbourne. Neither has been publicly named. | |
The previous Australian record was held by a woman who gave birth to her first child at 60 in 2010. | |
A Romanian woman named Adriana Iliescue set the record for being the world's oldest mother when she gave birth in 2005 aged 66. | |
An Australian reproduction specialist said "responsible" IVF clinics refused treatment to women over the age of 53, which he described as the "end of natural pregnancy". | An Australian reproduction specialist said "responsible" IVF clinics refused treatment to women over the age of 53, which he described as the "end of natural pregnancy". |
"That child will need looking after for 20 years, and there's a possibility she won't be able to do that," Monash University professor Gab Kovacs told the Herald Sun newspaper. | "That child will need looking after for 20 years, and there's a possibility she won't be able to do that," Monash University professor Gab Kovacs told the Herald Sun newspaper. |
"Our bodies weren't designed to have children in our 60s." | "Our bodies weren't designed to have children in our 60s." |
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