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How old is too old?

By Loren Anthony

Medical advances mean that a woman can carry a baby in her 50s, even 60s. But is there an age when a woman should be told, “Sorry, you’re just too old to have a baby”?


Advances in technology


Of course, the phenomenon of older mothers is not only due to social pressure but is, in large part, the result of the fact that it’s possible, which it wasn’t one generation ago. Advances in reproductive technology have enabled and supported women to have babies at later stages in life – in some cases with eggs donated by other women.

It’s these advances that have led to the more extreme and ethically controversial cases of elderly motherhood. The most notable story was in 2005, when Adriana Iliescu, a Romanian academic, became the world’s oldest mother at the age of 66. The birth of her child opened up a Pandora’s box of ethical, clinical and social questions.

Writer Deborah Orr, tracking the story at the time for The Independent newspaper in London, wrote scathingly that “advances in medical science are moving at a faster pace than human ethics”. Iliescu’s pregnancy, Orr argued, after nine years of fertility treatment designed to reverse the menopause, and using donor eggs and sperm, “is nothing but an elaborate, expensive and grotesque form of adoption, carried out to persuade an obsessed old woman, quite erroneously, that she’s somehow, miraculously, reproduced herself”.

Quite simply, Orr blames the medical establishment. Instead of advising her to seek psychiatric help, it pandered to her demands in this highly unethical, “rather piecemeal creation of a child”. More worryingly, wrote Orr, extreme cases like Iliescu’s “misleadingly foster a belief among the general public that childbirth is something that women can achieve at increasingly advanced ages”.

Earlier this year, psychologist Frieda Birnbaum, 60, became the oldest woman in the US to deliver twins. She and her lawyer husband Ken, 63, have been married for 38 years and have two older children, Jason, 33, and Alana, 29. They also have a son, Ari, who is seven. But not everyone in the Birnbaum family is beaming about the birth. “My mother is too old, for health reasons and for lifestyle,” daughter Alana has said. “I don’t think she’s thinking about the future – being 80 or 90 and having a kid.”

She said her brother is worried they will end up taking care of the babies. “He’s against it even more than I am.”
The Birnbaums were turned away from US clinics and flew out to South Africa for fertility treatment, where they struck it lucky. Birnbaum plans to write a book about her experiences.


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Nicky

2010-04-17 11:25

From one primigravida to another!!!

indi

2010-04-12 11:51

Hi thank you for this article. I am 39, a career lady and trying to fall pregnant and at the same time at the back of my mind woundered if i was perhapes two old, your article has indeed made me feel a whole lot more positive. Thank you again




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