German woman (65) gives birth to quadruplets

Annegret Raunigk, a teacher from Berlin, underwent fertility treatment in Ukraine

This photo taken on December 11th, 2005 shows then 55-year-old Annegret Raunigk (1st row, 2nd L), posing with her then youngest daughter Lelia (on her knees) and other children and grand-children in Cologne as guest in a German channel RTL show. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images.
This photo taken on December 11th, 2005 shows then 55-year-old Annegret Raunigk (1st row, 2nd L), posing with her then youngest daughter Lelia (on her knees) and other children and grand-children in Cologne as guest in a German channel RTL show. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images.

A 65-year-old teacher from Berlin has given birth to quadruplets after a pregnancy that was widely criticised by medical professionals because of her age, RTL television has reported.

Annegret Raunigk gave birth to a girl, Neeta, and three boys — Dries, Bence and Fjonn — by caesarean section at a Berlin hospital on Tuesday, RTL said.

The new-borns weighed between one pound, seven ounces and two pounds, two ounces each.

A spokeswoman for RTL said the babies stood a strong chance of survival but possible complications could not yet be ruled out because they were born in the 26th week of pregnancy.Their mother was doing well, the spokeswoman said.

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"Ms Raunigk basically has no medical risk any more," Heike Speda said.

She added that the woman had signed a contract granting RTL exclusive access in return for an undisclosed sum.

Ms Raunigk already had 13 children ranging in age from nine to 44, from five fathers.

She told Germany’s Bild newspaper last month that she decided to become pregnant again because her nine-year-old daughter wanted a younger sibling. She also has seven grandchildren.

Ms Raunigk travelled abroad to have donated, fertilised eggs implanted — a procedure that is illegal in Germany.

Her decision prompted criticism from doctors, who questioned whether her body would be physically capable of bearing four children.

But Ms Raunigk defended her decision, telling Bild last month: “They can see it how they want to and I’ll see it the way I think is right.”

PA