Malian woman who delivered nonuplets nearly dies from hemorrhage during cesarean

Mother nearly died from hemorrhagic complications during childbirth; nine premature infants face critical health risks requiring extended intensive neonatal care.
A minor infection in a premature infant can prove fatal within hours
The medical director explains the critical vulnerability of the nine newborns during their first weeks of life.

Em uma maternidade marroquina, uma jovem maliense de 25 anos sobreviveu ao parto de nove bebês — dois a mais do que os médicos esperavam — após quase morrer de uma hemorragia arterial durante a cesariana de emergência. O caso de Halma Cisse Arby ilumina uma realidade que transcende o extraordinário: quando a vida exige recursos que o próprio país não pode oferecer, as fronteiras se tornam tanto uma salvação quanto uma separação. Os nove recém-nascidos permanecem em incubadoras no Marrocos, frágeis e prematuros, enquanto seus pais aguardam em países distintos — unidos pelo amor e divididos pela desigualdade.

  • O que começou como uma gravidez de sêxtuplos revelou-se, na sala de cirurgia, um parto de nonupletos — uma surpresa que quase custou a vida da mãe.
  • Uma hemorragia da artéria uterina transformou o nascimento em uma corrida contra a morte, mobilizando dez médicos, vinte e cinco paramédicos e dezoito enfermeiros simultaneamente.
  • Os nove bebês nasceram prematuros, com sistemas digestivos e imunológicos incompletos — uma infecção menor, alertou o diretor médico, pode ser fatal em questão de horas.
  • O pai permanece no Mali cuidando da filha de dois anos, mantendo contato à distância com a esposa e os filhos que ainda não pôde ver pessoalmente.
  • O caso expõe com crueza a fragilidade dos sistemas de saúde maternos em países de baixa renda: a sobrevivência de Halma dependeu de uma transferência internacional de emergência que nem todas as mulheres em sua situação teriam a sorte de receber.

Halma Cisse Arby acreditava estar grávida de sêtuplos. Quando entrou em trabalho de parto, descobriu que carregava nove bebês — cinco meninas e quatro meninos. O sistema de saúde do Mali não tinha condições de lidar com uma gestação de tamanha complexidade, e ela foi transferida ao Marrocos para dar à luz na clínica Ain Borja, em Casablanca.

Durante a cesariana de emergência, Halma sofreu uma hemorragia da artéria uterina que ameaçou sua vida. Uma equipe de dez médicos e vinte e cinco paramédicos lutou para conter o sangramento enquanto dezoito enfermeiros acomodavam os recém-nascidos em incubadoras. O diretor médico da clínica, Youssef Alaoui, descreveu publicamente o quão perto a situação chegou do irreparável.

Todos os nove bebês sobreviveram ao parto, mas enfrentam semanas críticas pela frente. Prematuros, seus sistemas digestivos ainda não são capazes de processar alimentos, e suas defesas imunológicas são extremamente vulneráveis. Alaoui foi direto: uma infecção simples pode ser fatal em poucas horas. As crianças precisarão de pelo menos doze semanas de cuidados intensivos antes de poderem receber alta.

O marido de Halma, Kader Arby, ficou no Mali para cuidar da filha mais velha, de dois anos, e ainda não conheceu pessoalmente os nove filhos recém-nascidos. Ele descreveu os nascimentos como dádivas de Deus — mas a família agora vive a realidade de manter nove vidas frágeis à distância, separados pelo mesmo abismo de infraestrutura que os forçou a estar em países diferentes durante um dos momentos mais decisivos de suas vidas.

Halma Cisse Arby thought she was carrying seven babies. When she went into labor last week, she delivered nine—five daughters and four sons. The 25-year-old Malian woman nearly bled to death in the process.

Mali's hospitals lacked the capacity to handle a delivery of this complexity and risk. Arby was flown to Morocco to receive specialized medical care, where she underwent an emergency cesarean section at the Ain Borja clinic. During surgery, she suffered a hemorrhage of the uterine artery, a complication that threatened her life. A team of ten doctors and twenty-five paramedics worked to control the bleeding while eighteen nurses placed the newborns into incubators. The medical director of the clinic, Youssef Alaoui, later told the British newspaper The Times how close the situation had come to tragedy.

All nine infants survived the delivery, but they face a precarious road ahead. Born prematurely, the babies lack fully developed digestive systems capable of processing food. Their immune systems are equally fragile. Alaoui explained the stakes plainly: a minor infection in a premature infant can prove fatal within hours. The children will require at least twelve weeks of intensive specialized care in the incubators before they can be considered stable enough to leave the clinic.

Arby's husband, Kader Arby, remained in Mali during the delivery and has not yet seen his nine new children in person. He told the Mail Online that he has maintained constant contact with his wife but felt obligated to stay home to care for their two-year-old daughter. He described the nine births as gifts from God, though the family now faces the reality of keeping nine fragile infants alive through their most vulnerable weeks.

The case underscores a stark disparity in maternal healthcare infrastructure. A pregnancy this high-risk—carrying nine fetuses—demanded resources that Mali's medical system simply did not possess. The decision to transport Arby across a border for emergency care was not a choice but a necessity. Her survival and the survival of her children depended on access to equipment, expertise, and personnel that only a better-resourced facility could provide. As the infants remain in Moroccan incubators, their parents wait in separate countries, separated by the same gap in healthcare capacity that forced them apart.

A small infection in a premature baby can kill it in just a few hours
— Youssef Alaoui, medical director of Ain Borja clinic
I see the babies as gifts from God
— Kader Arby, the father
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Inventor

Why did the doctors think she was carrying seven babies when there were nine?

Model

Ultrasound imaging at that stage of pregnancy can be imprecise, especially with multiple fetuses overlapping on the scan. Seven is already an extraordinarily rare outcome—nine is even rarer. The surprise was genuine.

Inventor

What made this delivery so dangerous that she nearly died?

Model

The uterine artery hemorrhage during the cesarean. When you're carrying nine babies, the uterus is stretched to its absolute limit. The blood vessels feeding it are under extreme stress. When one tears during surgery, the bleeding can be catastrophic and very fast.

Inventor

Why couldn't Mali handle this delivery?

Model

The infrastructure simply wasn't there. You need specialized neonatal intensive care units with incubators, ventilators, trained neonatal nurses. You need surgeons experienced in high-risk multiple births. Mali's hospitals are under-resourced. A nine-baby delivery is an emergency even in wealthy countries.

Inventor

What happens to the babies now?

Model

They stay in incubators for at least twelve weeks. Their digestive systems aren't ready to process food. Their lungs may not be fully developed. A single infection could kill any one of them. The medical team is essentially keeping them alive artificially until their bodies mature enough to do it themselves.

Inventor

And the mother—is she out of danger?

Model

She survived the hemorrhage, which is the immediate crisis. But she's in Morocco, separated from her husband and her two-year-old daughter back in Mali. Recovery from a cesarean after carrying nine babies is not simple. She's alive, but the ordeal is far from over.

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