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What are mermaid twins?

This amniotic sac ruptures when a pregnant womans's water breaks before she goes into labour. It rarely happens that a woman goes into labour without her water breaking and in those cases, the baby is delivered fully or partially covered in amniotic sac. It is called mermaid birth.

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A Spanish twin birth has been making headlines for its rare nature. The two kids were born after a cesarean section operation on the mother. The babies came out of the mother’s womb wrapped in a sac. The wrapping found on the babies is called the amniotic sac. It almost always ruptures after the water breaks in a mother’s womb and hence the Spanish twin birth was a one in 80,000 rare occurrence of a mermaid birth. The birth of the twins took place in Valencia, Spain. The doctor who did the surgery gladly posted about it on her social media handle. Ob-Gyn Ana Teijelo wrote, “The first veiled cesarean section I’ve seen and I loved it, and I’m not telling the students anything (although I admit that I’m the one screaming). Teijelo also posted the pictures of the twins with the permission of their parents.

What is mermaid birth?

During a mermaid birth, the baby is delivered in a wrapped in a soft bubble, making it look like a gift wrapping. It is also called veiled birth or en caul birth. As per several experts, this kind of birth takes place only in one in 80,000 times. The wrapping around the baby, babies in this Spanish twins’s case, is called amniotic sac which is made of two layers of membrane filled with amniotic fluid. This is the same fluid in which the baby floats around during the entire pregnancy. This amniotic sac ruptures when a pregnant womans’s water breaks before she goes into labour. It rarely happens that a woman goes into labour without her water breaking and in those cases, the baby is delivered fully or partially covered in amniotic sac. It is called mermaid birth. Due to this sac, the baby stays safe and protective during and after birth. Whatever they need as a newborn is found in the sac. After delivering, the amniotic sac is carefully removed by the doctor. As per several reports, many babies have themselves been seen slowly breaking open the sac they are covered in. A baby needs more care if it is born with the outer membrane still intact around its body.

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Who is more likely to have daughters?

My general response is that it's a 50/50 chance that a woman will have a boy or a girl. But that's not exactly true – there's actually a slight bias toward male births. The ratio of male to female births, called the sex ratio, is about 105 to 100, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

Is it a boy or a girl? That’s the most common question I hear during ultrasounds. Many couples want to know before the 20-week ultrasound. And there are plenty of old wives' tales that patients reference when guessing the sex of their baby. My general response is that it's a 50/50 chance that a woman will have a boy or a girl. But that's not exactly true – there’s actually a slight bias toward male births. The ratio of male to female births, called the sex ratio, is about 105 to 100, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). This means about 51% of deliveries result in a baby boy. While the sex ratio can be distorted by populations that selectively value male over female births, there could be another explanation. Research suggests the slight natural skew of the sex ratio could be nature’s way of adjusting for higher death rates in males due to injuries, accidents, and war. For example, in England around 1900, 50.8% of births were boys. Following World Wars I and II, the rate of male births increased to 51.6%. This may not seem like a big difference, but it resulted in 32 more boys than girls born for every thousand births. Similar changes were seen in other European countries as well following these wars. It seems like sex ratio shifts should be a random phenomenon. But from a medical standpoint, perhaps there’s a genetic explanation to changes in the numbers of boy and girl babies at different times in history.

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