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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
Olivia Tobin

World's tiniest baby, weighing the same as an apple, born in California

A girl who was born weighing about the same as an apple is believed to be the world's tiniest surviving baby.

A San Diego hospital revealed the "miracle" infant, who was born in December, was born at 23 weeks and three days into her mother’s 40-week pregnancy.

She weighed just 8.6 ounces (245g) and her parents were told they would only have one hour with her after she was born.

The mother of the baby, who has asked to remain anonymous, emotionally told how she and the girl’s father were warned they would just have an hour with her before she died.

She said: “But that hour turned into two hours, which turned into a day, which turned into a week.”

In a video released by Sharp Mary Birch Hospital for Women & Newborns, she told how five months have now passed and the baby girl miraculously returned home as a healthy infant, weighing five pounds (2kg).

The baby's family gave permission to share the story but wanted to stay anonymous, the hospital said. They allowed the girl to go by the name that nurses called her: "Saybie".

The baby was cared for at Sharp Mary Birch Hospital for Women and Newborns (AFP/Getty Images)

Her ranking as the world's smallest baby ever to survive is according to the Tiniest Baby Registry maintained by the University of Iowa.

Dr Edward Bell, a professor of paediatrics at the University of Iowa, said Saybie had the lowest medically confirmed birth weight submitted to the registry.

But "we cannot rule out even smaller infants who have not been reported to the Registry," he said.

The hospital said the girl officially weighed 7g less than the previous tiniest baby, who was born in Germany in 2015.

The baby was born at 23 weeks and three days into her mother’s 40-week-pregnancy (AP)

In the video produced by the hospital, the mother described the birth as the scariest day of her life.

She said she was taken to the hospital after not feeling well and was told she had preeclampsia, a serious condition that causes high blood pressure, and that the baby needed to be delivered quickly.

"I kept telling them she's not going to survive, she's only 23 weeks," the mother said.

The baby girl, in April (AP)

But she did. The tiny girl slowly gained weight in the neonatal intensive care unit.

A pink sign by her crib read "Tiny but Mighty".

The baby girl was born in December (AP)

"You could barely see her in the bed she was so tiny," nurse Emma Wiest said in the video.

Nurses put a tiny graduation cap on her when she left the unit.

A nurse holding baby Saybie (AFP/Getty Images)

The girl faces enormous challenges as a micro-preemie, who is an infant born before 28 weeks of gestation. Micro-preemies can experience vision and hearing problems, developmental issues and a host of other complications.

Many do not survive the first year, said Michelle Kling of the March of Dimes, a non-profit that works to improve the health of mothers and babies.

The baby girl measured 23cm (AFP/Getty Images)

So far Saybie has beaten the odds.

Kim Norby, another nurse featured in the video said: “She’s a miracle, that’s for sure.”

Additional reporting by Associated Press

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