Thiruvananthapuram: A Keralite couple settled in the US are waiting eagerly for easing of COVID-19 lockdown curbs on travel to rush home and hold and cuddle their baby girl born out of surrogacy in a hospital in the southern state.
The couple, hailing from Pathanamthitta district and settled in the US, have been waiting for nearly 12 years to have a child and had planned to arrive in Kerala early last month in time for the delivery on March 19, but the coronavirus spread the world over has played spoilsport.
"The parents of the child are in US. They were supposed to come and receive the baby, but unfortunately due to the sudden lockdown, they are still having to wait," Dr Parasuram Gopinath, Consultant and Scientific Director of CIMAR, a fertility centre in Kochi, where the baby was born, said.
They had a first look at their baby through video chat.
The couple have been trying for having a child since the past 10-12 years. They have had multiple treatment failures. Ultimately, through surrogacy they have got a child of their own, Parasuram told.
The parents, who underwent treatment at the Centre for Infertility, Management and Assisted Reproduction (CIMAR), had returned to the US and were hoping to be back in Kerala by March 9 but could not make it.
The baby, born on Mar 19, is perfectly fine, he said adding she was well taken care of in the neo-natal ICU of the hospital for 12 days.
Asked how the parents reacted on first seeing their bundle of joy, the doctor said they were "overjoyed and extremely happy".