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The world is a strange and wonderful place, but mostly strange

Posted September 19, 2006 at 11:43 am by Andrea

When I saw a link from And We Shall March to an article titled, “She’s her own twin,” I had to click on it.

Fairchild’s fight for her kids began when she was 26-years-old, unemployed and applying for public assistance in Washington state. Everyone in her family had to be tested to prove they were all related.

The Department of Social Services called Fairchild and told her to come in immediately. What Fairchild thought was a routine meeting with a social worker turned into an interrogation. The proud mother was suddenly a criminal suspect.

“As I sat down, they came up and shut the door, and they just went back and just started drilling me with questions like, ‘Who are you?’” Fairchild said. The DNA test results challenged everything she knew about her family. Yes, her boyfriend was the father of the children, and, yes, they were all related, according to the DNA, except for Fairchild. She was told she wasn’t the mother.

What do you know–she’s her own twin, the result of a rare medical condition called chimerism which results when two fertilized eggs fuse in the womb and grow into one individual. And because of it she almost lost custody of her own kids; at the eleventh hour, her lawyer found out about this condition from independent research and had her tested for it.

The state was still so suspicious of Fairchild that when she gave birth to another child, a court officer stood in the delivery room to witness an immediate DNA test.

“They took DNA from the baby and myself right then and there, after birth, and it came back that there is no way possible that baby is mine,” Fairchild said.

Even though they’d witnessed the birth, officials believed she was acting as a surrogate, possibly bearing a child for money.

Fairchild’s attorney was determined to solve the mystery. That’s when he came across Keegan’s chimera story in the New England Journal of Medicine.

“I asked the judge to postpone the case until these tests could be done,” Tindell said.

After the tests were done, there was proof that Fairchild was her own twin as well. The judge finally believed Fairchild was the biological mother of her children and dismissed the case.

“I probably wouldn’t have my kids today if they didn’t discover her situation. They wouldn’t have known to even consider me as a chimera,” Fairchild said.

?‚? Is science the villain or the hero of this story?

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4 Responses to “The world is a strange and wonderful place, but mostly strange”

  1. 1. Jessica said:
    September 20, 2006 @ 5:51 pm

    Is this a multiple choice question?

    Science can be both, the villain and the hero. With every new technological or medical advancement, comes consequences.

    Freaky story though. I’ve never heard of such a thing.

  2. 2. Andrea said:
    September 20, 2006 @ 6:40 pm

    Yeah, that was pretty much my reaction too.
  3. 3. Stacy said:
    September 21, 2006 @ 12:08 pm

    Freaky. Scary. Wow.

  4. 4. Sheila said:
    September 29, 2006 @ 10:06 am

    Most scientists want people to think that the conclusions they often deduce are infallible. This is a very dangerous inference. Evolution is another one….

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