Triplets and multiple births in Singapore

Triplets and multiple births in Singapore


SINGAPORE – When banking professional Ng Han Siang and his wife Janice Chen married nine years ago, having children was not part of their plans.

That changed over the years, and they decided on just one child.

“I was scared I would regret missing out on the joy of having children,” said Ms Chen, 42, who used to work in the banking sector.

What they did not expect was to have their wish granted threefold.

On her first round of in-vitro fertilisation at the age of 40, she conceived triplets, after having two embryos, or fertilised eggs, placed in her womb.

“I was very shocked, but happy. It’s unbelievable,” she said. 

Today, she and her husband are the proud parents of a girl named Pei Xuan and two boys, Jie Rui and Jie Le.

The Ng triplets were among 12 sets born in 2024 here, the highest number since 2017, when the same figure was recorded.

In 2023, eight sets of triplets were born, and there were six sets in 2022.

16-month-old triplets (from left) Ng Jie Le, Ng Pei Xuan and Ng Jie Rui at home on Sept 30, 2025.

ST PHOTO: KEVIN LIM

While 2024 saw an uptick in the number of triplets, an analysis of data from 1994 to 2024 by The Straits Times based on official statistics from the annual report on registration of births and deaths showed that higher-order multiple births have fallen significantly over the years.

A multiple birth is when a single pregnancy results in more than one baby, such as twins, while higher-order multiple births means having three or more babies, such as triplets and quadruplets.

Doctors attribute the decline of higher order multiple births to the fact that many couples transfer just one embryo during IVF, given that advances in IVF laboratory techniques have improved pregnancy rates.

Another reason is the cap on the number of embryos that can be transferred in a single assisted reproduction cycle, limited to a maximum of two except in certain cases, to reduce the risk associated with multiple pregnancies.

From 2015 to 2024, 86 sets of triplets were born – about half the 177 sets recorded in the previous decade between 2005 and 2014.

Only 13 sets of quadruplets were born here between 1994 and 2024, with the most recent in 2012.

Singapore’s largest multiple birth took place in 1998, when a couple had five boys and a girl. The sextuplets were conceived through an assisted reproductive technology called gamete intrafallopian transfer, or Gift.

Twins, however, remain more common.



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