Social workers inspected the home of octuplets mother Nadya Suleman and decided her babies should remain at a Bellflower hospital for several more days, Suleman said today.

In an interview with Radar Online, Suleman said workers from Kaiser Permanente Medical Center went to her new home in La Habra and said it was shaping up well to house all 14 of her children. But for reasons she did not disclose, Suleman said the hospital is not going to release the first two of her eight babies for several more days.

"I am not disappointed," she said. "I appreciate what they are doing."

Suleman told a Radar interview that the social workers were disappointed that she was not at the La Habra home for the inspection, adding she didn't know she was supposed to be there.

She said she's been spending the last few days preparing for the move from her Whittier home to the larger space in La Habra. "There is so much I need to do to prepare," she said.