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Thread started 09/03/10 4:52pm

bboy87

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Mother revives newborn son :)


http://www.blogher.com/mo...garoo-care

After Australian mom Kate Ogg gave birth to premature twins at 27 weeks gestation, her doctor gave her the news no mother wants to hear. One of the twins -- a boy -- didn't make it, but that's just the beginning of this heartwarming story.

The doctor -- who struggled for 20 minutes to save the infant before declaring him dead -- gave the 2-pound lifeless baby to Kate and her husband David to say their goodbyes. Kate instinctively placed her naked newborn son, named Jamie, on her bare chest. As the grieving parents embraced and talked to Jamie for two hours, he began gasping for air. At first the doctors dismissed it as a reflex. However, the gasps continued more frequently and he began showing other signs of life. Kate gave Jamie some breastmilk on her finger. Amazingly, he began to breathe normally. Kate recalled, "A short time later he opened his eyes. It was a miracle. Then he held out his hand and grabbed my finger. He opened his eyes and moved his head from side to side. The doctor kept shaking his head saying, 'I don't believe it, I don't believe it.'"




The technique which Kate Ogg used to revive her baby -- placing the infant skin-to-skin with the mother or father -- is known as Kangaroo Care or Kangaroo Mother Care, a practice endorsed by the World Health Organization for use with premature infants. Pre-term and low birth-weight babies treated with the skin-to-skin method have also been shown to have lower infection rates, less severe illness, improved sleep patterns and are at reduced risk of hypothermia.

The March of Dimes has a section on their web site called Parenting in the NICU: Holding Your Baby Close: Kangaroo Care, which describes the benefits of the practice.

Kangaroo care is the practice of holding your diapered baby on your bare chest (if you're the father) or between your breasts (if you're the mother), with a blanket draped over your baby's back. This skin-to-skin contact benefits both you and your baby.

Kangaroo care can help your baby:

•Maintain his body warmth
•Regulate his heart and breathing rates
•Gain weight
•Spend more time in deep sleep
•Spend more time being quiet and alert and less time crying
•Have a better chance of successful breastfeeding (kangaroo care can improve the mother's breastmilk production)
Dr. Jack Newman believes Kangaroo care benefits all babies and believes the "vast majority of babies" should have skin-to-skin contact with the mother "immediately after birth for at least an hour. Hospital routines, such as weighing the baby, should not take precedence." In his article The Importance of Skin-to-Skin Contact, Dr. Newman states:

There are now a multitude of studies that show that mothers and babies should be together, skin to skin (baby naked, not wrapped in a blanket) immediately after birth, as well as later. The baby is happier, the baby’s temperature is more stable and more normal, the baby’s heart and breathing rates are more stable and more normal, and the baby’s blood sugar is more elevated. Not only that, skin to skin contact immediately after birth allows the baby to be colonized by the same bacteria as the mother. This, plus breastfeeding, are thought to be important in the prevention of allergic diseases. When a baby is put into an incubator, his skin and gut are often colonized by bacteria different from his mother’s.

On About.com, Pamela Prindle Fierro shared that her doctor prescribed Kangaroo care for one of her twins born at 36 weeks when the infant was having trouble regulating her body temperature. She mentions that, "Doctors seem a little bit leery of confirming that kangaroo care is a miraculous cure, but the story is bringing attention to the practice of kangaroo care. It's one of those rare medical treatments that has no drawbacks or side-effects and is actually pleasurable."

On the Informed Parenting blog, Danielle Arnold-McKenny said, "The mind boggles when you read stories like this. A mother instinctively caring for her baby by keeping him skin to skin, even when all hope is lost... and a baby responding to his mothers warmth and touch and voice."

Danielle mentions that she's read several stories over the years like this one and linked to a similar story from December 2007, Parents 'Last Good Bye' Saved Their Baby's Life. Carolyn Isbister was given her tiny 20 oz. dying baby to say good-bye. Carolyn instinctively put her baby girl to her chest to warm her up and again, using the Kangaroo Care method, ended up saving her life. "I'm just so glad I trusted my instinct and picked her up when I did. Otherwise she wouldn't be here today."

David Ogg said something very similar of his wife Kate's response to baby Jamie. "Luckily I've got a very strong, very smart wife. She instinctively did what she did. If she hadn't done that, Jamie probably wouldn't be here."

Little Jamie and his twin sister Emily are 5 months old now and doing well.

"We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world."
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Reply #1 posted 09/03/10 5:01pm

EmeraldSkies

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That is amazing! biggrin

Music washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life. ~Berthold Auerbach
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Reply #2 posted 09/03/10 7:22pm

Boriqua1130

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Awesome! woot!

I'll ♥️ "LemonDrop" 2DN 💋 your "Sugar"
Prince: TY! 🌹 🎶🎸🎶 💜 Rex @3/27/18 2D Media Let Prince R.I.P.
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Reply #3 posted 09/03/10 7:36pm

HatrinaHaterwi
tz

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Never and I do mean NEVER, underestimate the power of a mother's love!!! clapping

I knew from the start that I loved you with all my heart.
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Reply #4 posted 09/03/10 7:58pm

angel345

According to my family, I almost left this earth at 9 months. Though it wasn't my mother, it was my great-great grandmother who revived me. I had asthma pretty bad as a child, but outgrew it when I was 13 years old. For the story, miracles do happen. Don't underestimate it.

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Reply #5 posted 09/03/10 8:02pm

babynoz

Awww, I love stories like this, touched

Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise.
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Reply #6 posted 09/03/10 8:32pm

paintedlady

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touched What a wonderful story mushy TY for sharing!

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Reply #7 posted 09/03/10 9:33pm

luv4u

Moderator

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moderator

Awwwwwwwwwwww mushy

canada

Ohh purple joy oh purple bliss oh purple rapture!
REAL MUSIC by REAL MUSICIANS - Prince
"I kind of wish there was a reason for Prince to make the site crash more" ~~ Ben
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Reply #8 posted 09/04/10 5:50pm

prb

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the mum was on tv this week.

it took 2 hrs for the doctor to come back and check on them, after repeated requests, he thought they just "couldnt let go". they wanted to show the doctor that their son was in fact alive...

it was only after the parents requested that the dr return to explain why their son had passed away, that the doctor returned. disbelief

a midwife was in the room, and was filming for the parents.

seems that i was busy doing something close to nothing, but different than the day before music beret
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Reply #9 posted 09/04/10 9:31pm

PurpleJedi

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clapping

Amazing story!!!!

thumbs up!

By St. Boogar and all the saints at the backside door of Purgatory!
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Reply #10 posted 09/05/10 8:39pm

butterfli25

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this story warms my heart.

on the day I had my youngest the nurse midwife on duty that morning stayed with me all day and was well off the clock when I finally delivered. My baby was fine, but I will never forget how that midwife snatched my gown down and unwrapped my baby and put her naked on my naked chest. The nurse in the room looked at her quizzically and I being drugged (long story) was slow on the reflexes, but we left her there and then after about 10 minutes she started the crawl that newborns make to the breast. I didn't even have to offer it to her, she found it. We often forget that we are mammals, and instinct is high very high.

I remember sniffing both of my babies soon after they were born and rubbing my chin and face on them, it was funny because my friend who was present at the birth of my oldest told me I did it with her as I recounted to her that I did it with my youngest. I don't remember why I did it, it was just something I felt needed to be done before they went to the nursery.

butterfly
We all should know that diversity makes for a rich tapestry, and we must understand that all the threads of the tapestry are equal in value no matter what their color.
Maya Angelou
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Reply #11 posted 09/05/10 11:16pm

wildgoldenhone
y

mushy

This is a fascinating story.

Never heard of such a thing but now that I do, that would be the first thing I would do after having a baby.

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Reply #12 posted 09/06/10 8:44am

PunkMistress

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bawl

I always held my babies skin to skin on my chest.

mushy

It's what you make it.
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