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'kangaroo care' helped revive her 'dead' premature baby

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nitpicker1
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« on: August 28, 2010, 05:49:36 pm »


 

Miracle at birth?

Mom in Australia says 'kangaroo care' helped revive her 'dead' premature baby
By Michael Sheridan
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Thursday, August 26th 2010, 12:40 PM


Saved by a mother's touch.

A mom in Australia says a doctor declared her newborn son "dead," but she helped bring him back to life by holding the premature baby against her body using a method known as "kangaroo care."

"I thought, 'Oh my God, what's going on?' " Kate Ogg said on the Australian television show, Today Tonight.

The child, named Jamie, was born after only 27 weeks with his twin sister, Emily, at a hospital in Sydney. Her birth went well, but his was a different story. The doctor struggled for 20 minutes to save him before declaring him dead.

"His little arms and legs were just falling down away from his body," Ogg said. "I took my gown off and arranged him on my chest with his head over my arm and just held him."

She and her husband, David, spoke to the child as she continued to embrace him for nearly two hours. During that time, she said, the two-pound infant showed signs of life.

"I told my mum, who was there, that he was still alive. Then he held out his hand and grabbed my finger," Ogg said.

Although the doctor - who refused to be interviewed by Today Tonight - initially dismissed the baby's movements, when he put the stethoscope to its chest, he was reportedly shocked.

"He said, 'I don't believe it, I don't believe it,' " Ogg said. "It was a miracle."

The happy mother credits the amazing reversal to "kangaroo care."

According to Dr. Pinchi Srinivasan, director of the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit and Neonatology at New York Hospital Queens, the procedure consists of positioning a premature baby on its stomach - clad only in a diaper - against a woman's chest and between her breasts with "skin-to-skin contact."

"The care helps the baby maintain body warmth," he told the Daily News. It also "regulates their heart and breathing rate," and is believed to contribute to weight gain and improved sleeping habits.

Fathers can also use "kangaroo care," Dr. Srinivasan noted. The key to the method is skin-to-skin contact, not the gender of the person.

The practice began in less developed nations where access to ventilators and other equipment was more difficult, he said. It was eventually studied in the United States and Europe throughout the 1980s, and has since become a recognized practice in helping preemies.

The doctor felt it was "unlikely" that the Ogg baby was "dead," as the practice of "kangaroo care" would not resuscitate a deceased child. But the technique can and does benefit babies, and is used in many neonatal intensive-care units, including the one at New York Hospital Queens.

"It is credited with helping to shorten the amount of time a baby spends in the NICU," Dr. Srinivasan said.

msheridan@nydailynews.com;


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Magoo
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« Reply #1 on: August 28, 2010, 06:07:55 pm »

How amazing.
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Ares Abani
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« Reply #2 on: August 28, 2010, 06:09:13 pm »

This was a good story. I'm glad Jamie's mom hung in there and he made it.
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nitpicker1
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« Reply #3 on: August 28, 2010, 06:24:52 pm »


Yep. Great story.

Glad to see humans still even accidentally using natural instinct.

Can do the same sort of thing with animals too: over the years I have "revived" a LARGE WHITE newborn piglet that was born blue and didn't breathe till it warmed up, a hairless baby possum that had been in the mother's pouch since she was shot 24 hours before, and was not moving, a "stillborn" kitten, (once again, blue mouth and belly) chilled chickens and ducklings, all stuffed down my jersey next to the skin.  

A hotwater bottle just doesn't seem to work as well. I think the heartbeat rythm is needed, and maybe the wrap-around warmth between a female breast?


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« Reply #4 on: August 28, 2010, 07:30:29 pm »

I spent a fair bit of time with Sp1 under my top when she was in SCBU.
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nitpicker1
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« Reply #5 on: August 28, 2010, 08:16:19 pm »

I spent a fair bit of time with Sp1 under my top when she was in SCBU.

Doing what comes naturally, ssweetp 

I remember seeing my prem granddaughter in the incubator. It was an effort to resist a desire to take her out and look after her myself.

Read somewhere more recently that is what the cry of a newborn is designed to do, activating the hearer's nurture emotion.
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"Life might not be the party you were expecting, but you're here now, so you may as well get up and dance"

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