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Winston-Salem,
NC
It
was our first wedding anniversary, July 26 1996, when we found
out that we were pregnant. She was due on April fifth, her
dad's birthday. It was a planned addition to our family, and
we couldn't wait. But we couldn't foresee what was going to
happen.
My
pregnancy was hard going from the start. I had morning sickness
all day. Eventually that passed and all was well until February.
I
had two baby showers that month. There were the usual friends
and family, gifts and food. The last one was February eighth.
On Monday, February seventeenth, I knew that something was
not right. The baby wasn't moving as much as usual and the
all-day sickness had returned. Upon seeing the doctor, it
was determined that I was having contractions, but the baby
was doing well. I was put on bed rest and fluids. After spending
Tuesday and Wednesday morning in bed, I was still very sick,
the baby was still not moving, and I had developed a fever
of 102.4 degrees. We called the doctor and met him at Forsyth
Memorial Hospital. This was just the beginning.
Wednesday
February nineteenth, we are in the emergency room by eight
p.m., very scared and worried. Dr. V. monitors the baby and
determines that she is in distress. Her heart rate drops with
each contraction. He looks at us and says, "We are having
this baby tonight!" I'm moved to a birthing room and
Pitocin is given with fluids to start dilation. My fever still
has not broken. Now I endure cooling blankets with forty-five
degree water circulating through them, and ice packs under
my arms. My water is broken and is full of mecomium. I still
have not dilated enough to keep going. The doctor orders an
epidural and gets us ready for an emergency C-section.
Allison
Elizabeth is born at 3:13 a.m. Four pounds and thirteen ounces
and covered with mecomium. After a nine on the APGAR test,
her dad holds her for about three minutes before she is rushed
to the Neo-natal Intensive Care Unit. Meanwhile, I'm still
on the table getting stitched up with my head reeling. "Why
can't I see my baby!!" I asked my husband. I had no idea
what was going to happen.
After
recovery and in my room, the hospitals pediatrician comes
in to give us news on Allison. She has Listeria. We
never had heard of this before and truly did not know what
to expect. The doctor tells us that we can expect Allison
to stay in the NICU for four to six weeks. What can we do
but pray?
My
husband was able to see Allison very soon after her trip to
the NICU. He cries to this day remembering what he saw. Our
tiny new baby was hooked up to everything you could imagine.
She was under an oxygen dome. She had a tube going up her
nose to her stomach for feeding, a tube running into her belly
button, one in her arm for antibiotics. He couldn't even hold
her.
I
couldn't see her for forty-eight hours. When I was healed
enough to be wheeled to see her, nothing could have prepared
me for what I saw. The tubes, the green lighted blanket, the
monitors beeping endlessly. Was this my baby? I couldn't hold
her for two more days. I actually had to leave her there and
go home. How could I leave her now, I have never felt so helpless
in my life.
Allison
was a fighter. She was off of oxygen in five days and home
in two weeks. She was small, but she was strong and healthy.
We thank God everyday for our beautiful girl.
It
is very hard for me, or anyone else, to imagine that me, my
child and family had to go through such hell because of piece
of cheese. Something so trivial, so taken for granted; we
had no idea what could happen. And now we can't help but think
about those families that weren't as fortunate as us. Their
loss is meaningless unless we change the way things are done.
Think
of us and the other families whose lives were turned upside
down to save a little money.
Think,
Erin,
Matt and Allison Stadler
Copyright
2001 by author: Erin Stadler (Allison's mother)
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