This post is a little on the longer side, but I just
couldn’t figure out how to cut it down. It was a powerful experience that I
believe is worthy of the details. We recently
had a visiting team of nurses and nursing students from UCLA volunteering with
us. The team members were anxious to help deliver a baby and were thrilled when
late one afternoon a mother came in, in active labor. I wasn’t on call that
night and William wasn't expected to arrive until supper. I needed to get home to
relieve my babysitter
Right as William was pulling in I got a text from the
clinic saying that the patient was pushing. So I headed over to join in. Something
just didn’t feel right about the situation. As the patient progressed I decided
to do an exam. During the exam I had a hard time knowing just what I was
feeling. Was it a baby’s face? Then I felt little digits. I looked at everyone
in the room and said “I think I just shook hands with the baby!” Any time it’s
not the head coming first, things get a little complicated. So I called in our
most experienced midwifery nurse from home to please join our delivery team. I
asked if an ultrasound had been performed. The on-call nurse that night happens
to be new to the clinic and hadn’t been trained on the machine yet. (As a side
note, the mom was 8cm when she arrived so realistically there wouldn’t really have
been time to refer her to the hospital anyway.) We pulled out the machine and
could not find the head. Doing an ultrasound on a woman in active labor who is
pushing is NOT easy. We were not sure if the head was already in the birth canal
or up under the ribs somewhere.
So our experienced nurse, Triza, did a manual exam. She
looked up and our eyes locked. “Michelle, that was not a hand you shook. It was
a foot…” In that moment I believe the same memory washed over both of us. Two
summers ago we worked together on what is my most horrific medical experience
to date. It was a breech delivery where we lost the baby and almost lost the
mom. You can read about it here.
From that point things got pretty wild. I knew that there
was a HUGE chance that we were going to need to do resuscitation on the baby
when we finally got him or her out. So we put the visiting team into action
setting up all of the equipment we might possibly need. Triza and I began
talking through that case from two years ago. What could/should we have done
differently? What can we do now? We came up with a game plan. It was a HUGE
blessing having so many skilled hands in the room. The patient was a young mom
who was not cooperative at all. She began kicking and thrashing quite a bit as things
progressed. One of the student nurses actually wound up at the head of the bed
just trying to prevent her from kicking us in the face.
I sent a few nurses to my office to search my textbooks
for any instructions on a footling breech delivery. Every book they looked in advised
an immediate C-section. I’ll spare you the details, but thanks to God’s grace and
past experience we were able to get the baby out much faster than I was
expecting. At one point things were looking a little grim and I asked the visiting
team that if anyone felt that they couldn’t handle what was to come they should
please leave now. Everyone stood strong!
As I was guiding the baby’s body out, I could feel a slow
but strong heartbeat. I knew there was hope! The baby was born blue,
motionless, no crying, and no breathing. But her heart was beating, just too
slowly. We immediately began team CPR. Part of the resuscitation process
involves keeping the baby warm and pumping oxygen directly into the lungs with
something called an ambu bag. Because of
the third world electrical wiring we can’t run both the oxygen condenser and
heater at the same time. So we had this system going. I would yell out OXYGEN
and the nurse in charge of that machine would switch it on, while the nurse at
the warmer switched it off, then shortly after we would switch again. I was alternating
between doing the respiratory resuscitation and using a special devise to
suction out the babies airway while another nurse did the chest compressions. It
was a beautiful dynamic. Within a few minutes the heartbeat picked up and the
baby began to breathe independently.
Once it was clear that the baby was in the clear, we
continued to provide support with blow-by oxygen and heat. It is extremely rare
(as in I’ve never had it happen before!) to get an action photo while a situation
like this is going on. But once we knew the baby was in the clear one of the
American nurses got some pictures.
Suctioning the Baby's Lungs |
Providing Blow-By Oxygen |
More Suctioning and Oxygen |
Just after the above picture was taken the power went out
in the room. We were all overwhelmed by the fact that the power had stayed on
through the entire resuscitation process! One of the team members said it best,
“It was a God moment.”
Just this last week the mom brought her daughter in for a
well-baby visit. They both looked great. I hardly even recognized the mom. And the
baby girl, well she is doing fantastic! She is eating well, moving well, and
her reflexes are intact. Here she is!
2 comments:
all I can say is....WOW.
She's beautiful! And I love that the visiting team could really help!
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