Freya’s Story (5)

Moving to the specialist hospital came with its challenges.  It was a logistical nightmare for a number of reasons and put me an hour away from my children.  But it was the right place for us.  Initially Freya was under the care of an Immunology Consultant who worked with her team and the laboratories to try and find whatever this infection was, and where it was hiding.  By the time we left our local hospital, Freya has just one cannula in; the one in her head had been removed.  She still had the feeding tube, but she was much more accessible for cuddles with all the tubes and wires gone.  She drank a full bottle on the first evening, and I went to bed feeling that she was turning a corner.  The Children’s Hospital would now do their best to diagnose the illness, but said that there was a chance she could just get better and we might never know what made her so poorly.  She was a bit of an enigma to the medical staff.


It did feel like there was a real investigation under way.  Freya went for an echocardiogram on the Monday morning (Day 9) which showed nothing but a slight murmur, considered normal at her young age.  Her temperatures were settling down and she was feeding almost normally.  I truly believed she was getting better and we would be discharged without a diagnosis.  Some of her medication was changed.  I think they stopped the Gentamicin and replaced it with Meropenem.   They also added Acyclovir which is used to treat the herpes virus.  Her haemaglobin was low and the decision was made for her to have a blood transfusion.  I remember feeling shocked by that as it seemed such a drastic measure, particularly when I thought she was on the mend.  An MRI scan was planned to check Freya’s brain for any collections of infection that might be lurking there.  That’s where Group B Strep would be most likely to hide.

Freya received a blood transfusion on Tuesday 9th June.

Tuesday 9th June 2015, 12:52

“You now have someone else’s blood entering your body.  Seems the blood I gave you wasn’t quite up to the job…I just found out that your blood group is B Negative.  Mine is B Positive (which is ironic really as I can be such a neghead at times!). But the good news is (if I remember my maths lessons correctly) that a positive plus a negative equals a positive.  Which is grand, because that is exactly what we are together.” 

On Wednesday 10th June (Day 11) it seemed like we had taken 3 steps forward but 2 steps back.  The temperatures that I thought were a thing of the past returned, and Freya stopped feeding.


That was also the day of the MRI scan.  When the doctor told me that Freya would have to be sedated I fell apart.  I have this fear of general anaesthetic, always worrying that you might not wake up from one, so to be told my child would have to be put to sleep was hard to take.  I cried. A lot. I was relieved when in the morning the doctor said that they would try without sedation.  I had to feed Freya before we went down, and I had to swaddle her as tightly as I could in a blanket to keep her comfy and still.  I went in with her, and I was told that they would try Freya for a few minutes but if she wasn’t still they would have to pause and sedate her.   They gave me a set of ear defenders and I sat down next to the machine and cried silent tears as I watched her tiny swaddled body enter the tube.  She shouldn’t have to go through this at her age.

  
I’ve heard that MRI’s sound like an aircraft, and yes that is true of the background noise.  What I wasn’t prepared for was the periodic sirens and hammering sounds that were deafening to me even with my ears covered.  Freya slept through 25 minutes in there without moving a muscle.  I took it as a sign of how good and strong she was.  Her consultant was concerned that she was too sick to be affected.

Wednesday 10th June 2015, 12:55

“The good news is that the scan didn’t show any abnormalities…  They were looking for collections of pus that would indicate an infection in your brain.  You have a big day tomorrow.  The doctors want to take a sample of your bone marrow.  That means that you will have to be put to sleep with a general anaesthetic and they will take you to theatre  for surgery… I won’t lie to you sweetheart, I am scared.  I know that one of the things they look for in bone marrow is cancer. I am sure that isn’t the case…but they are concerned that you don’t seem to be recovering very well and there could be an underlying condition that is hindering you from getting better.  And I am so frightened that you won’t wake up from the general anaesthetic.  Silly I know,  but I can’t help being scared because you are so precious to me.  Part of me doesn’t know if I can be there…when you go to sleep, but a bigger part of me knows we are in this together.  See you in the morning.”

That night I went home to rest.  It was a stupid idea.  By the time I got home I was a nervous wreck.  I hadn’t made any arrangements for the children in the morning, but if I did the school run I could be too late for Freya’s procedure.  Luckily, my mother-in-law and sister-in-law already had it covered.  I had a large glass of wine, and went to bed where I worried more than I slept.

Freya’s Story (4)

Nothing much seemed to happen in the first week of Freya’s illness whilst we were under the care of our local hospital.  They were very much focussed on treating the suspected cause, and although they had no evidence at that point they continued to treat for sepsis and bacterial meningitis.  Freya was too unwell to undergo a lumbar puncture, so they continued to take blood to monitor the levels of infection in her body and waited for something to grow in the cultures in the lab.  Nothing grew.

On Day 4 (3rd June), the decision was made to use Freya’s head for the next cannula site.  I mentioned before that the doctors were quite sheepish about shaving her head, but one thing about me is that whilst I am incredibly emotional and sensitive, I am also very level headed when it comes to the necessary, and providing more stable IV access was exactly that.  It was on this day that the new antibiotic (Gentamicin) was added into the cocktail.  It is my understanding that it is a more potent broad spectrum antibiotic, but I never really did any research into the medication.  In fact in that first week I did no real research at all, only using the internet to search medical terms I was unfamiliar with, or to prepare myself for what a lumbar puncture involved for example.  My research skills came into play once we had a diagnosis, which would not come for another 9 days.

 

Having a cannula in Freya’s head wasn’t nice.  It felt a lot harder to handle her, although she seemed to be in pain whenever I tried to pick her up so we weren’t handling her much at that point anyway.  It was trickier trying to lay her back down, because the cup that was stuck over the cannula site to protect it kept falling backwards and I’d end up digging it into her head as I laid her down.  I think it was the same day that we took her for an ultrasound of her head, chest and tummy.  I wheeled the pram down to the ultrasound unit and the nurse wheeled the IV trolley.  As I pushed the pram over the threshold of the scan room, I got too far away from the nurse and the cannula tube in Freya’s head was tugged, making her cry out in pain.  I broke down in tears.  Here was my baby in enough pain and discomfort already, and I go and hurt her through my carelessness.  I was embarrassed and upset, but the nurse was great about it (this wouldn’t be the first situation like it, but I’ll save that one for later!) Everything looked ok on the ultrasounds – another dead end.

The days pretty much passed like that, uneventful, Freya not getting any better, blood tests showing nothing but elevated white blood cell count (and other things that I never understood) but never any diagnosis.  I stayed with Freya for the most part, going home on Day 7 to get some rest at home, and spend some time with our other two children.  On Day 6 (5th June), Freya had her lumbar puncture – I’ve already told you that was also inconclusive.  The night I went home was the night that my husband had a conversation with the doctor who spelled out to him how sick Freya was.  The next morning, my children had their first visit to the hospital.  My daughter had been away on a school residential, and my son was missing the iPad more than us, so we had managed to keep the situation away from them.  We told them that Freya had a cold, but that she was too young for us to give her medicine and it had to be given at the hospital.  The first week was a novelty to them, so they bought that story.  It was that afternoon that we were transferred to the specialist children’s hospital and Freya had her first trip in an ambulance.

That evening, my best friend (who also happens to be my sister-in-law) brought me a journal and a pen, and a little collection of inspirational quotes tied together with a pink ribbon.  She knows that I find it therapeutic to write and knew that I was finding it difficult to blog from the hospital.  That night, once Freya was settled and sleeping, I wrote my first entry.

Monday 8th June 2015, 23:05pm

“I am sat on my bed next to your cot, listening to your snuffly breath and watching your little tummy pump up and down, helping you to breathe.  Your tiny body is working so hard, fighting the infection and battling to bring that temperature down.  I cannot imagine how you feel.  Are you in pain? Are you frightened? What do you make of all this poking and prodding? At tubes going in and tubes coming out?  Do you feel the cool liquid pumping through your veins as the antibiotics are delivered to support you in your fight?  Does it scare you when the machines start to beep?  What do you make of all these new faces? Of doctors and nurses and everything in between?  If I try to put myself in your situation, I cannot fathom the thoughts that would be in that little head of yours.  As an adult I would be scared, lonely, in pain.  How much that are you feeling, little one?  

When the nurses come to take your blood and you stare right into my eyes do you know that it isn’t me that is causing you the pain?  Do you know that I would take it all away from you in a heartbeat; that every physical thing you have to endure causes a fissure in my heart that feels like it will cause it to break in two?  Do you know that I am there by your side for every procedure because I feel that if I am there with you sharing the experience, I can feel some of your pain.  Do you know how my heart breaks every time I hear you cry, or see your scared eyes pleading with me to make it go away? I would trade places with you in a heartbeat.

I pray that you will get well, and that you never, ever have to go through anything like this ever again.”

That night Freya took her first full feed from a bottle.  Things were looking up and I sent a postcard to the local hospital to tell them so.

Freya’s Story (3)

I wonder if I will ever not be afraid to wake up.  I sleep well, perfectly well in fact.  Freya fell into a 4-hourly feeding routine in line with the nurses timetables for observations and started sleeping through the night towards the end of our stay.  She would even stay asleep for her observations, hardly flinching when the blood pressure cuff tightened around her chubby little legs.  She’d take her oral medicines without a murmur, sucking away on the syringe and settling straight back to sleep.  Now we are home, she is sleeping from around 7pm to 7am, and the move to her cot didn’t phase her (although I guess a big cot has become more familiar to her than a moses basket since her hospitalisation).  She sleeps so still and quiet that i cannot help but fear the worst, and I keep my eyes squeezed tightly shut until I hear a murmur or a breath.  Sometimes I have to physically touch her to encourage some kind of movement to reassure myself that she is ok; that she is still here.

It isn’t an unusual fear in the early months of a baby’s life though is it?  I remember checking my other two were breathing constantly whenever they were sleeping, especially when they started taking their naps upstairs.  We have a baby monitor, but she is so quiet that it doesn’t provide much reassurance.  For the first six months at least, most mothers  will harbour a fear of cot-death, and secretly (sometimes publicly) celebrate the milestone being reached without their baby coming to any harm.  This for us has been a very real fear, with the chances of the worst happening increasing as a result of her illness and its effect on her body.

When I hear her first sound or see her first movement after a period of sleep, I breathe a sigh of relief and thank a God that I don’t believe in for keeping her safe for one more day.  I count my blessings that she is still here with us, and think of all the moments when things might have been different.  Imagine not taking her to the hospital on Day 1!  Imagine not even making the call in the first place!  I was worried that I was over-reacting, worried that I would be putting strain on an already struggling Accident & Emergency function, worried I would be judged as a hypochondriac; one of those mothers.  My mother-in-law, who was once a nurse, told me not to take any chances and to trust my gut.  She said it didn’t matter what anyone else thought, it was better to get her checked out and it be nothing, than not to check and risk her becoming more poorly.  How right she was.

I often think about all the times people have said to us “she’s in the right place”.  Firstly, she wasn’t in the right place.  The right place was home with her family doing normal things.  Secondly you might assume that if you are in the right place, the right things would always happen.  That wasn’t always the case, and I was often glad that I am blessed with some intelligence, an inquisitive nature, and unfaltering tenacity.

I am by no means critical of the medical profession in it’s entirety.  On the whole, the medical staff from cleaners to consultants and everything in between were amazing.  There were however, a few occasions where it paid to be nosey, to take an interest, and to keep notes (mental or otherwise).  The first of these occasions happened on either Day 2 or 3 of Freya’s illness.  I can’t remember which day, but I can remember that we were still in the HDU so it had to be the Monday or Tuesday night.  As Freya’s nurse was administering her IV medication, she commented that the cannula had tissued.  In layman’s terms, it was no longer in the vein and therefore any fluid was entering the tissue surrounding the vein rather than being delivered into the bloodstream.  It had to be checked and/or removed, and a new one would have to be inserted before she could receive any further medication.  There was a cannula in the other wrist, but it was in such a tenuous position that it was not successful for the IV medication delivered through the pump.  The nurse did a thorough handover as it was at the end of her shift, and I felt as happy as I could be with the arrangements that had been made to keep Freya safe and aid her recovery.  That evening we were looked after by a bank nurse.  I asked on a few occasions when her next antibiotic dose was due, and reminded her that she needed a cannula inserting in advance of that.  Because she was difficult to cannulate, the nurse eventually called the on-duty doctor to come and insert a new cannula so her drugs could be given.

The ‘doctor’ arrived, and I use inverted commas because there was no name badge visible and she didn’t introduce herself so to me she could have been anyone.  Add to that her physical appearance (which I will not describe for fear of offending anyone), and the rancid smell, and I really had to wonder who they had sent to my daughter’s aid.  She took a look at her patient and commented at how many cannula sites she could see (I mentioned in my last blog how quickly they kept failing), and she said that she wasn’t prepared to insert another as it was unfair on Freya.  I asked how they planned to give her the antibiotics without any access, and she replied quite nonchalantly “Perhaps she doesn’t need the antibiotics.”  I felt like I had been smacked in the face.  A few hours before, a senior nurse had given me a clear explanation of what to expect, what care they were giving and why they were giving it.  I felt confident that Freya was in good hands and that she would recover soon.  In one moment, and one blasé statement, that ‘doctor’ knocked any confidence I had out of me.  I immediately jumped to Freya’s defence and the fatigue and stress forced a rather angry response.  I remember very loudly saying something along the lines of “Do not walk in here with that blasé attitude and tell me that my daughter does not need the medication that this morning I was told would save her life.”  Immediately she said she would put a cannula in, and again I stopped her; “Hold on just a second!  When you came in you felt it was not right to cannulate her and now because I question you, you flippantly say you will do it.  Why say it is wrong, then back down so easily when I challenge you?”  She spoke in a very thick accent, so it was hard enough to understand her that day, without trying to remember today, but I got the impression that she felt that I was afraid that a cannula would hurt Freya, and the nurses tried to usher me away for a cup of tea because apparently my reaction was down to tiredness. I retorted with “Trust me, I am not tired. No amount of tiredness would change the fact that right now I have no confidence in the care you are providing, and I am not leaving my daughter alone with her!”   In the end, they tested the cannula that had failed, believed it to be working ok and ‘pushed’ the drug through manually at the instruction of the ‘doctor’.  Once she had left i made it clear that if that ‘doctor’ (who was not actually from our local hospital) ever came near us again, I would wheel Freya in her cot right out of the front doors!  I never saw her again.

Luckily incidents like that one were rare, but there were times when I was thankful that I had paid so much attention to Freya’s care-plan.  There were a number of occasions throughout the course of our ‘incarceration’ when I was required to remind the nurses that Freya was due some medication. Sometimes I would be met with a casual “I was waiting for her next feed”, but that never washed with me as I had all the milk in our cubicle, the nurses didn’t know when Freya was feeding, and on one occasion when I received that response I had only fed Freya an hour before.  Had it have been an antibiotic that wouldn’t have been critical, I might not have been so cross, but when it is the drug that is responsible for reducing the risk of further complications with her heart it was a different matter.

Another time, Freya was due to receive some essential medication (once we had moved to the specialist hospital and a diagnosis had been reached).  It had to be delivered as one dose, but over 2 days due to Freya being so tiny.  Because we were being transferred to a 2nd specialist hospital the following morning, it was important that the medication was delivered at 4am, being a drug that took at least 4 hours to ‘infuse’ through the IV pump. At 5:30am I woke up and noticed that there was no IV going in.  When I asked the nurse, she replied that it was one dose, and Freya had received that the night before.  I corrected her, telling her that the dose had to be split and that it needed to be started at 4am so it was delivered before the ambulance arrived to transport us.  I overheard the phone call from the nurses station, working out how to rectify the situation.  The drug was given, and our transfer was delayed.

I guess that was a bit of a long-winded way of saying that when you put your life in the hands of medical professionals in a hospital, you do indeed believe that you are in the right place.  Over the 6 weeks that Freya was in hospital care, we encountered numerous medical staff.  Freya spent her 6 weeks in 3 different hospitals so we were also able to draw comparisons between staff and the physical environment.  I would say that 99% of the time we were in hospital, Freya was cared for incredibly by some amazing staff who proved through their actions why they were in the profession.  There were a tiny number of nurses that I felt less warmth from, or felt that they were desensitised, lazy even.  I will not allow my view of the NHS as a whole be shadowed by the behaviour of a few less capable nurses.  But I will say never assume that they all know best.  Do your research, but be discerning about where you get your information from.  Ask questions, make notes, and ask again and again until you understand.  With an illness like Kawasaki Disease, it is possible that many disciplines will become involved.  Freya receives follow up care from Immunology, Rheumatology, Cardiology, Gastroenterology and a Dietician.   They are not always joined up, sometimes making decisions that contradicted the care being provided.  At the beginning of this journey I was reluctant to ask questions for fear of offending the doctors, I bottled my concerns up because I didn’t want them to think I was over-reacting.  Freya could not fight her own corner.  I soon learned that if she was to stand a chance, she needed her mother strong and bold, and beside her every step of the way.

Freya’s Story (2)

I was just stood over my daughter’s cot watching her sleep peacefully in her ‘big bed’.  Last night we built the cot in our room, as we accepted that she has outgrown her moses’ basket.  It seems hard to believe that we have reached this milestone already, having been robbed of a number of weeks of our tiny baby, cooped up in a hospital cubicle when we should have been at home.  Standing watching her from the end of her cot I was struck by the thought that 8 weeks ago today, at around the same time, I was stood at the foot of a hospital cot in a high dependency unit, watching doctors work to save my daughter’s life.  I remember being stood there, watching on without making a sound, my hands gripping the high metal bars at the foot of the cot with silent tears rolling down my cheeks.  I recall feeling numb; it was surreal and I struggled to digest what was happening.  I had called my husband and told him that he needed to come straight away.  I could search a dictionary and never find the words to describe the fear I felt at that moment.  It was a fear I had never known, and one I never wanted to feel again.  Unfortunately, because of the lasting effects that the illness has had on Freya’s body, that fear will remain with us for many years to come.

I ought to feel elated by the contrast of this morning, and I guess there was a small part of me that smiled inside at the idea that we are home, and had I not made the decision that I did all those weeks ago, what happened on that morning would have been happening at home, and her situation will have been very different.  But I can’t help but look at her with sadness sometimes.  Watching her sleeping soundly she looks like any other baby; she bears no scars to betray the journey she has been on.  If I could see inside her though, I would see that she is broken.

We spent 8 days in our local hospital.  All that time Freya battled with soaring temperatures that could not be controlled despite the cocktail of drugs that she was receiving intravenously.  She spent the entire week wearing nothing but a nappy, lying in the cot quiet and still.  She had daily blood tests while the doctors tested for whatever it was they were looking for.  One of the things that they measure from your blood is something called CRP.  It is an indication of inflammation or infection.  On the day we took Freya into hospital, the CRP count was around 37.  By mid-week this had soared to over 300.  There was something happening inside her body, but no-one could tell us what.  The doctors referred to Freya as ‘septic’, and continued to affirm that they were treating her condition as meningitis and would expect to see some improvement after a few days on the antibiotics.  The only real way to confirm bacterial meningitis is through a lumbar puncture, but Freya was too sick for them to attempt the procedure.

Around mid-week, the doctors decided to add a 3rd antibiotic, Gentamicin.  On the Thursday, her temperatures started to settle down, spiking a number of times throughout the day as opposed to constant fevers.  She was tachycardic, meaning that she had an abnormally high heart rate.  She was connected to a monitor that showed her heart rate and oxygen saturation levels (‘sats’) that beeped every time she went over the thresholds set.  Because her heart rate was so high – over 200 bpm – they had to set the monitor higher than normal or it would have been alarming constantly.  The doctors believed she had turned a corner, the CRP levels had come down a small amount, and they felt she was well enough to undergo a lumbar puncture.  By this point, Freya’s symptoms included prolonged fever, a light rash over her body, and dry cracked lips.  Her hands also looked very strange, and I remember remarking to the doctors that her hands looked like those of a dead person.  They were grey and the skin looked paper thin.  They put it down to the cannulas that were inserted in each wrist.

During the course of the week, a number of cannulas were inserted to provide access for the intravenous (IV) drugs.  Because their veins are so tiny, babies can prove difficult to cannulate, and they often stop working much quicker than they would in an adult for example.  Due to the position of the cannulas and the fact that it is pretty impossible for a baby to keep parts of their body still, with all those jerky arm movements, the cannulas in Freya’s wrists were failing daily, and the decision was made to insert a cannula in her head.  The doctors had to shave her hair on one side.  They were so cautious about doing that, because apparently some parents have been known to kick off about their child’s head being shaved.  Seriously? Hair grows back, why on earth would you want to hinder your child’s recovery because they might look a bit strange for a while.  To protect the cannula from Freya’s wandering hands, the nurses placed a plastic cup over it, and taped it to her head.  She did look a sight! I have the photographic evidence to show her just how daft she looked!

The lumbar puncture was performed on the Friday, which was our 6th day in the hospital.  This was the only procedure that I wasn’t present for.  The nurses felt that it was better for me to wait for Freya to return and provide the comfort of cuddles.  It is apparently not a pleasant procedure, and the body has to be bent into such a tight ball that to watch your baby go through it can be quite distressing.  I paced the corridors, wincing when I heard  my baby girl’s cries from behind the doors of the treatment room.  She recovered from it pretty quickly, babies are so incredibly adaptable.  I remember the nurse passing her to me, and telling me that I had to keep her flat for a period of time. An hour? I can’t recall how long.  What I do recall is my complete meltdown at the pressure and responsibility of having to keep my baby still for that period time, and I panicked that I could cause Freya some damage if I were to get it wrong.  The nurses were brilliant and reassured me that it would be ok.  The results from the lumbar puncture were inconclusive.  The white blood cell count was slightly elevated, but there was no confirmation of meningitis.  There was a suggestion that because Freya had already had 6 days of high dose antibiotics, the initial condition may have been treated and no longer be apparent in her spinal fluid, although they would still have expected to find some trace of it.

Throughout this first week in hospital, I couldn’t make out how I felt.  It is strange because you almost become used to seeing them in that poorly state so it becomes a new normal.  Remember we hadn’t had much time with her before she became ill, so we quickly forgot what Freya’s normal looked like.  I received mixed messages every day, and wasn’t sure whether I should be scared for Freya, or whether her condition was under control.  At one point a nurse came to tell us that they had found rhinovirus in the test of her nasal secretions.  She had a cold!  Was it possible that it could be just that?!  I knew that it was not right that she should be continuing to have a temperature after a week, particularly when she was receiving fluid, 3 different IV antibiotics, and regular paracetamol and ibuprofen.  She was too exhausted to feed from a bottle, and had a tube inserted through her nose into her stomach for feeding.  She was still being tube fed after a week in hospital which was another sign that she wasn’t recovering.  I was so emotional, that every conversation I had with a doctor had me in tears, and I worried that I was only hearing the negative.  Prone to automatic negative thoughts, I put that down to me being a ‘neghead’ and tried to bat those thoughts away.  It was the Saturday (Day 7) that I relayed one of the conversations with a Registrar to my husband that he decided he needed to hear the news first hand.  I had told him that the doctor had said that whilst rhinovirus is a common virus that causes cold-like symptoms in an adult, for a baby as young as Freya it was a pretty nasty virus to have, and there was a chance that was the situation with Freya.  However, a consultant later that day said “rhinovirus doesn’t do this to a baby.”  The registrar kept saying that Freya was very sick, and I felt that the doctors looked overly concerned whenever they examined her.  My husband arranged to meet with the doctor to discuss it.  I told him I needed to understand how sick Freya was.  I needed to know if there was a chance that she might not get better at all, if she could die.

My husband asked the doctor to tell us on a scale of 1-10 how sick Freya was.  The doctor replied that with 1 being healthy, and 11 being dead, Freya was a 10 on the day she was taken to the HDU.  She felt that, Freya was now more like a 7 out of 10, and that she was still very sick though clinically more stable than she had been earlier in the week.  My husband asked why they were not considering moving Freya to the specialist children’s hospital in a neighbouring town, and she replied that she felt Freya was receiving the appropriate care and that her condition was slowly improving.  The following morning, a consultant came to see us.  He said that it was unacceptable that we should have a baby as sick as Freya for as long as 8 days without any diagnosis or prognosis for recovery.  He said that if it was his child he would not be happy that we were still none-the-wiser about her condition, and that he would want everything possible to be done to ensure our daughter’s recovery.  He told us that he had requested a bed for Freya at the Children’s Hospital and an ambulance was on its way to take us there.

Freya’s Story (1)

Exactly a year ago today, my husband and I made the decision to create another child for our family – ok so it wasn’t quite a decision as a ‘happening’, and it was more unconscious than conscious given the amount of wine I had consumed that afternoon! If you’ve read the posts that gave birth to this blog, you will have some understanding of the journey that I went on through my pregnancy, and you will have shared some of my thoughts and fears along the way.  You will also know then, the joy I felt when my daughter was born.  I was besotted; I am besotted.

I’ve been absent from my blog for a while.  I will forgive my followers for assuming that I just got busy with the new addition, and that having 3 children and a home to look after left me very little time for writing.  I wish it were that simple.  But we have been on an ‘adventure’, Freya and I.  It’s an adventure that began on Sunday 31st May 2015 when Freya was just 7 weeks old.  It’s an adventure that I would like to share with you.  I hope that through the telling of Freya’s story we are able to raise awareness of a barely known disease, and if our insight and updates can help others to understand this illness, or provide support to those who are living with this devastating condition, then I will have achieved more than I could hope for with my words.

I was unable to blog from the hospital with limited or no internet access, so I kept a hand-written journal.  To tell the story, I need to go back in time to when this all began, so I ask that you indulge me as I share the experiences of the last couple of months, as well as keeping you up to date with where we are today.

How it all began

On Sunday 31st May 2015 my daughter awoke at around 5am for her first feed of the day.  I had stopped breastfeeding about a week before so she was bottle-fed with formula.  She was very snuffly, her nose was all blocked up and she was struggling to feed as a result.  She took about an ounce of the 4 ounce bottle and fell asleep in my arms.  Assuming she was just tired still and not ready for the milk, and that she had most likely tired herself out trying to feed with a blocked up nose, I thought nothing of it and returned her to her moses basket.  She slept until around 9am, again I prepared her formula, and again she managed to drink around an ounce before falling asleep.

After a few hours, I decided I couldn’t leave her sleeping any longer and I needed to try and get her to take a bigger feed.  When I approached her in her bouncy chair where she was sleeping, I noticed that her lips looked dry and she had a lot of spit around her mouth.  Again I assumed this was because her nose was so blocked up that she was having to breathe through her mouth.  When I touched her to pick her up, I noticed that she felt very warm, so I took her temperature with a digital ear thermometer.  Her temperature was 38.3 degrees; she had a fever.  I went to the medicine cabinet to find some Calpol (paracetamol) but the box said ‘from 2 months’, and with Freya being one week short of that milestone I wasn’t sure whether I should give it to her not.  Being a bit of a worrier and a goody-two-shoes, I decided to call the out of hours doctor’s service.  By this time, Freya was still sleeping soundly, though I had noticed that her tummy was heaving up and down a lot whilst she was breathing which was unusual.  The doctor advised us to take her to the hospital Accident & Emergency unit as a precaution as it is unusual for such a young baby to have a fever.

After the initial examination, the doctors decided to admit Freya to the Children’s Ward for overnight observation.  I mentioned that I was Group B Strep positive in my pregnancy; I had this niggling worry that she could be starting to present symptoms of late onset GBS infection.  The doctors decided to give her intravenous Amoxycillin as a precaution and we settled into our room for the night.  I sat in the reclining chair holding Freya as the IV antibiotics were delivered to her tiny veins.  When the IV had finished, I laid with her in my arms until she finally fell asleep.  Not wanting to risk losing my hold on her if I fell asleep, I transferred her to the hospital cot and returned to my chair.  There was all too familiar smell coming from her nappy, but I decided to leave her to sleep rather than disturb her again. I say I decided to leave her, but after about 2 minutes back in my chair the guilt of leaving her in a dirty nappy took over and I got up to change her.  As I lifted her vest, I noticed what looked like a rash on her torso in the dim light.  I wasn’t sure though as it was quite dark, so I decided to put the light on.  A bit dazed by the light I found it hard to decide whether my eyes were playing tricks on me or not.  It was around 5am, and was beginning to get light outside so I opened the curtains to take a closer look at Freya.  Her torso was covered in a rash of tiny red spots.  I’d read somewhere about meningitis and that the rash was one of the last symptoms that would appear, and also that it would be the type of rash that wouldn’t go away if you pressed it against a glass.  I didn’t have a glass so I ran my finger across her skin.  The rash seemed to go away.  I called the nurse and asked her to take a look.  She was unsure whether it was concerning or not, so she called the on-duty doctor. He came within ten minutes.  By that time, the rash had spread across Freya’s arms and down her legs.

What happened next is a bit of a blur, as it all seemed to happen so fast.  I will never forget the feeling as I watched the doctor and listened to his directions to the nurse.  They called a more senior doctor.  As soon as he entered the room I felt the atmosphere change.  The feeling was oppressive, like an elephant was sitting on my chest.  Their calm orders, and deliberate movements betrayed no panic, but there was something about the air that just felt wrong.  I watched on as they wheeled her to a high dependency unit (HDU) and started to give her fluid, more antibiotics, take blood samples.  She looked like she was sleeping.  I didn’t know then that she had gone into septic shock, and her little body was starting to shut down.  I learned later that what they were doing in the HDU is called fluid resuscitation and that Freya was very sick indeed.

It was too early to say what was wrong with Freya, but the symptoms suggested bacterial meningitis was the cause, and so the medical staff elected to treat her for that with two antibiotics (Amoxicillin and Cefotaxime), intravenous fluid, and regular paracetamol and ibuprofen to reduce the fevers.  Looking back to that day, I remember feeling scared, but also feeling very proud that I had moved quickly enough to get her to hospital before the illness had really taken its hold.  Everyone told me she was “in the right place”.  I didn’t know that the “right place” would end up being our home for the next 6 weeks, and that Freya would eventually leave the hospital forever changed.