The New Zealand Herald

Little Charn owes life to blood donors

Parents say their prem baby would not have survived without all his transfusio­ns

- Teuila Fuatai teuila.fuatai@nzherald.co.nz

Auckland preschoole­r Charn Lee-Tuafale, 3, has received more than 30 units of blood in transfusio­ns since he was born. Considered an “extreme prem” after being born at only 24 weeks, Charn had to undergo two major operations for his heart and bowel before he was 4 months old.

The fragile youngster, who needed a ventilator to breathe, was given 34 units of blood during this time — the equivalent of what 52 donors would donate.

Ahead of tomorrow’s World Blood Donor Day, his parents, Tesha LeeTuafale and Aaron Tuafale, are speaking out about how their family benefited from the generosity of others.

Charn, who is the couple’s fourth child, would not have survived without blood transfusio­ns.

“Because he was so little, he couldn’t make his own red blood cells,” Ms Lee-Tuafale said.

“If I held both hands together, he would fit with only his limbs hanging out. He didn’t have the strength to make his own. They continuous­ly had to top him up.”

Charn, who was in Auckland City Hospital’s neonatal intensive care unit during his first four months, also received transfusio­ns while undergoing operations for a faulty heart valve and bowel infection.

“We’re just so grateful to the blood service, to all the services,” Ms LeeTuafale said.

Around this time, the family also found out that Charn was suffering from brain bleeds, meaning he could have serious developmen­tal problems as he grew due to brain damage.

“It was severe enough for them to warrant them asking us whether we wanted to continue with the life support.”

While Ms Lee-Tuafale and her husband were “very close to letting him go”, the pair decided against it. “Once he came home and was over being sick, so probably at about a year and a half when we were finally out of hospital, then we could actually just sit there and notice he could understand us when we talked to him.”

Charn does not have full strength on the left side of his body because of brain damage.

However his older siblings — Troy, Paige and Marnei, aged 10, 9 and 4 respective­ly — help him around the house.

He also suffers from hydrocepha­lus and will continue to work with various therapists to help his developmen­t.

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 ?? Picture / Sarah Ivey ?? Tesha Lee-Tuafale says her 3-year-old son, Charn, was saved by the generosity of blood donors.
Picture / Sarah Ivey Tesha Lee-Tuafale says her 3-year-old son, Charn, was saved by the generosity of blood donors.

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