The New Zealand Herald

Donations flow after triplets’ mum dies

- Sarah Harris

Tributes and donations have poured in for the mum who tragically died shortly after giving birth to triplets in Hawaii.

Chervonne Magaoa, 34, was born in Hastings but raised in Hawaii. She arrived at the Kapi’olani Medical Center for Women and Children last Thursday for her weekly appointmen­t, when things suddenly went wrong.

After the birth of her three healthy sons Magaoa had an amniotic fluid embolism.

The condition occurs when amniotic fluid, which surrounds a baby in the uterus during pregnancy and contains products such as cells, hair, urine and secretions from the babies, enters the mother’s bloodstrea­m. It can cause serious reactions, including heart failure and uncontroll­able bleeding. In New Zealand it kills about two mothers a year.

Since the Herald shared the family’s story yesterday over $10,000 has been raised, with their GoFundMe now totalling over $46,300. The page shared a photo of Magaoa’s husband Martin holding one of the tributes and the words “proud father”.

Tributes have flooded in for the family with everything from suggestion­s of a community baby shower, an offer to adopt one of the triplets and a woman commiserat­ing as she lost her own daughter, who was a mother of eight, to the same complicati­on.

Magaoa’s father, Bishop Hyran Smith, took her to her medical appointmen­t last Thursday as Martin continued to work to ensure they had as much money as they could get ahead of the triplets’ birth.

Speaking from the hospital on Monday, Smith told the Herald the day had started off as normal.

“Usually, the appointmen­t takes 30 minutes. But it ended up being longer.”

Doctors informed Magaoa and Smith she would need to have the babies that day. She asked her father if he could pick up her husband and collect her 6-yearold son Tanner from school.

Unknown to Smith, Martin was already on his way to the hospital. Smith would miss the birth of the triplets — and the moment his daughter took her final breath.

“By 5.30pm, the babies were born. Everything was fine and then she got a complicati­on.

“The doctor said statistics wise, it only happens to one in 100,000 [women], so it was a rare event.”

Smith said by the time he returned to the hospital, his daughter had died.

“My daughter-in-law who got here before me, as soon as she saw me, she came jumping out of the car, crying. That’s when I found out.”

The family is now preparing a funeral service for their loved one, to be held on Saturday (local time).

They are also rallying to support Magaoa’s husband and his now-mammoth task of taking care of his four young sons: Tanner, Aayden, Blaise and Carson.

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