The National - News

Baby girl born at 23 weeks beats the odds

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A premature baby, who weighed only 250 grams when she was born, was discharged from an Abu Dhabi hospital after 177 days in care.

Baby Latifa is believed to be the smallest child on record to survive in the UAE, being born only 23 weeks and a day into her mother’s pregnancy.

Emirati parents Ahmed Huseein Salem and Fatema Omar feared for her life after doctors at NMC Royal Hospital told them their baby had only hours to live.

But she survived and was sent home this week – nearly six months old and now weighing 3.825kg.

Ms Omar lost her first baby to a miscarriag­e and stayed in regular contact with her gynaecolog­ist during her second pregnancy to avoid any issues.

But after only 23 weeks and a day she felt pain and went into preterm labour.

“It was the scariest day of my life,” she said. “I just felt very uncomforta­ble and I feared I had lost my second pregnancy also.”

Latifa weighed as much as a large apple when she was born. She was so small, she could “fit in the palm of the hands of her care team”, her doctors said.

The baby required a team of doctors to work on her case.

“She suffered from several complicati­ons such as respirator­y distress, sepsis, anaemia, renal failure, hearing issues and chronic lung disease, among many others,” said Dr Wilson Lopez, consultant and head neonatolog­ist at the hospital, who led the team fighting for the baby’s life.

Latifa’s parents were not even allowed to hold her at first because she was so fragile and susceptibl­e to infection.

“The doctors allowed us to hold the baby for an hour after two months from her birth. We used to visit the hospital daily, sit for an hour or more, hold her and take care of her,” Mr Salem said.

“My wife used to feed her during this time. Doctors also helped us to learn kangaroo mother care.”

Kangaroo mother care refers to the care of preterm or low birthweigh­t infants. Mothers or fathers hold their babies in skin-to-skin contact.

Research proves this helps to regulate the infant’s heartbeat and breathing, leading to a higher chance of survival.

Babies who experience kangaroo care are also more likely to gain weight, breastfeed, cry less and spend more time in deep sleep.

According to data from the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, more than half of all babies born at 23 weeks do not survive.

The world’s smallest surviving premature baby was born at a hospital in San Diego in 2018, according to the Tiniest Babies Registry that is maintained by the University of Iowa in the US.

She weighed 245 grams but, unlike Latifa, had no underlying health conditions.

Michael Davis, the chief executive of NMC Health, praised the efforts of his team and Latifa’s parents.

“Latifa most likely survived and thrived as she did because she is a fighter and has a great family who stayed by her side, along with good genes and some good luck,” he said.

Latifa’s doctors believe that the little girl’s parents played a huge part in her recovery.

“I think it was a combinatio­n of everything, especially her parents being there all the time. They are part of the team,” Dr Lopez said.

“If they weren’t involved, I don’t think she would have thrived the same way.”

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 ?? NMC Health ?? Baby Latifa’s parents, Ahmed Huseein Salem and Fatema Omar, far left, had to wait for two months before they could hold their new daughter, who was born weighing only 250g
NMC Health Baby Latifa’s parents, Ahmed Huseein Salem and Fatema Omar, far left, had to wait for two months before they could hold their new daughter, who was born weighing only 250g
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