The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Parents aim to raise £30,000 after losing ‘little fighter’ Eve

Karen and Michael Hughes had to take heartbreak­ing decision to have the ventilator turned off

- Cheryl Peebles cpeebles@thecourier.co.uk

Parents who made the agonising decision to turn off their baby’s ventilator hope to raise £30,000 in her memory.

Michael and Karen Hughes, of Cupar, cuddled four-month-old Eve as she slipped away after spending her short life in hospital.

In their grief, they have launched a campaign to raise money for Ronald McDonald House, in Glasgow, and the neonatal intensive care units at Dundee’s Ninewells Hospital and Glasgow’s Royal Hospital for Sick Children.

Eve had a unique chromosome 18 disorder which caused complex respirator­y problems, congenital heart defects, limb and bone abnormalit­ies, a cleft palate and other significan­t medical issues.

After she was born on December 17, last year, Michael and Karen’s excitement at becoming new parents turned to anguish.

Former guitar shop manager Michael said: “Eve arrived six weeks earlier than expected, so that was a shock in itself.

“We were terrified to hear as a provisiona­l list of her many issues was rattled off to us by one of the doctors on the day she was born.

“Nothing had been picked up in scans so we were absolutely not prepared for this at all.”

Three days after her birth, Eve was transferre­d from Ninewells to the Glasgow hospital for a detailed heart scan.

She was sent back to Ninewells, with doctors believing she would grow out of some of her problems but 10 days later her breathing had became so poor she returned to Glasgow for a tracheosto­my.

Following the surgery, Michael and social care worker Karen, both 27, were told their daughter would have to go on a ventilator for a few days or even weeks, but she was never weaned off it.

By April it was clear Eve had no quality of life and there were other complex problems with her breathing she would never grow out of.

Michael and Karen were advised by medical staff that without improvemen­t they should consider ending her ventilatio­n to let her pass away.

Michael said: “Learning from the consultant­s in charge of Eve that she would never have any kind of quality of life but would only continue to suffer, we made the agonising decision to have Eve taken off the ventilator.”

On her last night, Eve was moved into a room with her parents where she fell asleep between them and drifted away peacefully in their arms in the early hours of April 20.

Michael and Karen have been devastated by the loss of their “little fighter” but overwhelme­d by the response to their campaign.

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 ??  ?? Top: Michael and Karen with Eve, who spent her tragically short life in hospital.
Top: Michael and Karen with Eve, who spent her tragically short life in hospital.

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