Chattanooga Times Free Press

Mom on a mission to protect babies

Infant daughter’s death drives her to warn new parents of a simple sleeprelat­ed mistake

- BY THERESA COTTOM AKRON BEACON JOURNAL

AKRON, Ohio — All it took was a blanket.

Before Meagen Gries returned back to her first day of work from maternity leave on May 4, 2015, she dropped off her toddler son, Owen, and 2-month-old daughter, Molly, at a baby sitter’s house. Of all things, it was an object of comfort that has prevented her from ever picking her little daughter back up again.

While Molly was napping in her Pack ‘N Play that day, she suffocated on a blanket and died in her sleep.

The grief and guilt still follow Gries and her husband, Jeff, to this day. But instead of immersing themselves in grief, the Hudson couple has immersed themselves in activism.

The Grieses started the Molly Ann Gries Foundation

last year to raise awareness about and distribute resources surroundin­g infant sleep safety.

The foundation’s newest partnershi­p is with Akron Children’s Hospital. Beginning in January, every baby who visits one of the hospital’s 28 pediatric offices for their initial wellcheck will receive a copy of Sleep Baby, Safe and Snug, a small board book about safe sleep practices, along with a card of questions to ask potential childcare providers.

“She should still be here,” Meagen Gries said. “That’s all we can do is share our story.”

MOLLY’S STORY

Meagen Gries was on her lunch break at Echo Hills Elementary School in Stow where she teaches first grade when she got the call from the baby sitter that Molly wasn’t breathing.

She hurried to Akron Children’s Hospital to meet Molly in the ambulance, but was greeted instead by a social worker and teary doctor.

“The worst part was leaving her there,” Gries said. “As a mom, it goes against every fiber of your being to hand over your baby and walk out the door.”

In the days following Molly’s death, Gries wasn’t thinking about sharing her story. She didn’t even want to be part of the story.

But that changed when the Grieses learned Molly’s cause of death. The family initially thought she died of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), an unpreventa­ble death, until the medical examiner called Gries in August

and told her Molly died of positional asphyxiati­on.

The first thing Gries did was call the baby sitter to let her know what happened — and let her know that she had been just as guilty of making the same simple sleeping mistakes with Molly every day.

“It absolutely could’ve been me,” Gries said.

The second thing she did was write a post on Facebook about Molly’s death. Despite the tragic news, Gries couldn’t help but think of all the other new moms making the same vital mistakes as she and her baby sitter had.

“If I didn’t say that, somebody could have potentiall­y walked upstairs and put their baby in the same situation,” she Gries said.

PREVENTION

The Grieses have since had another daughter named Emma, who is now 1, but Molly is still ever-present. Her name lives on through the foundation, its logo covering stickers, shirts and even the back of Meagen Gries’ sedan.

Sleep-related infant deaths are an issue Gries has made her personal mission to alleviate — and one

that still needs attention.

Suffocatio­n is the leading cause of injury-related deaths for babies before their first birthdays.

Dr. Susan Nofziger, a pediatric hospitalis­t and chair member of the Akron Children’s Hospital Safe Sleep Committee, said there are six to 10 infants under the age of 1 who die in her county every year from sleep-related deaths. A large part of that is due to lack of education, along with changes in safe-sleep guidelines in recent years.

“Most people just feel like it’s something that would never happen to them,” Nofziger said.

The hospital is undergoing several initiative­s to alleviate the problem as well. Sherry Blair, the Akron Children’s Hospital Cribs for Kids coordinato­r, and Nofziger said the goal is to educate every parent in the system with a child under the age of 1 about safe practices and get them to develop a safe sleep routine.

“We just want to make it standardiz­ed, like a car seat,” Blair said.

The books donated by the Gries foundation could help accomplish that mission. They were written by Dr. John Hutton, a Cincinnati-based pediatrici­an who also lost a child to a sleep-related death.

The book is an illustrate­d board book, much like one that would be read to a child at bedtime, and it covers the do’s and don’ts of safe sleep.

The Grieses purchased 8,500 of them with money a friend raised for them on GoFundMe, and they’ll be given to new parents. The Grieses plan to donate the same amount to the hospital each year.

In addition, the foundation also distribute­s movement monitors and breathable crib mattresses to families of infants at risk for SIDS, and it gives away two additional movement monitors every month.

“I have a love/hate relationsh­ip with the foundation. The only reason I’m here right now is because she’s not here right now,” Gries said. “But the thought that there are babies alive today because of Molly is really powerful. The idea that even though she’s not here, other babies are — it helps.”

 ?? PHIL MASTURZO/AKRON BEACON JOURNAL ?? Meagan Gries talks about losing a daughter from positional asphyxiati­on in 2015 during an interview at Akron Children’s Hospital.
PHIL MASTURZO/AKRON BEACON JOURNAL Meagan Gries talks about losing a daughter from positional asphyxiati­on in 2015 during an interview at Akron Children’s Hospital.
 ?? HIL MASTURZO/AKRON BEACON JOURNAL ?? Dr. Susan Nofzinger, left, and Sherry Blair share informatio­n on positional asphyxiati­on during a interview at Akron Children’s Hospital in Akron, Ohio.
HIL MASTURZO/AKRON BEACON JOURNAL Dr. Susan Nofzinger, left, and Sherry Blair share informatio­n on positional asphyxiati­on during a interview at Akron Children’s Hospital in Akron, Ohio.

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