Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Wartime birth amid the air raid sirens in Ukraine hospital

- By Renata Brito and Cara Anna

LVIV, UKRAINE » It’s easy to tell the delivery room from the rest of the main maternity hospital in Ukraine’s western city of Lviv, even from the outside. Its exterior wall is piled high with sandbags.

In the dim basement, where heavily pregnant women must bend low to avoid the water pipes, there is a delivery table in case the baby comes amid the air raid sirens.

Stress is part of childbirth, but it’s not meant to be like this.

At least 49 attacks have targeted medical facilities in Ukraine since the Feb. 24 Russian invasion, including a maternity hospital bombed in March in Mariupol, where Associated Press images of a wounded pregnant woman being rushed from the rubble on a stretcher were seen around the world, personifyi­ng the horror of the attack on civilians. The woman and her baby later died.

About 200 pregnant women displaced by Russia’s invasion have come to the hospital in Lviv since the war began. More than 100 have given birth, said Maria Malachynsk­a, director of the Lviv state regional perinatal center. They come from some of the communitie­s the world now knows by name: Mariupol, Kharkiv, Donetsk, Kyiv.

“This stress which women have, in times of war, it influences a lot and we see a lot of complicati­ons,” Malachynsk­a said.

Lilia Myronovich, who heads the natal department at another hospital, Lviv municipal maternity, said she also has seen more premature births than normal. “The women are stressed,” she said. “Especially ladies who come from other districts.”

One woman from Mariupol at the Lviv state perinatal center cries all the time, traumatize­d after making it out of the besieged city. “They were starving,” Malachynsk­a said. “We are even helping them with clothes, with prams, because they don’t have anything to give to their children.”

Outside the director’s window, a new shelter was being dug. It will be large enough to hold the incubators needed for babies born prematurel­y.

Upstairs, expectant mother Kateryna Galmalova fled Mykolaiv, a city now occupied by Russian forces, with her husband as tanks were approachin­g and after three nights sleeping in the hallway amid explosions.

“I had high blood pressure the first few days from this news” of the war, she said. “Because you don’t understand what to do next, where to go, where and how to give birth.”

She fled Mykolaiv with just her documents, spare underwear and the clothes she wore. She was overwhelme­d by the kindness she found in Lviv, where she has no family, she said, and which quickly became a haven for hundreds of thousands of people displaced from more threatened parts of Ukraine.

Suddenly a siren sounded, sending patients and staff to the basement until the alert was lifted half an hour later.

“I do not want children to be born in war,” Galmalova said as she waited undergroun­d scrolling through social media on her phone, where she learned of a woman forced to give birth in a bunker. “And I don’t want to give birth in a basement or a bunker. I do not want any child to be born in such a place.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY NARIMAN EL-MOFTY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Yana Tananakina, 38-week-pregnant woman displaced from Kyiv, lays on a bed to get a fetal heart monitor check up, at the Lviv state regional perinatal center, western Ukraine, Thursday, April 7, 2022. “Life goes on,” says her husband, Oleksander. “Every war ends. And this one will end, too.”
PHOTOS BY NARIMAN EL-MOFTY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Yana Tananakina, 38-week-pregnant woman displaced from Kyiv, lays on a bed to get a fetal heart monitor check up, at the Lviv state regional perinatal center, western Ukraine, Thursday, April 7, 2022. “Life goes on,” says her husband, Oleksander. “Every war ends. And this one will end, too.”
 ?? ?? A makeshift operating area for urgent deliveries, inside the shelter of the Lviv state regional perinatal center, western Ukraine, Friday, April 1, 2022. In the dim basement, where heavily pregnant women must bend low to avoid the water pipes, there is a delivery table in case the baby comes amid the air raid sirens.
A makeshift operating area for urgent deliveries, inside the shelter of the Lviv state regional perinatal center, western Ukraine, Friday, April 1, 2022. In the dim basement, where heavily pregnant women must bend low to avoid the water pipes, there is a delivery table in case the baby comes amid the air raid sirens.

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