Weekend Herald

ICU nurse now the one in need of care

Bleeding brain forces mum to have caesarean, go unconsciou­s

- Chelsea Boyle

A husband and wife team devoted to caring for people in ICU have been rocked by a health emergency of their own.

Dunedin ICU nurses Hayloon (Heylon) Sevilla and his wife Teresa, also known as Tessa, are parents to 5-year-old Nio and were expecting baby number two to arrive around September.

That changed when Teresa suffered a brain bleed and her daughter, Estella Marie, was brought into the world at 32 weeks via emergency caesarean.

The community has rallied around the young couple, creating a Givealittl­e page to support them.

Dozens of comforting messages have been left on the page.

“Your community is walking right beside you,” one donor said.

A family spokespers­on for the couple said they felt a deep sense of gratitude for the outpouring of aroha.

“[Heylon] feels so overwhelme­d reading the messages in the givealittl­e page, especially a couple of them coming from their previous patients,” the spokespers­on said.

“He is amazed at how much of an impact he and Teresa made to these people in the short span of time they looked after them.

“Estella is doing well, getting bigger and cuter every day. Nio still keeps on going to school every day and is getting better at math.”

The couple were surrounded by an amazing support network, the spokespers­on said.

“At this time, prayers would be the best thing we could give the family while we wait for Teresa to wake up.”

According to the page, on August 3 Heylon awoke to the news his wife

Prayers would be the best thing we could give the family while we wait for Teresa to wake up. Family spokespers­on

had collapsed at work and initially he thought it was a fainting spell.

“Unfortunat­ely, this was not the case and then the nightmare started,” the page reads.

She did not wake up and was admitted to ICU, where she needed to have a breathing tube.

A CT scan of her head showed a

“massive bleed” and as her brain had swollen, the neurosurge­on deemed it too risky to operate at this stage, the page reads.

Southern DHB chief nursing and midwifery officer Jane Wilson said they were supporting the two “treasured ICU nurses” during an extremely difficult time.

“ICU staff dedicate themselves to caring for some of the most unwell people in our communitie­s, and now our team members are needing the care of their friends and colleagues,” Wilson said.

“I thank all of our ICU and NICU teams for their incredible strength and profession­alism at this very challengin­g time.” The support, kind messages and generous assistance the family had received from across the community was greatly appreciate­d, she said. “This includes messages from former patients and wha¯nau who have remembered the care they received from [Haylon] and Teresa in their own times of need.”

 ??  ?? ICU nurses Haylon Sevilla and wife Teresa have had great support. She has yet to awake and a swollen brain means surgery must wait. Haylon is pictured with premature baby Estella Marie.
ICU nurses Haylon Sevilla and wife Teresa have had great support. She has yet to awake and a swollen brain means surgery must wait. Haylon is pictured with premature baby Estella Marie.

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