Cynon Valley

Parents thank staff who ‘kept fighting’ for Tommy

- BETH THOMAS Reporter elizabeth.thomas@walesonlin­e.co.uk

PARENTS who lost their baby boy after he fought for his life for eight days are now raising money for the hospital ward that helped care for him.

Thomas Jack Keeble, known as Tommy, was born nine weeks prematurel­y in October with a lung condition.

His proud parents, Kath and Tim, from Pontypridd, are now raising money for Swansea’s Singleton Hospital’s NICU ward that helped care for their son.

Tommy, an IVF baby, was born on October 22 and transferre­d to Singleton Hospital in Swansea from Prince Charles Hospital just a few hours after he was born.

He passed away on October 30, despite Kath and Tim saying that the staff at the NICU had done “everything in their power” to help Tommy.

The couple had lost IVF twins last year at around eight weeks into the pregnancy, and said that Tommy was “definitely a wanted little boy”.

The couple found out, at 20 weeks, that Tommy had a right foot talipes (also known as a club foot) and were told that he had a problem with his heart, which rectified itself later on.

“Then everything was OK and at 27 weeks my waters broke,” Kath said. I was admitted to Prince Charles first and then transferre­d to Singleton.”

The couple knew that Tommy would be small when he was born and that he would need support with his breathing, as he was born nine weeks early.

On the Friday night that Tommy was born, it transpired that Kath and Tommy had an infection.

Tommy was diagnosed with pulmonary hypertensi­on, a serious condition that causes high blood pressure in the blood vessels that supply the lungs.

“He couldn’t breathe on his own,” Kath said.

“To my understand­ing, the hypertensi­on meant that the pressure in the lungs was too high and they wouldn’t move – they were just fixed open – which meant he couldn’t get air into his lungs.”

Because of this, Kath said, Tommy’s heart and blood pressure were working overtime. Tommy was put on a ventilator with 100% oxygen with a nitrate machine to help him.

“A few hours after birth, we were told they were taking it minute by minute, basically, and they had done everything that they could to save him, but he couldn’t get air into his lungs,” Kath, 31, said.

Kath and Tim were given the option to transfer Tommy to Swansea, with Tim, 52, in the front of the ambulance.

As Kath had had an emergency Caesarean, she was unable to travel with them.

“We decided to take the chance,” she said. “They thought he wasn’t going to survive the journey to Swansea, but we decided to give him a chance.

“I can honestly say, [Singleton Hospital’s NICU ward] did absolutely everything.

“They had about 11 or 12 drugs on a syringe going into him, they had a ventilator, they were doing his normal care as well – what a baby would normally need in the NICU,” Kath said.

She added that the staff also tried a blood pressure medication that they had specially brought in for Tommy.

“They did try everything. He had so much medication for his heart, his blood pressure, his lungs,” she said.

“They just did so much for him. Every time something would happen and he would crash and it looked like that was the end, Tommy would get himself back or the people there would get him back to normal.

“They sort of said to us, ‘Tommy’s fighting, so we’ll keep going,’ which we were grateful for.”

Tragically, Tommy had a bleed on his lungs after a few had occurred earlier in the week and he passed away on October 30.

“That sort of wiped him out completely then, everything he had built in the last couple of days.

“He was tired after that and we knew that was the end coming.

“Even in that moment, the staff were really careful with us,” Kath said.

“The care for us, as well as for Tommy, I can’t fault it. It was amazing. The people there are amazing.

“We were given a room because we were an hour and 20 minutes away from Singleton, so we were given a room on the same floor as him all week. We literally didn’t leave his bedside.”

To thank the staff for the care they provided for Tommy and themselves, Kath and Tim have set up a fundraiser in recognitio­n of their hard work. While they were initially hoping to raise £300 for the ward, they have now raised over £1,500.

“They gave us time with our baby, so we’re really grateful for that. They didn’t give up on him. They used everything,”

Kath said. “They would make sure that Tommy was looked after until the next nurse came in and they would stay afterwards.

“Some nights, you would walk past a nurse at about 9pm and think, ‘You were supposed to go home two hours ago.’ It’s just our way of saying thank you in Tommy’s name.”

“It’s been very difficult. We’ve wanted to start a family for a long time and Tommy was our last embryo. He was so wanted. He fought really hard.”

She continued: “This fundraiser has given me some kind of comfort. It’s in his memory and I want his legacy to be that he was a fighter. He definitely did things his own way.”

You can donate to the fundraiser at www.gofundme.com/f/nicu-wardsingle­tonswansea.

 ?? KATH KEEBLE ?? Thomas Jack Keeble, known as Tommy, was transferre­d to the NICU at Singleton Hospital.
KATH KEEBLE Thomas Jack Keeble, known as Tommy, was transferre­d to the NICU at Singleton Hospital.
 ?? KATH KEEBLE ?? Parents Tim and Kath with baby Tommy.
KATH KEEBLE Parents Tim and Kath with baby Tommy.

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