USA TODAY US Edition

Mom with COVID-19 delivers twins

Father, also positive for coronaviru­s, stayed away

- Tresa Baldas Detroit Free Press USA TODAY NETWORK

The twins were coming. Jennifer Laubach was battling COVID-19 symptoms the day her water broke. So was her husband, who raced upstairs to pack his wife’s hospital bag, worried as she wasn’t due for another eight weeks.

But when he returned with the bag, the virus took over.

Andre Laubach was overcome by a violent cough, gasped for air and couldn’t speak, so his wife headed to the hospital with him in the passenger seat. But while driving through their Clarkston, Michigan, neighborho­od, they got a call from their doctor: The dad’s coronaviru­s test results were in. He tested positive. He couldn’t go to the hospital.

So Jennifer Laubach turned the car around.

“When I dropped him back off at home, I was worried that I might not see him again,” Jennifer Laubach recalled. “I was afraid he was going to die in his sleep, and he was all by himself.”

As her husband got out of the car, she said, “I love you.”

The Laubachs are among 37,000 Michigande­rs who have been infected by the novel coronaviru­s that to date has afflicted more than 934,000 Americans and killed more than 53,000. More than 3,000 have died in our state.

Their story is one of survival. Andre Laubach, a 36-year-old attorney, overcame the virus that took over his lungs and caused him to miss out on the birth of his twin sons, Mitchell and Maksim, who were born early on April 3. Mitchell weighed 3 pounds, his brother 4. Neither baby has the virus. On Saturday, after three weeks of being cared for by nurses and doctors, baby Mitchell finally came home. His brother Maksim, who is still fighting some lung issues, is due home soon.

The Laubachs are now sharing their story, they said, to clear up any misconcept­ions about how serious COVID-19 is. The virus caused the mom to go into early labor, they said, and nearly cost the father his life.

“I want everyone to know that they need to take this virus seriously,” said Jennifer Laubach, 36, a controller for a constructi­on firm who gets frustrated by social media comments that claim COVID-19 isn’t a big deal. “I’m like ‘Oh my God. If you only knew. It’s not just a cold.’ ”

‘I was seeing stars’

After his wife drove off for the hospital,

Andre Laubach slowly made his way back to the house and laid down. His mind raced.

“I thought, ‘I know I’m going to miss the birth of my children. But I’m on the brink of death,’ ” recalled Andre Laubach, who has asthma and struggled to breathe, gasping between vicious coughing fits.

He had been sick for nine days by then, battling a cough, fatigue and dizziness. His wife also had a nasty cough, along with shortness of breath and diarrhea. Neither had a fever, though they suspected coronaviru­s. His wife called their doctor on a Sunday night for prescripti­ons to get tested.

The following day, he turned 36 years old.

“I was sick and resting and she said, ‘Happy Birthday, I got you a coronaviru­s test,’ ” he recalled.

The next morning, the couple got tested. By nightfall, they were in the ER. Andre Laubach had been coughing for nearly two hours and couldn’t breathe. At McLaren Hospital, however, his oxygen levels were high and he had no fever. So they sent him home with asthma treatments.

More coughing fits followed, so badly that he vomited. One night he coughed for five hours straight and thought he tore his abdominal muscles. At about 7 a.m. he finally fell asleep.

Then four hours later, his wife woke him up.

“My water broke,” she told him. Jennifer Laubach remained calm. She sat down to compose herself while her husband called Troy Beaumont Hospital, told them they were on their way, and that they might have COVID-19.

He then raced upstairs and packed his wife’s hospital bag. But by the time

he got back downstairs, he hit a wall. The coughing took over again.

“I got a violent cough. I was seeing stars,” he said. “I sat down in a chair and couldn’t talk. Jen said: ‘You ready to go? Can you drive?’ I knew it was a no, but I couldn’t tell her that. It was my responsibi­lity to drive my wife to the hospital when she was in labor.”

But his wife saw through him. After his wife arrived at the hospital, she called her husband and told him to call 911.

An ambulance arrived at the house. EMT workers checked his oxygen levels and said they were good.

‘We are having babies’

It was a half-hour drive to Beaumont Hospital in Troy, Michigan. When Jennifer Laubach arrived, there was a lot of confusion.

“They didn’t know what to do with me,” she said, noting the hospital knew that her husband was COVID-19 positive and presumed her to be positive, too.

Jennifer Laubach’s first test came back negative (her second test after giving birth came back positive) though the hospital was aware of her symptoms: coughing, shortness of breath and chills. So, upon arrival at the hospital, she sat in a wheelchair in the ER for a half-hour while the staff looked for a room for her.

There was concern over her infecting other pregnant moms or newborns. So they looked for a special room. A nurse and doctor eventually examined her and told her that she hadn’t dilated yet.

After her exam, she was taken to a negative pressure room designated for COVID-19 patients. The doctors had hoped to keep her from going into labor for another two weeks.

“I prayed to God that night, ‘Please let me live through this,’ ” the mom recalled, noting she was worried about her husband at home.

She also thought about how difficult it was getting pregnant in the first place. She and her husband struggled. She had a low egg count and wound up getting fertility shots – they worked. She produced two eggs that were successful­ly fertilized in a Petri dish and then placed back in her body, and the twins would grow. They were their miracle babies. She had to get through this, she thought. And so did her husband.

At 5 a.m. the following morning, she had her first contractio­n.

“We are having babies,” she texted her husband.

Although she labored alone, she recalled the kind hospital staff encouragin­g her, and a nurse named Onn who held her hand as she grimaced in pain.

“She was my angel, my rock star,” she recalled of Onn.

Almost five hours after her first contractio­n, the twins arrived.

Mitchell was born at 9:41 a.m. Maksim at 9:51.

Jennifer didn’t get to hold the babies, who were whisked away by nurses to be cleaned and to avoid any contaminat­ion.

“They held them up from me across the room. They were cute. I remember thinking how tiny they looked,” she said.

She then texted a photo of the babies to her husband.

Meeting the boys

The Laubachs would go three weeks before they got to meet their boys, who also couldn’t come home right away because they were born prematurel­y and needed extra care. On Thursday, after being cleared by infectious disease doctors at Beaumont, the couple finally went to the hospital and held their sons.

“Andre relied on wanting to see his kids, to feed his kids, that’s what got him through,” his wife recalled. “For us to be reunited as a family.”

On Saturday, they drove away from Beaumont Hospital, with baby Mitchell in the back. His brother could be home by the end of the week.

Andre Laubach credits much of this to his wife.

“Jen drove a half an hour after her water broke, after thinking I was dying, diagnosed with coronaviru­s and then delivered two babies with no support” he said. “She’s tough.”

The experience also taught him a valuable lesson.

“Don’t take the moments that you have with the people you love for granted,” he said. “You just gotta cherish every day that you have.”

 ?? TROY BEAUMONT HOSPITAL ?? Jen Laubach holding Mitchell and her husband Andrew Laubach holding Maksim inside the neo-natal intensive care unit inside Troy Beaumont Hospital in Troy, Mich., on Friday.
TROY BEAUMONT HOSPITAL Jen Laubach holding Mitchell and her husband Andrew Laubach holding Maksim inside the neo-natal intensive care unit inside Troy Beaumont Hospital in Troy, Mich., on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States