Baby Dana was born a happy, healthy girl.
She was breastfeeding well and putting on weight.
At 11 days old, she developed a blocked nose and was unsettled at
night. Dana’s parents acted quickly and saw the GP, who diagnosed a cold
and prescribed saline drops. When she was three weeks old, Dana
developed an occasional cough, like clearing her throat, and appeared to
gag at night. Little coughs, runny nose, a bit unsettled, but appeared
well during the day.
Her parents returned to the GP, who assessed Dana each day and tested
her for whooping cough and other respiratory viruses. After her fourth
visit, Dana’s test results confirmed she was positive for whooping
cough, and the GP admitted her straight to hospital.
Ten minutes after arriving, Dana had her first coughing fit where she
coughed violently for nearly two minutes, turned blue and needed
oxygen. This occurred up to 10 times an hour throughout the night, and
her parents and two nurses held oxygen to her face to keep her
breathing.
Dana’s parents learned there was no cure, and had to watch the
Pertussis take its course. Dana was put in a perspex headbox, which
provided oxygen and humidified her airways, was fed her mother’s breast
milk via a tube inserted in her nose and received extra fluids via a
drip. Wires monitored her pulse, temperature and oxygen levels, and she
was given antibiotics to stop her transmitting the infection and prevent
pneumonia. The doctor told Dana’s parents she could go home when she
could recover from an attack without oxygen, but that she would continue
having coughing fits for many months.
But, on the third day at hospital, Dana developed pneumonia and she
was placed on a ventilator and airlifted to intensive care. She was
stable, but her parents were advised she would stay on the ventilator
for a week and was at risk of secondary infections, and collapsed or
perforated lungs. Dana had blood tests every half hour and mucous was
suctioned from her lungs
On the fifth day, Dana developed Rapid Invasive Pertussis, where the
whooping cough toxins suddenly attacked her major organs. Dana’s blood
pressure plummeted, while her white blood cell count skyrocketed. The
medical team consulted experts worldwide and completed two blood
transfusions. After ten hours, Dana’s parents began to hope as her blood
pressure increased, but then watched in horror as the alarms sounded
and she went into cardiac arrest. The busy room became silent as Dana
was declared dead at 6.45pm. She was only 32 days old.
Nobody knows where Dana was infected with whooping cough. It may have
been at her sibling’s school or preschool. A loving relative or friend,
or a complete stranger may have unknowingly passed the infection on.
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