Calgary newborn recovering after 13 days in hospital with COVID-19 - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 07:59 AM | Calgary | -17.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Calgary newborn recovering after 13 days in hospital with COVID-19

The parents of a five-day-old Calgary girlbelieved to be the youngest person in Canada hospitalized because of COVID-19are urging people tested for the virusat the first sign of any symptoms.

Parents of baby Nora are urging others to get tested at the first sign of any symptoms

Ben Forrest and Ceyda Alaf Forrest pose with daughters Hazel and Nora after the baby was discharged from the Alberta Children's Hospital following a nearly two-week stay for COVID-19. (Submitted by the Forrest family)

The first two weeks of little Nora Forrest's life have been eventful.

She was only five days old when she made history as one of Canada's youngest patients to be hospitalizedwithCOVID-19.

And now that she and her family are recovering from a scaryexperience that included four days in intensive care for the newborn baby who had temporarily stopped breathing, her parents are urging people to get tested at the first sign of a symptom of the virus.

"At the sign of any symptoms, just get a test and then wait for the results," said Nora's dad. "And if you're negative, then keep on keeping on. And if you're positive, then there's a protocol for that, too."

All seemed well when Norawas born,in a Calgary hospital on Nov. 22. Hours after her birth, Nora was headed home withher parents,Ceyda Alaf Forrest and Ben Forrest.

"Everything was good. She was doing great, we were all fine," said Ceyda.

'Like a train just hit me'

But the next day Ceyda woke up feeling terrible.

"It kind of felt like a train just hit me," she said. "My eyes were puffy, my sinuses and throat were sore and I had a little bit of a runny nose. Ithought I just had a cold becauseI didn't sleep and just had the birth and was very overtired."

The following day, Ben woke up with similar symptoms. The day after that,it was Ceyda's mother and 20-month-old daughter, Hazel.

"Since we had runny noses, we booked our COVID tests," she said.

The next day as the family awaited their results Norabroke out in a fever.

"We looked it up and they said if they're younger than two months old, you've got to take them to emergency right away, which we did," said Ceyda.

It was there, just ninehours later, that the family was informed Nora was positive for COVID-19.

Whole family tested positive

"In that time, we found out that we all have COVID, when we got a message from Alberta Health saying we're positive," said Ceyda.

While the doctors worked to decide whether or not the infant would be admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU)or a regular unit, Norastopped breathing.

WATCH | Calgary newborn survives COVID-19:

Calgary newborn survives COVID-19

4 years ago
Duration 1:44
A newborn baby girl in Calgary was one of the youngest COVID-19 patients in Canada. The baby's parents, who also got sick, said the first weeks of her life were ones of worrying, waiting and finally, of relief.

"The way they explained it to us is that she had apnea, where she wasperiodically forgetting to breathe andso they needed to put her on ventilation," said Ben. "They intubatedher in ICU and that was definitely a pretty traumatic experience for both of us, but the procedure went well."

Dr. Jim Kellner, a pediatric infectious disease specialist with the University of Calgary, said while serious COVID-19 infections are more rare in children, physicians do worry more about infants in their first year of life, especially if they are premature or born with a medical condition.

1st year a risky time

"Those children can end up being admitted to the ICU at a rate that is similar to how it is in adults, and they can have a very rough course of things," he said. "Certainly the first year of life is a particular risk period for children. If they're going to get severe COVID, that's an age at which they can get it."

While the hospital sent Ben home immediately after his daughter was admitted to the ICU as a way to limit the number of COVID positive people at the hospital Ceyda remained with Nora in the ICU for the next four days, then in a different unit in the hospital for nine more.

"She was very irritable and she just wouldn't sleep," said Ceyda. "She would crynonstop for 20 hours. She would cry and I have to bounce her. I didn't get to sleep for a couple of days either."

The family saidthey were told their daughter, who was just five days old when she was admitted to the ICU, had made history as one of Canada's youngest COVID-19 patients to be hospitalized.

At the sign of any symptoms, just get a test and then wait for the results.- Ben Forrest

Slowly but surely, things did improve for Nora and the rest of her family.

It took only days for her parents and 20-month-old sister Hazel to recover, but her grandmother suffered for longer.

"Ceyda's momwas bedridden," said Ben. "Shetook the longest, probably 10 days to get over it."

Now, the family is home together.

"Nora is gaining weight, she's more alert and she looks at us and she even smiles sometimes. It's kind of cute to see," said Ceyda. "She spends more and more time awake instead of just sleeping. So we're actually doing much better."

In Alberta, more children per capita than any other province have been diagnosed with COVID-19 in-part because the province has done so much testing,Kellner said.

"The good news is, regardless of the number of cases, there really have been not that many cases of COVID-19 in children," he said"And the outcomes in these children are much milder on average than they are for adults. We've had no deaths that we know of in children under the age of 18 in Alberta.

Ben said most parents know that kids get runny noses and fevers often.

Nora spent 13 days in the hospital before being discharged. (Submitted by the Forrest family)

"And right now, for each runny nose the whole household is out of commission until test results come back, and by this point it was our fourth time going through it," he said. "We went through three of your run-of-the-mill runny noses and the fourth one, we were so surprised when we got the positive test result. "

He said although it might seem easy to get complacent, their family's story illustrates why following health guidelines and protocols is important.

"What I learned in this experience is the measures are there for a reason. They don'twant parents judging whether it's COVID or not," he said.

Ceyda agreed.

"Our baby girl might not have made it. And just the idea of it, it's unbelievable how serious it could get," she said. "In the end, taking all the precautions and doing everything you're supposed to do, it's just one less thing to worry in the end."

The family said they don't knowhow or where they contracted the virus, having limited their circle to immediate family in the weeks leading up to Nora's birth.

"We're a unique case because Ceydawas 40 weeks pregnant and so we weren'tgoing around to malls and stuff like that," said Ben. "We weren't leaving the house very often and we weren't seeing anybody, really."

Long-term impacts unknown

As for what long-term impacts COVID-19 will have on babies like Nora, Kellner said not a lot is known.

"Honestly, we'll allbe a lot smarter and more experienced a few months from now and in a year or two fromnow. But in the meantime, we have to do the best we can with the knowledge that we have," he said.

The family said they are thankful for the staff at the Alberta Children's Hospital who helped them and Nora along the way.

"We're lucky to have something like[the children's hospital] herein Calgary," Ben said.