Kids Safety Network

Worlds ‘Most Premature’ Baby Who Was Born At 22 Weeks Is Now Thriving

Worlds ‘Most Premature’ Baby Who Was Born At 22 Weeks Is Now Thriving

“She may be the most premature known survivor to date,” says a case report about her birth published in the journal Pediatricslast week.

The now 3-year-old girl was born at 21 weeks and four days after conception.

Most pediatrics and obstetrics societies agree that 22 weeks of gestation is the lower threshold of viability, and many doctors will recommend against assessing for viability or resuscitating babies born younger than 22 weeks due to a low chance of survival.

Before a medical emergency led to the very early birth of her child in 2014, while still in the antepartum room at Methodist Children’s Hospital in San Antonio, Texas, Stensrud said that she searched online for any other mothers who gave birth at 21 weeks.

“There were stories of 22-weekers, 23-weekers, but nothing about 21-weekers. So I knew that there was little to no survival or viability at 21 weeks,”said the stay-at-home mom, now 35.

Just after she gave birth, Dr. Kaashif Ahmad, a MEDNAX-affiliated neonatologist at the hospital and lead author of the case report, counseled her about the baby’s extremely low chances of survival and initially counseled against resuscitating the baby.

Stensrud held her 15-ounce girl in her arms, with the umbilical cord still attached and listened to the new given by the Doctors.

“Although I was listening to him, I just felt something inside of me say, ‘Just have hope and have faith.’ It didn’t matter to me that she was 21 weeks and 4 days. I didn’t care,” Stensrud said.

“As he was talking to me, I just said, ‘Will you try?’ And he said he would, and three years later, we have our little miracle baby,” Stensrud said.

“I don’t tell her story a lot, but when I do, people are amazed,” she said. “If there’s another woman in antepartum that is searching Google, they can find this story and they can find a little bit of hope and a little bit of faith.”

Ahmad pointed out that Stensrud’s daughter was one case, and that more research needs to be done on preterm births lower than 22 weeks.

“We have to be very cautious about generalizing one good outcome to a larger population,” Ahmad said.

It is very possible that there have been many 21-week babies resuscitated in other places that did not have positive outcomes, and for that reason, we haven’t heard about them,” he said. “We reported this case because after this resuscitation she did well, but it may be possible that this is just an extraordinary case and that we shouldn’t expect the same from other babies. We have to learn more before we can make any conclusions.”

‘She very slowly changed colors from blue to pink’

Around the world, an estimated 15 million babies are born too early — before 37 weeks gestation — every year, according to the World Health Organization.

** For the sake of privacy, the family has requested that media not publish the childs name or current photos to respect her family’s privacy.

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