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Archive for September, 2009

Gift from a stranger: Couple to give up baby after embryo switch

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

By JOHN SEEWER
Associated Press Writer

TOLEDO, Ohio – Carolyn Savage didn’t know what to think, what to say, where to look as the ultrasound wand glided over her belly. It was supposed to be her baby inside. Not someone else’s.
Yet here she was in her doctor’s office with the baby’s biological mother, both brought together by a terrible error at a fertility clinic. A doctor, they said, had given Savage the wrong embryo, and now she was carrying the other woman’s child.
“The wand is on my abdomen and the technician’s talking to someone else: ‘There’s your baby’s nose. There’s your baby’s head,’” she said. “It was surreal.”
Embryo mix-ups at fertility clinics are extremely rare. In those few instances, they’ve degenerated into custody battles, ugly lawsuits and at least one abortion. But not this time. Savage and her husband decided that the right thing – the only thing – to do was to give the baby to the biological parents.
“This was someone else’s child,” she told The Associated Press on Wednesday. “We didn’t know who it was. We didn’t know if they didn’t have children or if this was their last chance for a child.”
“We knew if our child was out there, we’d go to the ends of the earth to get our child back,” she said.
Savage, 40, is due to give birth to a boy within the next two weeks via cesarean section. When it happens, biological parents Paul and Shannon Morell, of Michigan, will be nearby, waiting to meet their son.
“How do you thank somebody for what they’ve done?” Shannon Morell said. “I could say thank you a million dif-ferent ways.”
The Savages say the fertility clinic transferred the wrong frozen embryo to Carolyn’s womb in early February. Ten days later, Sean Savage got a call from a doctor saying his wife was pregnant with someone else’s child.
“By God’s grace, there was never a moment where we thought we were going to have another baby of our own,” Carolyn Savage said.
The doctor told them they could abort, but the couple didn’t consider that a viable option.
“It wasn’t even something we had to discuss,” said Sean Savage, 39.
The Savages won’t reveal the name of the fertility clinic, saying only that it’s not in Ohio. They have hired attorneys who say they are working to make sure the clinic will accept full responsibility.
A message was left Wednesday for the Savages’ Detroit attorney, Brian McKeen.
The Morells, who live north of Detroit, learned of the mistake a day after the Savages. They were just about to start the process of having another baby with their last embryos when the clinic called.
The two couples knew nothing about each other. Shannon Morell feared that the pregnant woman would choose abortion, ending their chance to give their 2-year-old twin girls a sibling.
“I didn’t think she’d want to carry the baby to term,” Shannon said. “I felt helpless.”
A few days passed before they learned that the Savages were not only willing to continue with the pregnancy, but also to hand over the baby without hesitation.
In the first few weeks, the Savages sent e-mail updates after every doctor’s visit. The couples finally met about three months into the pregnancy.
They shook hands, held back tears and began to form a bond. Phone calls followed.
Then in August, Carolyn Savage asked Shannon Morell whether she wanted to be with her for the ultrasound.
Shannon felt funny, too, being in the same room with Carolyn and her husband. She didn’t want to show too much excitement, knowing how conflicted they must be feeling.
“I felt like the third wheel,” she said. “Although I knew that child inside her was mine, it wasn’t the same feeling I had with the twins.”
The American Society for Reproductive Medicine doesn’t track how many women have been given the wrong embryos, said Eleanor Nicoll, a spokeswoman. Only a few cases have popped up the past decade or so.
A California woman was awarded $1 million in 2004 to settle a lawsuit against a fertility specialist who accidentally gave her the wrong embryos and hid the mistake until her baby was 10 months old.
A white New York woman gave birth to a black couple’s baby in 1998 after an embryo mix-up that set off a two-year court fight between the couples over visitation rights. And just this year, a Japanese woman aborted her preg-nancy after she was told there had been a mistake at a government-run hospital.
Each fertility clinic has its own system for identifying and tracking embryos. Most patients get an identification number that also is kept with the embryos while they are stored. Names are double-checked. So are the numbers.
The Savages and the Morells say they have not been told what exactly went wrong at their clinic.
Neither family is sure what will happen after the baby is handed over to the Morells. They plan on approaching it like they have so far – with caution and care – making sure not to cause any more pain.
Carolyn Savage won’t have another chance to carry her own baby because of her age and difficulties during her earlier pregnancies. She and her husband plan to hire a surrogate and try again for a fourth child.
The Morells don’t have a name picked out for their son and aren’t likely to make it public.
His mom doesn’t want him to be known as the baby who got switched at the clinic. She wants to tell him about that herself. And she wonders if someday he’ll want to meet the woman who gave birth to him.
Carolyn Savage said she knows she’ll always think about him, and Shannon Morell plans to send the Savages up-dates as the baby grows.
“We’ll always have a bond,” she said.

Do Your Part to Stay Healthy!

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

WASH HANDS, Keep Germs Away 

Wash AFTER:

  • Eating
  • Using the Bathroom
  • Blowing your Nose
  • Sneezing/Coughing
  • Playing Outside
  • Returning Home

 

Wash BEFORE:

  • Eating

 

ALSO:

  • Cover coughs with a tissue or sleeve
  • Avoid touching your face

Stay HOME if you:

  • Have a fever of 100 degrees or above
  • Have been vomiting
  • Continue to cough after medication
  • Have symptoms that don’t allow you to concentrate or learn

 

Avoid GERMS:

  • Don’t share cups or eating utensils
  • Use disinfectants when a household member is ill
  • Keep common surfaces clean: doorknobs, phones, remote controls, toys and keyboards.

 

Head Lice 101

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

 As children return to school, you may have a note that comes home with your student notifying you that head lice were found on one of your child’s classmates.  While panic may be your first reaction, a review of the facts will give you the information you need to deal with this.

  • Head lice (insects) are not due to poor personal hygiene.
  • Head lice crawl; they do not hop, jump or fly.  They need human blood to survive and they will not live for more than 24 hours off of its human host.
  • They are mainly spread by head-to-head contact, such as sharing clothing, bed linens, combs, brushes, and hats.  Kids are most prone to catching lice because they tend to have close physical contact with each other and often share personal items.
  • Nits (the eggs) are small yellowish-white, oval shaped eggs that are “glued” at an angle to the hair shaft.  Nits are laid by live lice close to the scalp where the temperature is perfect for keeping warm until they hatch in 7 – 10 days.

Successful treatment and elimination of head lice includes:

  • Check every family member – nits are easier to see than the live louse (single insect).
  • Use a product to eliminate the lice for family members over age 2.

Concentrate your time and energy on removing the nits.  Separate hair into sections and  remove nits with your fingernails.

  • Wash bedding, towels and recently worn clothing in hot water and dry in a hot dryer.  Vacuum rugs, carpets, upholstered furniture, pillows, mattresses, car interiors and car seats.
  • Following the treatment, inspect hair and remove nits daily for the next 14 days.  If lice and/or nits are observed, a second treatment is recommended.

Be sure to let your child know that they haven’t done anything wrong and anyone can get lice.  Patience, daily head checks, nit removal, and discussing prevention will keep the bugs away.   

 

Make a Plan

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

 Your family may not be together when disaster strikes, so it is important to plan in advance: how you will contact one another; how you will get back together; and what you will do in   different situations.

 Family Emergency Plan

  • Identify an out-of-town contact.  It may be easier to make a long-distance phone call than to call across town, so an out-of-town contact may be in a better position to communicate among separated family members.
  • Be sure every member of your family knows the phone number and has a cell phone, coins, or a prepaid phone card to call the emergency contact.  If you have a cell phone, program that person(s) as ICE (In Case of Emergency) in your phone.  If you are in an accident, emergency personnel will often check your ICE listings in order to get a hold of someone you know. 
  • Teach family members how to use text messaging.  Text messages can often get around network disruptions when a phone call might not be able to get through.

 Planning to stay or go

Depending on your circumstance and the nature of the emergency, the first important decision is whether you stay where you are or evacuate.  You should understand and plan for both possibilities.  Use common sense and available information to determine if there is an immediate danger.

 

Emergency Information

Find out what kinds of disasters are most likely to occur in your area and how you will be   notified.  You might hear a special siren, get a telephone call, or emergency workers may go door-to-door.  Methods of getting your attention vary from community to community.