Posted on 12/25/2025 7:46:07 AM PST by Morgana
A baby girl born in the family car at only 22 weeks gestation has made it home from the hospital in time for Christmas.
Baby Daleyza weighed just over one pound when she was born in the front seat of the family car on the way to the hospital. Her mother, Jazmin, was only 22 weeks pregnant when she unexpectedly went into labour and had to drive 50 miles to a hospital after she discovered the local hospital was not equipped to care for such a premature baby.
Baby Daleyza wouldn’t wait until they got to the hospital, however. She was born in the car while an emergency dispatcher gave instructions to Jazmin over the phone, including how to break the amniotic sac and perform CPR. Thankfully, paramedics arrived within minutes and performed CPR on the tiny baby using a single finger before she was rushed to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU).
“The call came in at 2 am. Most of us have had labour and delivery calls, but not for someone this premature”, said Engine 6 Capt David Fike, one of the emergency personnel who attended the initial scene. “Those initial moments matter”, he added.
Janelle Beall, nurse manager at the NICU, said, “In our own controlled environment with the NICU, it can be challenging to maintain thermoregulation in extremely preterm infants. It is incredible what [the paramedics] did to get the baby here safely. It made all the difference”.
“When [the paramedics] brought the baby to our Emergency Department, the baby had a good temperature and a good chest rise”, she continued.
Baby Daleyza then spent 146 days in the NICU, cared for by a dedicated neonatologists, NICU nurses, NICU-focused dietitians, respiratory therapists, and pharmacists. Finally, after all this time and all her ups and downs, she has been allowed to go home, just in time for Christmas.
“Not all family is blood relatives. There is the family that you make and these doctors and nurses are my family”, Jazmin said of those who helped save baby Daleyza’s life. “There are no words to express how thankful we are”.
Improved survival rates for extremely premature babies
The survival rates for extremely premature babies like Daleyza have significantly improved in recent decades. A 2008 study looking at survival rates for a neonatal intensive care unit in London found that neonatal survival rates at 22 and 23 weeks gestation had improved over time. In 1981-85, no babies who were born at these gestational ages survived to discharge. However, by 1986-90, 19% did and this increased to 54% in the period 1996-2000.
In the decade to 2019 alone, the survival rate for extremely premature babies born at 23 weeks doubled, prompting new guidance from the British Association of Perinatal Medicine (BAPM) that enables doctors to intervene to save premature babies from 22 weeks gestation. The previous clinical guidance, drafted in 2008, set the standard that babies who were born before 23 weeks gestation should not be resuscitated.
Spokesperson for Right To Life UK, Catherine Robinson, said “It is great to hear that baby Daleyza has made it home in time for Christmas after a tough 146 days in the NICU. Her story is a testament to the strength of unborn babies, and highlights the increasingly high chances of survival that extremely premature babies like her have”.
|
Click here: to donate by Credit Card Or here: to donate by PayPal Or by mail to: Free Republic, LLC - PO Box 9771 - Fresno, CA 93794 Thank you very much and God bless you. |
Most of those kids have severe lung problems. A good many are permanently damaged.
“Most of those kids have severe lung problems. A good many are permanently damaged. “
I would hope that has medicine and technology improves, in the future this too won’t be a problem.
My wife has been managing kids like this for two decades as an advanced practice NICU nurse. Over that time, the threshold of maturity necessary for survival has dropped by about a week and generally speaking, the prognosis over a lifetime has become worse. A very few do well.
Most of these kids are conceived to women with serious problems (drugs and such). The vast majority are on public assistance. The cost is well over a million, each. Instead of focusing resources on attaining a lower gestational threshold, we'd help more kids live better lives with less money if we focused upon better prenatal care.
Sadly not the case.

“Most of these kids are conceived to women with serious problems (drugs and such). The vast majority are on public assistance. The cost is well over a million, each. Instead of focusing resources on attaining a lower gestational threshold, we’d help more kids live better lives with less money if we focused upon better prenatal care. “
Sounds like the mothers need to be in a Nervous Hospital while pregnant so they can’t do drugs and get prenatal care. Yea I know the dems will bellyache about that but it’s what must be done.
God Bless this sweet angel, forever!
Merry Christmas!
“Jesus’ very birth (of a virgin) transcended science, was met with resistance”
A beautiful example of the value of life. Mary saw it through and birthed our savior. One has to wonder how many amazing human beings that God sent to us, were unwanted and terminated.
That is roughly 5.75 months.
My sister was 2 lbs, 10 oz. born in 1970. Some remnants of being born prematurly are: poor eyesight (improved with surgery), asthma, and arthritis, issues with walking.
What some of these kids go through is nothing short of a horror in which death becomes merciful. My wife has done what she could over the years, from cooling brains, to cutting down ambient noise, to music, getting colostrum in them as soon as possible, to introducing the skin microbiome from the mother, to improved IV systems, to better protocols for managing bilirubin, to developing parent education systems for when these damaged kids go home...
But there are children born with conditions incompatible with life but for "technology" that can keep the body going if only for a while but sometimes indefinitely. But what is the cost to the family if they're so committed to one damaged kid that they can't have others without facing both physical and financial ruin? Our society has for the most part lost efficacy in those institutions (such as churches) who used to organize voluntary assistance.
G_d made us to make free choices, and yet some seem so far beyond our capacity that they can't be made ultimately just. Yet choices do have to be made, and some are time sensitive. The best outcomes are those in which we can read what the patient wants (and yes, sometimes even an infant does let us know), but that isn't always possible. It is a system that ends up on legal autopilot.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.