Saturday, September 26, 2015

‘Miracle baby’ born on cruise ship: What pregnant passengers need to know

The story began when Emily Morgan, along with her husband Chase, and their 3-year-old daughter Chloe, were on the second day of their seven-day cruise aboard the Royal Caribbean's Independence of the Seas. Emily, who was in her 23rd week of pregnancy and due in December, had been given the okay by her doctor to go on the trip, but she starting experiencing labor pains after she had turned in for bed.
"I started having contractions late at night and I had a terrible pain in my stomach,'" Morgan told FoxNews.com. "Around one o'clock in the morning, we called the medical team because I knew the baby was coming." 
Just 30 minutes later the baby boy, Haiden, was born. But doctors initially refused to let Emily hold him. Due to the amount of blood she had lost and the newborn's size, she says the doctors told her she had miscarried.
"I saw the doctor holding him but I didn't hear him crying. My motherly instincts kicked in and I
just asked over and over again if I could hold my baby," she recalled. "They initially told me the baby wasn't breathing so I was crying and my husband was crying but the doctors were really concerned about my health so they still wouldn't let me see him."
But the story soon took a miraculous turn. 
While Haiden was initially pronounced dead, doctors were able to revive the infant and told her that he was still breathing 45 minutes after the birth.  But with no incubators on board, the medical team made due with towels and heated saline pads to keep the premature infant warm. A nurse fed him a dextrose solution for the next several hours.
After being alerted to the incident, the ship’s captain made every effort to get the newborn to shore, soon docking in San Juan, the nearest port, two hours ahead of schedule. Local doctors are saying those hours likely saved the baby’s life.
Stewart Chiron, a veteran cruise industry expert known as The Cruise Guy, says that the quick thinking medical staff pulled off a near impossible feat. Not only are cruise lines not equipped to handle this type of emergency, they have very strict guidelines to try and prevent something like this from happening. 
“Many of these ships have extensive medical facilities and well-trained staff onboard but they usually don’t have someone trained in delivery and they are not full-fledged hospital emergency rooms,” Chiron told FoxNews.com. He explained that most cruise lines enforce strict policies regarding pregnant passengers, and he has even seen expectant mothers turned away at the dock.
For Royal Caribbean, Disney and Princess cruise lines, the cut off is at 24 weeks, regardless of whether or not a doctor has written a note permitting a patient's passage. Pregnant women must also sign a statement stating they are within compliance of the guidelines. 
By comparison, air travel policies are more flexible, as passengers are on board an aircraft just hours as compared to days at sea. Major airlines, including United, American and Delta, permit pregnant women to travel through their eighth month without a doctor's note. As women approach their due date, airlines will often require some type medical certification that the passenger is fit to fly.

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