Heidi and Paul Jackson’s twin girls, Brielle and Kyrie were born October 17, 1995, 12 week ahead of their due date. Standard hospital practice is to place preemie twins in separate incubators of reduce the risk of infection. That was done for the Jackson girls in the neonatal intensive care unit at The Medical Center of Central Massachusetts in the eastern United States.
Kyrie, the larger sister at two pounds three ounces quickly began gaining weight and calmly sleeping her newborn days way. But Brielle, who weighed only two pounds at birth couldn’t keep up with her. She had breathing and heart-rate problems. The oxygen level in her blood was low, and her weight gain was slow.
Suddenly, on November 12, Brielle went into critical condition. She began gasping for breath and her face stick-thin arms and legs turned bluish-gray. Her heart rate was way up, and she got hiccups, a dangerous sign that her body was under stress. Her parents watched, terrified that she might die.
Nurse Gayle Kasparian tried everything she could think of to stabilize Brielle. She suctioned her breathing passages and turn up the oxygen flow to the incubator. Still Brielle squirmed and fussed as her oxygen intake plummeted and her rate soared.
Then Kasparian remembered something she had heard from a colleague. It was a procedure, common in parts of Europe but almost unheard of in America, that called for double-bedding multiple-birth babies, especially preemies.
Kasparian’s nurse manager, Susan Fitzback, was away at a conference, and the arrangement was unorthodox. But Kasparian decided to take the risk.
“Let me just try putting Brielle in with sister to see if that helps,” she said to the alarmed parents. “I don’t know what else to do.”
The Jackson quickly gave the go-ahead, and Kasparian slipped the squirming baby into the incubator holding the sister she hadn’t seen since birth. Then Kasparian and the Jackson watched.
No sooner had the door of the incubator closed then Brielle snuggled up to Kyrie and calmed right down. Within minutes Brielle’s blood-oxygen readings were the best they had been since she was born. And as she dozed, Kyrie wrapped her tiny arm around her smaller sibling.
By coincidence, the conference Fitzback was attending included a presentation on double-bedding. This is something I want to see happen at The Medical Center she though. But it might be hard making the change. On her return she was doing rounds when the nurse caring for the twins that morning said, “Sue, take a look in that isolate over there.”
“I can’t believe this,” Fitzback said. “This is so beautiful.”
“You Mean, we can do it?” asked the nurse.
“Of course we can,” Fitzback replied.
Today a handful of institutions around America are adopting double-bedding, which seems to reduce the number of hospital days. The practice is growing quickly, even though the first scientific studies on it didn’t begin until this past January.
But Heidi and Paul Jackson don’t need any studies to know that double-bedding, helped Brielle, She is thriving. In fact, now that two girls are home, they still sleep together and still snuggle.
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