Even full-term infants sometimes need the NICU
There werenât supposed to be any surprises the day Brandon Ridgeway was born. He was supposed to be a full-term infant delivered via a scheduled Caesarean section, just a week before his due date.
His mom and dad, Mindy and Brad, knew they were having a son and knew the drill, since they had Brandonâs big sister delivered via C-section a couple of years earlier.
âWe had no idea anything was wrong until he was born,â Mindy says. âAnd then as soon as he came out we instantly knew something was wrong. He was gasping. It just wasnât normal.â
Despite being considered full-term by the calendar and weighing 7 pounds, 2 ounces, Brandonâs lungs werenât fully developed when he was born at a hospital in Silverdale. His pediatrician quickly determined that if little Brandon were to survive, he needed more intensive facilities than the Silverdale hospital could provide.
âI just remember them saying they werenât equipped to handle this kind of issue,â Brad says.
A specially outfitted ambulance with a full crew was dispatched from MultiCare Tacoma General Hospitalâs level IV neonatal intensive care unit (NICU).
âI didnât get to see him at all,â Mindy says. âWe begged the ambulance crew to let me say goodbye to him. They wheeled him in for a second on his way to the ambulance.â
Recovering from her surgery, Mindy could not go with, but she ordered Brad to follow the ambulance. The drive was a blur.
Soon after Brad arrived at Tacoma General, a nurse brought him in to see Bran.
âBy then he had tubes and wires everywhere,â Brad says. âThat was a shock.â
The sheer scope of the NICU was overwhelming, he recalls.
âSo I sat down in a chair and was staring at him forever,â Brad says. âI know one of the nurses was talking to me, but I wasnât sure what she was saying until she handed me Bran and let me hold him.â
Over the next few days, while his wife remained hospitalized in Silverdale and his 2-year-old daughter and 10-year-old son were with grandparents, Brad felt torn.
âI had no idea where I should be,â he says. âBut I knew I needed to be with him because he had no one. I was the only one there for Bran.â
Meanwhile, Mindy wasnât just depending on Brad for updates.
âThe day he got to Tacoma General a nurse called me on my cell phone,â Mindy says. âShe totally went out of her way to call and update me and make me feel better. I wish I had her name so I could thank her. Throughout my stay at the hospital she called me every day. She didnât have to. She just did it because sheâs awesome.â
On the fourth night of her hospitalization, Mindy was able to convince a doctor to release her and she was finally able to see Bran again. Like Brad, she was shocked by the feeding tubes, a respirator and many wires and monitors attached to the newborn â but grateful they were keeping him alive.
Bran remained in the NICU for close to a month while his lungs developed. Nurses also worked with Brad and Mindy to assure them Brandon was going to be OK in their care at home.
âThey let us give him his first bath at least a couple weeks in,â Brad says.
At the time, Brad was afraid to even touch his son. But the nurse was insistent that he be the one to give Bran a bath, and heâs grateful.
âI remember looking at the nurse and saying, âAre you sure you donât want to do this?â She said, âHeâs your third. You got this.ââ
Still, when the time came to remove all the monitors and take him home, Brad and Mindy were worried.
âI knew the doctors were fantastic and they said he was good enough to go but I was just terrified to take him home,â Mindy recalls. âI wanted to, I was excited to, but I was so afraid he would stop breathing. I was terrified to go to sleep.â
Today, Bran is a healthy, active 10-year-old who plays on a MultiCare-sponsored soccer team. His parents appreciate seeing MultiCare emblazoned on his uniform.
âHeâs alive because of Tacoma General,â Mindy says. âWeâre very thankful.â
The cause of Branâs underdeveloped lungs is still a mystery, she adds.
âUnless the doctors were wrong on how far along I was,â Mindy says. âThey just werenât developed, and nobody was expecting that.â
Itâs a surprise that has her recommending Tacoma General to expectant mothers today.
âThis girl I work with was pregnant and she was trying to figure out where to have her baby,â Mindy says. âShe was looking for places that had more luxurious rooms with bigger TVs. I said, âThatâs not what you want. You want Tacoma General because if something goes wrong, thatâs where you want to be.ââ
What's next
- Learn more about MultiCare Tacoma General Hospital and Mary Bridge Children’s Level IV NICU
- Donate to Tacoma General and Mary Bridge Children’s NICU