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Katy Noone

Katy Amy & Eileen

Fundraising for Nottingham University Hospitals Charity
£550
raised of £1,000 target
by 26 supporters
Donations cannot currently be made to this page
Event: Color Obstacle Rush Derby West / Uttoxeter, on 13 July 2019

Story

Katy''s nephew, Amy and Eileen's little friend George Arthur Parkins, was born in September 2017. It was such an exciting time.

Very soon after being born the doctors realised something wasn’t right with George. He was coughing some horrible mucus up, and they took him away to check him over, after only half an hour of cuddles with his new mummy and daddy. He never came back to them. The doctors scanned and x-rayed him urgently.

They found George was born without a bottom hole, his bowel wasn’t fully formed, he had two holes in his heart and the main complication was his oesophagus did not meet his stomach. There was a gap. But it was also attached to his airway. This is very complex.

Tracheo-Oesophageal Fistula (TOF) and Oesophageal Atresia (OA) are rare congenital conditions of the oesophagus (food pipe) and/or trachea (airway) that affect one in every 3,500 babies.

At just six hours old he was transferred by ambulance to Nottingham’s QMC hospital from Derby. It was 50/50 whether he would survive the journey.

Ritchie, Katy's brother in law, followed in the car. Sophie was too unwell after a horrific 36 hour labour, and had to stay at Derby. She was transferred the next day, and admitted as a patient for 10 days.

At 13 hours old George had major surgery which saved his life. He was in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit for a month. Sophie and Ritchie lived there in a parents room. They couldn’t hold him for five days which was heartbreaking for them. They stayed by his side from 8am often until 11pm/midnight. Katy got to visit on his one week birthday but couldn’t touch or hold him. We took Sophie and Ritchie to the pub down the road for a much needed beer and wine! George had another few operations whilst in NICU, but went home just before his one month birthday.

George had a stoma created, known as his ‘tum bum’, as the bottom hole couldn’t be made in that initial operation as he was so fragile. He went home with a feeding tube in his nose which went straight to his tummy. George was fed through this for a few months.

They were trained in CPR, stoma care and the feeding whilst in NICU, but as there wasn’t a special room, it was done in staff rooms, on the unit, and in any spare room.

After a week at home, George deteriorated very quickly. To summarise a horrific situation, George was ventilated and sedated for two days before an emergency tracheostomy operation was performed at QMC. His airway had shrunk to the size of a pin head. If they hadn’t taken him in that Sunday evening to A&E he would have died.

Sophie and Ritchie again didn’t leave his side and it took a while to adjust to the situation and how their lives had changed so dramatically. They lived at QMC for 11 days and were trained in tracheostomy changes which have to be done every few days, and suctioning, which can be as much as every few minutes. They also learnt CPR for a baby with a trachy.

George needs 24/7 care so my sister extended her maternity leave to care for him, and is still off at present.

They were told the trachy would be in for 2-5 years which was a daunting prospect. However, after visiting Great Ormond Street Hospital, the amazing surgeon said he would perform the surgery when he was one. He had to be operated on just after his first birthday. 

In the last 17 months George has had 23 operations. Many were dilatations of his oesophagus - in effect, stretching it as the repair site shrinks when healing. They were weekly, then fortnightly, and now he hasn’t needed one for months. George also had a bottom hole made last year, and his bowel brought down. A few months later they reversed his stoma, and the tum bum has gone! All his little wonky bits, as we fondly call them, are being fixed one by one.

He is a hungry baby and really loves his food and milk. Weaning is going well, but they take things slowly and steady so as not to rush George.

The trachy reversal and reconstruction of his airway was a huge operation, and it was a scary time. But Super George has overcome everything amazingly. His two holes in his heart are closing on their own! 

George has been through so many scary ordeals, and been admitted to QMC’s Paediatric Intensive Care a number of times with bronchiolitis, and other viruses of his airway.

Sophie and Ritchie are trying to raise £25,000 to fund a parents education room; a nice, warm, welcoming environment for parents of babies with complex issues to learn how to care for their baby. Including trachy care, CPR, stoma training and feeding, amongst some of the things.

He is known as Super George for obvious reasons, and we want to help raise £1,000 towards this room. The room is to be named after him, and will be a lasting legacy at the hospital.

More information about Super George’s Army Fundraising Appeal is available at Justgiving.com/teams/SuperGeorgeArmy. On Facebook you can visit Super George’s Army Fundraising Appeal page, and on Twitter, follow @SuperGeorgeArmy.

Please dig deep and help us to say thank you to the hospital for saving George’s life.
Thank you for your support,
Katy Amy & Eileen
xxx

About the charity

Nottingham Hospitals Charity enhances patient care at Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust’s Queen’s Medical Centre & City Hospital. Donations help provide added extras such as improved facilities, equipment, research & staff development.Our website is www.nottinghamhospitalscharity.org.uk

Donation summary

Total raised
£550.00
+ £122.50 Gift Aid
Online donations
£550.00
Offline donations
£0.00

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