It was at the height of the global pandemic that my wife, Lana and I were told that we were having a little baby girl – and that our little girl would be born with spina bifida.
I wasn’t there when Lana was told the news due to the government restrictions, I was in the park with my son, Dylan, when I got the call from the sonographer. All I heard was ‘abnormalities on the brain and spine’. Ever since then it has been an emotional rollercoaster having to deal with the uncertainty around our daughter and the worry about the pandemic.
It was planned that Jasmine would be born at Addenbrooke’s Hospital in Cambridge so that she could have a major operation at just a few days old. The hospital is one of a few that can perform this specialist surgery and is about a two hour drive from our home in Norwich.
I didn’t think it was too far a drive, but with COVID I was unsure about what would happen and worried that every day she was in hospital I would be driving back and forth to spend time with her and Lana.
Jasmine has a form of spina bifida known asmyelomeningocele, which means when she was born the neural tissue was exposed on her back because her neural tube had failed to close. The tissue looked like a sac on the base of the spine. Jasmine’s was the size of a cricket ball.
When she was born, we held our breath as we waited to hear her cry. When she did she was given oxygen and taken to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU).
Over the next couple of days, I could only see Lana for short periods of time and waited for news about Jasmine. The restrictions made it really hard for us at times. English is Lana’s second language and when I couldn’t be there at the meetings with doctors, things were missed.
Not only that, but the doctors have to give you the full picture and for Jasmine it was grim. It was so important for us to find a way to be together. Even on the day of her surgery, I couldn’t be there. For three hours I had to distract myself.
After a few days of spending hours waiting by vending machines, and wandering around Cambridge Lana was about to be discharged from hospital. This is when we were told about The Sick Children’s Trust’s ‘Home from Home’ Chestnut House. We were handed keys to a place that both of us could stay and be together while Jasmine recovered from her operation.