Perinatal Impact Story – Little Lungs

Perinatal Impact Story – For the Love of Little Lungs

August 2016 

Pacific Blue Cross presented a cheque for $10,000 to the Kelowna General Hospital Foundation recently to support the purchase of a very special piece of equipment, one that will help keep babies safer and allow medical staff and loved ones to breathe a little easier.The donation, presented by Pacific Blue Cross Health Foundation board member Christine Johnson, represents the organization’s commitment to supporting the health care needs of British Columbians across the province.

The funds will be directed towards the purchase of a new digital imaging plate for Kelowna General Hospital’s Neo-Natal Intensive Care Unit (NICU).  This state-of-the-art piece of equipment fits in an incubator and allows the medical care team to instantly view a baby’s lung development, a critical indicator of a premature infant’s vitality.  Without this plate, an x-ray can take up fifteen minutes to process, a long wait for a fragile newborn facing respiratory distress.

“We are thrilled to be able to support the recovery of these tiny babies in a meaningful way,” says Johnson, who toured the unit last week.  “As a mother, I know how helpless it feels when your baby is sick.  Our hope is that this equipment will provide for a safer environment for premature babies, and increased peace of mind for their parents and families.”

For many babies and their families, the Neo-Natal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) becomes a home-away-from-home as premature newborns stabilize and become strong enough to be discharged.  The NICU at Kelowna General Hospital provides care for acutely ill and premature infants born as young as 30 weeks. This could mean ten or more weeks surrounded by medical staff and beeping machines.  No matter how you look at it, it is a difficult time for these tiny babies and their families.

The lungs are one of the last organs to develop in utero, so babies born early are at high risk of developing breathing problems.  As a result, most x-rays in the unit are done for those babies in respiratory distress.

“The image quality is superior, the x-ray dosage is lower for our sensitive preemies, the wireless design is less intrusive and more hygienic.  Most importantly though, it’s fast,” notes Bonnie Wilkie, NICU Nurse Educator of the many advantages of the digital imaging plate.  “Having timely answers on an infant’s lung development allows us to make those critical, life-saving decisions even more effectively.”

The NICU at KGH is part of our newly expanded Perinatal unit, which opened March 6, 2016 on the 4th floor of the new Interior Heart and Surgical Centre.  The NICU provides care for acutely ill and premature infants born as young as 30 weeks.

Perinatal Unit

Each year more than 1,600 babies are born at KGH with increasing numbers being born pre-term.  The new NICU at KGH opened its doors to the community in March 2016 and with it, the most advanced perinatal unit in the Southern Interior region.  The level 2B NICU can accommodate premature infants born as early as 30-weeks.  The KGH Foundation’s Giving Giggles campaign set out to raise $3million to equip the unit with the most advanced, state of the art equipment and patient care items in the country. Thanks to the extraordinary generosity of donors and the community, the campaign closed in 2017.

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