Never Bet a Dollar on a Horse Called Eternity (Millard example)
Posted: Sun May 21, 2023 2:25 pm
Bonnie, May 16, 1977, 12:14 PM EDT, Whiting, ME
Died June 8, 1977, 7 PM EDT, Portland, ME
Dr. Millard gave the birth coordinates as 44N44, 67W19, which is somewhat outside of Whiting. It's either an error or more exacting coordinates of someone born in deep woods. I've used Whiting in my calculations. [NOTE later: Lyse tracked down this birth information to Casco, Maine, but the coordinates are quite a bit off: 44N00, 70W31. I'm recording this here, but will continue to use Whiting, matching the coordinates Millard gave.]
Died June 8, 1977, 7 PM EDT, Portland, ME
Dr. Millard gave the birth coordinates as 44N44, 67W19, which is somewhat outside of Whiting. It's either an error or more exacting coordinates of someone born in deep woods. I've used Whiting in my calculations. [NOTE later: Lyse tracked down this birth information to Casco, Maine, but the coordinates are quite a bit off: 44N00, 70W31. I'm recording this here, but will continue to use Whiting, matching the coordinates Millard gave.]
Dr. Millard wrote:Bonnie was born prematurely in the north of Maine and weighed only eight hundred and fifty grams [30 oz.]. She was at once transported about two hundred miles by helicopter to the nearest intensive care unit in Portland, where she arrived looking very vigorous, considering she was so premature. She was placed in an incubator with 30% oxygen, and put under the bilirubin lights. After twenty-four hours, she was breathing room air, and all seemed to be well.
It is important to give nourishment to these small babies as early as possible, in order to avoid brain damage from low blood sugar. Since their stomachs are too small and underdeveloped to tolerate anything by mouth, routine intravenous feeding is used...
Bonnie began to vomit on the third day, and for the next four days, she was bringing up bile-stained fluid. X-rays showed no obstruction in the digestive tract, and there was no blood in the stools. Although all the cultures taken from her skin, stomach and umbilical cord were sterile, she was given a five day course of antibiotics. By the eighth day, she was much better, and could take feeding by mouth... Everything went well, and she became able to tolerate larger and larger amounts without vomiting.
An error in management was then made. On her sixteenth day of life, the formula was changed... with twenty-four calories per ounce instead of only twenty... The abdomen became distended, and bloody fluid could be withdrawn from her stomach. X-rays showed that her intestines had perforated.
...it was downhill all the way. She was given [various treatments] and finally taken to the operating room where a colostomy was carried out. She went into shock, had renal shut-down, and died four days after the operation. The diagnosis: necrotizing enterocolitis. The national incidence is 3-4% of admissions to neonatal intensive care units, and the mortality is around 38% It is a disease of intestinal and gastric dysfunction.