Coronavirus: Four-week-old Portsmouth baby recovering from confirmed case of Covid-19
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The 28-year-old work coach, who asked not to be named in The News, noticed her baby girl had developed the symptoms of a suspected cold on Friday, March 20 - but her condition worsened on March 22, leading to a hospital visit.
Now, thanks to support of NHS staff, the baby is due to make a full recovery.
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Hide AdHer mother said: ‘She’s got blocked sinuses and a nasty head cold… but otherwise she’s likely to be recovered by Sunday (March 29).
‘We've got nasal spray and a nose sucker to get out any excess mucus.
‘I can’t thank QA, and their wonderful staff, enough. The NHS is truly a godsend.’
The Portsmouth-based mother has told how the ordeal happened.
She said: ‘(On March 20) she started to get a bit snuffly.
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Hide Ad‘Come Sunday we took her up to (Queen Alexandra Hospital) because she had got to the point where she had really become quite laboured with her breathing.
‘And the doctors (thought) it’s probably bronchiolitis.
'They took a swab and said “it's quite unlikely it's the virus, but we just want to be sure”.’
But less than 90 minutes after they returned from the hospital, the now five-week-old took a 'horrific' turn for the worse in the early hours of the morning of March 23.
The mother said: ‘As I was feeding her her lips went blue, her eyes rolled back in her head, and she went limp.
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Hide Ad‘I have experienced some pretty bad horrors in my life, but nothing has ever come close to this.
‘It's been horrific.’
Paramedics took the infant back to QA, where doctors discovered the baby had choked on her feed – because she was so congested due to her infection.
She was sent home and her family received a phone call on March 24 to reveal the swab had tested positive for Covid-19.
But the possibility of being caught up in a global pandemic had been far from the mind of the first-time mum when she gave birth on Sunday, February 23.
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Hide AdShe said: ‘There had been four reported cases (in Portsmouth) by that point.
‘My focus was on having a baby.
‘We took her home and were being very careful, following the guidance to the letter.
‘But she was fine - she was a very happy, healthy baby. That was how she started off.’
The family have no idea when the newborn contracted the potentially fatal virus.
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Hide AdHer mum said: ‘I asked the doctor if it’s anything I have done, but there’s no way to know.
‘I had to go out for essentials the other day and I couldn’t leave her on her own, but I made sure she was protected. I stayed away from people as much as humanely possible.
‘People need to be extremely careful.'
According to the latest figures from Public Health England, within the Portsmouth area there are 64 cases of the infectious disease, which has killed a total of 31 people at QA hospital. There have been 41 diagnoses in Southampton, according to the data as of March 28.