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Woman whose twins died at 24 weeks tells how she left hospital without them on Mother’s Day

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Woman whose twins died at 24 weeks tells how she left hospital without them on Mother’s Day
News

News

Woman whose twins died at 24 weeks tells how she left hospital without them on Mother’s Day

2018-10-12 17:52 Last Updated At:17:52

Hannah Griffin has issued a heartbreaking plea for people to open up about baby loss, saying ‘I’m still a mum, ask me about my boys.’

Heartbroken when her twins died at 24 weeks and she left hospital without them on Mother’s Day, a woman is pleading with people to talk about her babies, saying: “I’m still a mum, ask me about my boys.”

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Hannah whilst pregnant (PA Real Life/Collect)

Hannah Griffin has issued a heartbreaking plea for people to open up about baby loss, saying ‘I’m still a mum, ask me about my boys.’

Hannah holding some memorial casts she had made (PA Real Life/Collect)

With Bowen deteriorating, Hannah and Matt, of Calne, Wiltshire, were offered laser surgery, but she said it was not an option they would consider, explaining: “The procedure was called laser ablation.

Despite an increasingly fraught pregnancy, Hannah and Matt held onto hope as best they could – until 9 March 2018, when she awoke feeling “empty.”

A memorial print of the boys' scan photo (PA Real Life/Collect)

But, rather than staying silent about her grief, she is keen to urge others to challenge people’s awkwardness around baby loss and overcome the stigma by talking about it.

Some memorial flowers for the twins (PA Real Life/Collect)

Hannah and Matt, who had been trying for a baby, were ecstatic to discover she was expecting in October last year.

The twins' initials carved into a tree (PA Real Life/Collect)

“It was then that we found out we were having twins. They looked like two perfect little Maltesers, flickering on the screen,” smiled Hannah. “Twins run in my family, so I’d had an inkling, but there was still that ,‘Oh my god’ moment.

She added: “On the other hand, though, regardless of how it ended, my pregnancy shouldn’t have been different to anyone else’s and announcing it to family and friends is the done thing now.”

Some poignant keepsakes made for the boys (PA Real Life/Collect)

Put under general anaesthetic, Hannah was quickly operated on, with doctors delivering Hartley as fast as they could.

Hannah is now speaking out to encourage others to open up about baby loss (PA Real Life/Collect)

She added: “When I came round, I got to see them both. They weighed just over 1lb each, but they were perfect.”

It was a dream come true for health visitor Hannah Griffin, 29, when those all-important blue lines appeared on a pregnancy test in October 2017 – followed by more good news, when she and her fiancé, landscaper Matt Carver, 37, discovered they were expecting twins.

But one baby, Bowen, was growing slower than his brother, Hartley, and, as they were sharing the same placenta, the blood flow between them became unbalanced.

Hannah whilst pregnant (PA Real Life/Collect)

Hannah whilst pregnant (PA Real Life/Collect)

With Bowen deteriorating, Hannah and Matt, of Calne, Wiltshire, were offered laser surgery, but she said it was not an option they would consider, explaining: “The procedure was called laser ablation.

“It would basically coagulate the vessels in the placenta to divide it into two, but where those vessels were in my case would mean Bowen only got about 30 per cent of it.

“We thought long and hard, but it would mean Bowen had barely any chance of survival. If anything happened to him, it could affect Hartley, too. We just couldn’t do that. Both our boys needed each other to survive.”

Hannah holding some memorial casts she had made (PA Real Life/Collect)

Hannah holding some memorial casts she had made (PA Real Life/Collect)

Despite an increasingly fraught pregnancy, Hannah and Matt held onto hope as best they could – until 9 March 2018, when she awoke feeling “empty.”

At Great Western Hospital in Swindon, Wiltshire, they were given the heartbreaking news that Bowen had died and, after Hartley was delivered minutes later by emergency caesarean, he, too, passed away.

In a cruel twist of fate, Hannah was discharged two days later on Mother’s Day – driving home with little memory boxes instead of her babies.

But, rather than staying silent about her grief, she is keen to urge others to challenge people’s awkwardness around baby loss and overcome the stigma by talking about it.

Speaking out during Baby Loss Awareness Week 2018, which runs from 9 to 15 October, she said: “Every step out of that hospital was agony, and we’re slowly falling across difficult dates, painful reminders and anniversaries. But our boys aren’t a bad memory in our lives. They are the light in our lives and I wanted their story to help others.”

“It’s horrid that people fear saying the wrong thing, but not mentioning my sons at all just furthers the stigma. I’m still a mum, even though they aren’t physically here, so please ask me about them.”

A memorial print of the boys' scan photo (PA Real Life/Collect)

A memorial print of the boys' scan photo (PA Real Life/Collect)

Hannah and Matt, who had been trying for a baby, were ecstatic to discover she was expecting in October last year.

At five weeks, though, she developed ongoing hyperemesis gravidarum – the same condition causing excessive sickness that has plagued Kate Middleton’s pregnancies.

Then, at six weeks, she had an emergency hospital scan after experiencing a worrying stabbing pain – the results of which brought a welcome surprise.

Some memorial flowers for the twins (PA Real Life/Collect)

Some memorial flowers for the twins (PA Real Life/Collect)

“It was then that we found out we were having twins. They looked like two perfect little Maltesers, flickering on the screen,” smiled Hannah. “Twins run in my family, so I’d had an inkling, but there was still that ,‘Oh my god’ moment.

“Suddenly, we had so much to think about, even silly little things, like how a double pram would fit through the doors at our house.”

Three weeks later, another scan revealed that the babies were identical monochorionic diamniotic (MCDA) twins, meaning they shared a placenta.

A trained nurse with experience working on a neonatal unit, Hannah knew that twins like hers carried the highest risk of twin-twin transfusion syndrome (TTSS), an imbalanced blood flow between babies, meaning her pregnancy would need to be closely monitored.

Still, after passing the 12-week mark, she felt comfortable enough to announce her happy news.

“We made the announcement over Christmas,” she said. “In a way, I regret it, as just two weeks later, the problems began. “I wish I’d held fire a bit, but it’s hard when you’re so excited to share your news. I already had a bump too, so it was hard to hide.”

The twins' initials carved into a tree (PA Real Life/Collect)

The twins' initials carved into a tree (PA Real Life/Collect)

She added: “On the other hand, though, regardless of how it ended, my pregnancy shouldn’t have been different to anyone else’s and announcing it to family and friends is the done thing now.”

The couple were still enjoying the flurry of congratulatory messages, when their 16-week scan showed a significant difference in size between the unborn boys.

Concern mounted when Hannah was referred to the more specialist fetal medicine unit at Oxford’s John Radcliffe Hospital, where a team of experts scanned her, measuring the twins to determine what was causing the disparity in growth.

That same day, they were diagnosed with Type III selective intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR), where the disproportionate distribution of placenta between twins results in poor growth and nourishment, as well as restricted blood flow for one.

“After that, we were scanned every two weeks. Matt, bless his heart, is a very positive person, and was determined that we’d bring both our boys home,” said Hannah. “But I was terrified. I didn’t want to go shopping for baby things, take many photos or any other normal pregnancy things.

“Both babies did continue to grow, but Bowen did so very slowly, so the difference between them was getting larger and larger. His heart was also three times the size it should have been.”

She continued: “He was deteriorating before our eyes, but we clung on to every bit of hope we could. I prayed that the babies would stay strong for us, forever looking out for signs that things would be okay.”

Eventually, doctors decided to book Hannah in for a caesarean section at 27 weeks, concluding that the twins had a better chance of survival outside the womb.

But, at 24 weeks, on March 9, she woke up feeling a worrying lack of movement in her bump.

“I can’t explain it, but I just felt hollow. Where they’d been kicking before, there was nothing,” she recalled.

“I knew right away something was wrong, so we raced to hospital and did a scan. Then they told us Bowen had passed away. There are no words to describe that moment – it’s just a blur.

“Hartley’s heart rate was really slow, too, so he needed to be delivered as soon as possible. I was still trying to process losing Bowen when, within minutes, I was gowned up in theatre. I just couldn’t take it in.”

Put under general anaesthetic, Hannah was quickly operated on, with doctors delivering Hartley as fast as they could.

Beforehand, she had agreed with them to work on him if he showed any signs of life – but to let him go peacefully if he did not. Tragically, though, he could not be saved.

“I was still under at that point, but I trusted doctors to make the right decision,” she said. “We didn’t want Hartley to die alone, so Matt came in and our boys were placed next to us both. Hartley stayed alive for around 15 minutes, before slowly slipping away. For his last few minutes of life, he was showered with love, next to his brother and parents.”

Some poignant keepsakes made for the boys (PA Real Life/Collect)

Some poignant keepsakes made for the boys (PA Real Life/Collect)

She added: “When I came round, I got to see them both. They weighed just over 1lb each, but they were perfect.”

For two days, the babies were kept preserved in special cooling cots, so that family could come and create memories and say their goodbyes.

Hannah added: “We wanted people to come and meet them, just like any other babies.”

Then, on 11 March – Mother’s Day – Hannah was allowed home from hospital.

As she grieved, she searched he internet for support, finding the charity Tamba – the Twin and Multiple Births Association – which has a bereavement group.

Now, she is sharing her story to thank Tamba for helping her in her hour of need, and hopes to encourage other mums to take her lead and use support networks.

Hannah is now speaking out to encourage others to open up about baby loss (PA Real Life/Collect)

Hannah is now speaking out to encourage others to open up about baby loss (PA Real Life/Collect)

She said: “I felt like I was the only one going through it, but I’m not. You don’t want anyone to feel this pain, but it is comforting to know people out there understand. I do believe more needs to be done in hospitals to let parents know about the support options they have, though, and that something for dads needs to be put in place. Right now, there’s nothing – but they’ve suffered a loss too.”

Tamba is the only UK-wide charity working to improve the lives of twins, triplets or more, and their families. Campaigning to improve health and developmental outcomes, it funds clinical research to reduce the risks faced before, during and after birth and by providing practical support for all families, including those in crisis.

Tamba has a Bereavement Support Group for parents who have lost one or more babies from a multiple birth. www.tamba.org.uk

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The Philadelphia Eagles selected Toledo cornerback Quinyon Mitchell with the No. 22 pick in the NFL draft on Thursday night.

Mitchell ran a 4.33-second 40-yard dash at the combine. The Eagles took a cornerback in the first round for the first time since 2002. The Eagles believe they have a shutdown cornerback who projects as an impact player with fellow cornerback Darius Slay in defensive coordinator Vic Fangio's scheme.

“I feel like right now, I'm with the right fit, I'm with the right organization with the right players, the right city,” Mitchell said.

Mitchell wasn't ready to declare himself a starter, saying he's “got some vets in front of me that I can really learn from.”

The pick was only the second big move of the night after they kept wide receiver A.J. Brown in the fold with a contract extension. The Eagles and Brown agreed to a three-year extension that includes $84 million in guaranteed money, according to a person familiar with the situation.

The person spoke Thursday to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the financial terms were not announced.

Brown is set to become the highest-paid wide receiver in the NFL at $32 million a season and he could earn as much as $96 million over the life of the extension.

Brown had 106 catches for 1,456 yards receiving last season after he had 88 catches for 1,496 yards in 2022 in his first season with the Eagles.

Eagles general manager Howie Roseman and the scouts have hit more often than they have missed in recent drafts — one reason the Eagles went to the Super Bowl in the 2022 season and followed with a 10-1 start last season before a late-season meltdown.

Jalen Hurts is already an all-time franchise steal, the second-round QB picked at No. 53 overall in 2020. DeVonta Smith, who signed an extension with $51 million in guaranteed money this week, is still a 2021 first-round bargain. Jordan Mailata went from an Australian ruby player to a seventh-round pick in 2018 to one of the best left tackles in the NFL. Defensive tackle Jalen Carter was the No. 9 pick last season and finished second in the voting for 2023 AP Defensive Rookie of the Year.

“We can't afford to get too cute,” Roseman said.

The Eagles also hold the 50th and 53rd overall picks in the second round. They have five other draft picks.

Roseman said he was “comfortable” the Eagles would get a player they wanted at 22, one reason why he didn't trade up in the draft.

“As long as we're in the same tier of grade in that round, we feel comfortable sitting,” he said. “If we get to a lower number, we try to move up.”

AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

Toledo cornerback Quinyon Mitchell walks on stage during the first round of the NFL football draft, Thursday, April 25, 2024, in Detroit. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

Toledo cornerback Quinyon Mitchell walks on stage during the first round of the NFL football draft, Thursday, April 25, 2024, in Detroit. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

Toledo cornerback Quinyon Mitchell walks on stage during the first round of the NFL football draft, Thursday, April 25, 2024, in Detroit. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

Toledo cornerback Quinyon Mitchell walks on stage during the first round of the NFL football draft, Thursday, April 25, 2024, in Detroit. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

Toledo cornerback Quinyon Mitchell walks on stage during the first round of the NFL football draft, Thursday, April 25, 2024, in Detroit. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

Toledo cornerback Quinyon Mitchell walks on stage during the first round of the NFL football draft, Thursday, April 25, 2024, in Detroit. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

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