Travel   |   Contact us   |    Advertise your business      

Kids Friendly

Home

www.kidsfriendlynz.com

Click here to visit our new family travel website

          Home is the heart of the family
Home Recipes  Products for you and your child Children's Furniture Eco-friendly Outdoors

Our Story about a deadly disease

 

Look at those two little monkeys, full of mischief! Isn't it funny how things look from the outside and how funny it isn't always what you see?

Meningitis and Meningococcal B have played a large part in our families lives. There are three stories here to tell, mine and my two boys, Andrew and James. I suffered viral meningitis and Andrew and James Meningococcal B. 

 

The thing is we don't fit people's normal view of those people that get the disease. We aren't Maori or Pacific Islanders. We don't live in over crowd housing. We have good health and we lived in Ponsonby, Auckland, so why us? I can't answer that question other than to say we were unlucky.

But what I can tell you is our stories. Our hope with sharing with you our stories, is that it may save someone life some day. 

Two very special boys        -       Andrew and James (Their Story)

I love my two little monkeys, they make me laugh and they make me cry. Andrew turned five in June 2005 and James turned six some ten days later. Besides being the same age for around ten days each year, they have another common bond, Meningcoccal B.

This horrible disease nearly took Andrew from us. And over the last four and a half years we have worked our way through it legacy.

The boy's story starts back in December 2004, when Andrew was just six months old and James 17 months old. We had sold our house in Ponsonby and were due to move up to Snells Beach in a few days. With the movers due in a couple of days, Paul and I decided that my parents could look after Andrew and James while we did the shift. That would only leave us with Matthew and Sophia and the moving to worry about. 

The day before the furniture movers came we got a ring in the afternoon. It was my mother who was in Starship Hospital with Andrew. We were told Andrew was in the Intensive Care Unit and fighting for his life. What happened in the previous four hours was to saved our son's life.

Four hours earlier my mother was worried about Andrew, he just wasn't well. So she took him to her local GP, Dr Miller of Whangamata Medical Centre. Dr Miller couldn't see anything that was making him sick, but because Whangamata is some two and a half hours from Auckland, thought it was best to have him sent to Starship Children Hospital for observation overnight. It took my parents half-an-hour to pack a bag and be on their way to Auckland. An hour and a half had passed. Andrew showed no physical signs of meningitis at this stage. Over the next two and a half hours of the drive Andrew's crying grew quieter until finally it stopped. In that short space of time, Andrew had become unconscious, with the deadly blood clotting spots consuming his little body. He would spend the next 48 hours fighting for his life. 

Andrew did win his battle with little physical evidence of how close he came to dying. Besides a slight hearing loss and some minor development delays he has little to show for his fight. 

Now it would be enough for any parents to watch one child fight for their life, but within a few days we got another call, James was on the Westpac Rescue Helicopter with suspected meningococcal disease. James had caught the disease, we believe, because he had picked up Andrew's baby bottle and drunk from it. I remember sitting in isolation with my two babies. One, Andrew sleeping peacefully, the black spots still covering his body. The other James, trying to tear the hair from his head because of the horrible headache. His body so sore, I could not hold him to comfort him. What makes it worst is I knew how much pain he was in, and I could do nothing to help him.

Today James is doing well, although there have been some development delays, he like Andrew, has little to show for his ordeal. But for me, each day is a blessing and I do love my little monkeys so much!

 

 

My Story - Gaye Miller

Eight years ago, when I had only two children; Matthew aged 19 months and Sophia aged 12 weeks, I got the flu! Will that is what I was told at the Accident and Emergency Clinic. I was told to go home and take some Panadol! I should add here that we went to the A & E clinic because my husband, Paul thought I had the symptoms of Meningitis. At the time I had a stiff neck, hot and cold sweats and flu like symptoms. So back home we went.

Early the next evening I decided to not to go out for a farewell dinner with our friend Joe, as the 'flu' was still hanging around and I really wasn't feeling very well. So I sent Paul and Joe off and stayed at home curled up on the couch. The thing with meningitis when it finally hits you, it can hit very fast. In my case I had sent Paul and Joe off and within an hour, I was ready to call for an ambulance. My eyes had become sensitive to light and I had one mean headache. I remember ring the same Accident and Emergency Clinic, only to be told this time I must have a migraine! 

The meningitis headache is something else. Now bear in mind I had had two babies, one only twelve weeks ago, so the pain of childbirth was still very much still in my mind. The meningitis headache was like someone had taken a carving knife, stuck it in my head and was slowly, painfully moving its sharp blade around my skull. I couldn't cry, the slightest sob made me nearly blackout due to the intense pain. Somehow in that hour, I must have rang Paul, because he turn up at home. While he stay home with our two babies, Joe (Who was flying out at 5 am the following morning!) took me too the Accident and Emergency. This time they said it might be meningitis and told him to take me to the hospital. 

From here I don't remember much. I know that I asked Joe to turn the lights off in the hospital cubicle because my eyes hurt like hell. This meant that for an hour we were left because they thought that the cubicle was empty! The last thing I remember for two days is telling Joe that I was scared, something is terribly wrong. From there Joe did the rest and I woke up in isolation, diagnosed with viral meningitis.

Recovery took a year, with my niece Sarah coming to live with our family to help me with Matthew and Sophia. I have no memory of my engagement to Paul and the first ten years of my life. Even now I look at some family photo's and movies and they are someone else life. Even though they have me in them, I do not recall a thing about them. Some of my memories are those of other people, mine are lost!

 

 

Articles Links About Us Privacy Policy

Kids Friendly New Zealand Limited                PO Box 93, Matakana 0948 , New Zealand           Copyright 2002-2009