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Womans discomfort dismissed as pregnancy symptoms until she collapses; Doctors describe what happen
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They both should have died...but they didn't. Doctors described it as a miracle. - photo by Wendy Jessen
Joy and excitement usually surround pregnancy and births of brand new babies into families. But pregnancies and births aren't always smooth; some come with risks and scary medical situations.

Brittany Forrest was seven months pregnant when she began experiencing pain in her shoulder, exhaustion and shortness of breath - all of which were dismissed as pregnancy symptoms, according to BBC News.

Not just pregnancy symptoms

But when she passed out in the emergency room near her home, she was flown to another hospital over 100 miles away and admitted into the cardiac intensive care unit. The cardiologist diagnosed her with myocarditis, "a disease marked by inflammation and damage of the heart muscle," according to Myocarditis Foundation.

Myocarditis is usually caused by "viral infections, autoimmune diseases, environmental toxins, and adverse reactions to medications" - not pregnancy.

It was a medical emergency

Forrest was now weak and needed medication to keep her heart pumping and supplying the placenta with blood for the baby. Her obstetrician wanted to avoid induction because of the extra stress it would put on Forrest and her heart.

An emergency C-section was ordered when Forrest went into cardiac arrest - her heart had stopped beating. Her doctor performed the C-section while a team of about two dozen doctors used CPR and a ECMO bypass machine to keep her heart pumping blood.

It could have been worse

Forrest didn't see her baby, Jaxon, until he was twelve days old. While Forrest was recovering from her cardiac arrest, Jaxon spent his time in the neonatal ward. She doesn't remember giving birth or much from the several days before her heart attack. "I was still trying to process what had happened to me, and then I was going to see a baby that I didn't even know," she told BBC.

Forrest was released from the hospital, but Jaxon remains under special care until he can go home to his family.

Though things could have turned out much worse, her doctors agree it was a miracle that both Jaxon and Forrest have little permanent damage.

A true miracle

Miracles happen in times when, logically, the opposite should have occurred. Merriam-Webster's dictionary defines a miracle as "an extraordinary event manifesting divine intervention in human affairs."

We may not know why a miracle happens, but they are surely events that we should note and remember. Jaxon and Forrest will be forever grateful for their miracle.
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From the book 'Outliers' comes proof that good health is more than just genetics
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Friends Jim Young, left, Mike Natale, Jeff Natale and Ryan Kiernan were on Greenwich High School football team together and Jim and Mike were captains. Jim, who was the youngest in Sherry Young's family, was welcome in the homes of the other three boys who still had siblings around and grandparents near. - photo by Sherry Young
As I look back on my life and the lives of others, both personally and in the reading I have done, I am convinced of the necessity of positive human contact in our lives. We are doubly blessed when we are able to make good friends or are a part of a family where we are accepted and loved.

Malcolm Gladwell in his book Outliers tells of a time in the 1950s when Dr. Stewart Wolf met a physician who practiced in the area of Roseto, Pennsylvania. Roseto was settled by a group of Italian families from Roseto, Italy, who re-created their life again in America.

This was in the 1950s before drugs and measures to prevent heart disease became important. In their conversation the physician said, You know, Ive been practicing for 17 years. I get patients from all over, and I rarely find anyone from Roseto under the age of 65 with heart disease.

Wolf was surprised by these words as, It was impossible to be a doctor, common sense said, and not see heart disease.

Wolf enlisted the aid of a sociologist and friend John Bruhn to help him. They found, There was no suicide, no alcoholism, no drug addiction, and very little crime. They didnt have anyone on welfare. Then we looked at peptic ulcers. They didnt have any of those either. These people were dying of old age. Thats it.

They checked into diet, genetics and possibilities of something in the foothills of eastern Pennsylvania but nothing made sense.

What they found was that Rosetans visited one another, stopping to chat in Italian on the street, say, or cooking for one another in their backyards. (Researchers) learned about the extended family clans that underlay the towns social structure. They saw how many homes had three generations living under one roof and how much respect grandparents commanded. They went to Mass at Our Lady of Mount Carmel and saw the unifying and calming effect of the church. They counted 22 separate civic organizations in a town of just under 2,000 people. They picked up on the particular egalitarian ethos of the community, which discouraged the wealthy from flaunting their success and helped the unsuccessful obscure their failures.

What they found eventually convinced the medical establishment to look beyond the individual and understand the culture people are part of their friends, families and town they came from. They determined that the people we surround ourselves with and the values of the world we inhabit have a profound effect on who we are.

Likely, this study could have been done with other ethnicities. However, my family's experiences with the Italian families in Connecticut ring true to the study. Our hungry and growing sons, especially our youngest son, Jim, who was left home alone with two beady-eyed parents, all had some memorable experiences being fed and loved in the Cos Cob multigenerational families. Proof of the African proverb, It takes a village to raise a child.

We live in an age when the contact we have with people often is on the internet, and many of us live among strangers. Unless we make the effort to reach out, we will become isolated, especially as we age. The Rosetan study is proof that reaching out and communicating may be good for our health.
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