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Managing Group B Strep
Get Tested to Protect Your Newborn
By Cecelia Cancellaro
Dawn Fox of Mount Juliet, Tenn., had a 3-month-old daughter when she became pregnant again at the age of 26. Her second pregnancy, like her first, was uneventful and without complication. When she went into labor, during her 39th week, all of that changed.
Fox was running a high fever and her baby began to show signs of distress. An emergency C-section was performed and soon after the delivery, it became clear that her baby girl, Ellison, was sick. She was immediately transported to the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) of a nearby hospital where tests revealed that she was infected with the Group B streptococcus bacteria and suffering from sepsis (a blood infection) and pneumonia. "We were told that our daughter was 'in grave condition,'" says Fox. "That phrase haunts me to this day."
GBS is the most common cause of life-threatening infections in newborns, including sepsis and meningitis, as well as the frequent cause of newborn pneumonia. In pregnant women, GBS can cause bladder infections, womb infections and stillbirth. CDC figures suggest that one out of every 20 babies with GBS disease will die from the infection and those that survive may experience a host of long-term problems.
After Ellison's birth, Fox was horrified to learn that simple screening and prevention measures existed that could have prevented her daughter's severe illness. "I knew nothing about GBS at the time," she says. "My doctor never said a word to me because I wasn't considered high-risk. My daughter endured weeks of intrusive treatment while we waited and wondered if we were going to lose her. She is now a healthy and happy 5-year-old, and for that we are grateful, but it has taken me a very long time to come to terms with what happened and to get over the anger associated with the experience."
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