5-year-old Audrey was born with her lungs connected to her stomach and an incomplete esophagus (Long Gap EA/TEF or Esophageal Atresia). After two big surgeries and 142 days in the NICU in Utah, Audrey finally moved home but has since needed much more surgery, now in Boston. Much of her food still comes through a tube directly into her stomach, and she has had many procedures to help her swallow food, but she is thriving today. Thank you for blessing us with your love and prayers.
Flutter By
Saturday, January 12, 2013
Hospital Curtains
When you've spent a lot of time in a hospital, and particularly if you care about art, you start to notice certain details. Some of you might remember my photo of the curtain fabric from the Primary Children's Hospital mother's room last year, and the laugh I had over that design choice. Well, here's a pic of the Boston Children's Hospital curtains in the PACU, Post Anesthesia Care Unit, where Audrey and I have spent many many hours after her procedures, in a room with many patients recovering from surgery, in little areas separated only by these curtains. Look closely. Do you see what I see? :) I thought it was a clever design as industrial fabrics go in a children's hospital.
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