BԪַ

Skip to content

Family finds strong sense of community at BC ChildrenBԪַs Hospital

BC ChildrenBԪַs Hospital Dream Lottery has now sold out
22485705_web1_082120-BPD-CHILDRENS_HOSPITAL-Eveylyn-Kim_1

A B.C. mom and her family are extremely grateful to the doctors and nurses at BC ChildrenBԪַs Hospital who helped her young daughter to overcome severe complications from her premature birth.

Laesa Kim told Black Press Media on Friday (Aug. 21) that her four-year-old girl, Evelyn, was born at the hospital two months prematurely, weighing less than 3.5 pounds. On top of being underweight, doctors found that baby Evelyn had a congenital heart defect and a condition called Pierre Robin Sequence, which causes anomalies in babiesBԪַ facial features.

Laesa and her husband, James, came to rely on ChildrenBԪַs staff right away, splitting their time between the hospital and their home in Surrey while Eveyln recovered from jaw surgery doctors hoped would allow her to breathe on her own. But EveylnBԪַs tiny jaw was set so far back in her throat that she had to undergo a tracheotomy that left her with a breathing tube below her vocal chords.

Eveyln had open-heart surgery at the hospital shortly before her first birthday.

SheBԪַs now a happy and healthy pre-schooler who watches Peppa Pig and loves the swings at her neighbourhood park, where Laesa said she plays with her seven-year-old brother, Noah. Evelyn canBԪַt speak over her breathing tube, so she and her mom have learned to communicate using sign language.

Through it all, Laesa said she and James have drawn on a strong sense of community among ChildrenBԪַs staff, a bond that grew deeper after a hospital upgrade allowed for parents to stay overnight. She recalled walking into EveylnBԪַs hospital room on a Saturday morning to find their daughter and her nurses having BԪַa dance partyBԪַ set to R&B playing from a stereo plugged into the wall.

Eveyln has been looked after by her pediatrician outside ChildrenBԪַs since the COVID pandemic took hold in March, but the Kims expect that sheBԪַll be able to resume treatment at the hospital in the fall.

The BC ChildrenBԪַs Hospital Dream Lottery is an annual fundraising lottery with proceeds going to fund the hospital. There are eight grand prizes up for grabs, each of which is worth over $2 million.

Tickets are sold out, but the winners will be announced on Nov. 10 on the .


Is there more to this story?


laurie.tritschler@grandforksgazette.ca

Like us on and follow us on





(or

BԪַ

) document.head.appendChild(flippScript); window.flippxp = window.flippxp || {run: []}; window.flippxp.run.push(function() { window.flippxp.registerSlot("#flipp-ux-slot-ssdaw212", "Black Press Media Standard", 1281409, [312035]); }); }