Liz

This was Liz’s first pregnancy age 36. After heavy bleeding Liz went into labour at 20 weeks. Her twin babies were born showing no signs of life. She has gone on to have two daughters, now aged 1 and 2 ¬¨¬®≈í¬© years.

Liz had had a history of fertility problems and so was delighted to discover the treatment had been successful and she was pregnant. However, an early scan showed that she was carrying quadruplets. She and her husband had discussions with her consultant who advised them about the risks to mother and babies of a quadruplet pregnancy, and they took the decision to reduce their pregnancy to twins.

The pregnancy continued well, but at 17 weeks Liz developed a high temperature. The GP based at her work was concerned and sent her to the local hospital for some checks. They ran lots of tests, but could not find a cause for her fever. In the end she was kept in hospital for two weeks while they tried to bring her temperature down. Liz was finally discharged home on a Friday. She had started bleeding lightly just before she left hospital and the nurse told her to keep an eye on things. But the next morning, she woke up bleeding heavily and was rushed back to hospital in an ambulance. Because it was a weekend, there was no one available to scan her properly until the Monday morning and she had an anxious weekend worrying whether her babies were still OK.

Liz continued to bleed and on Monday morning the scan showed that she had lost a lot of amniotic fluid. She didn’t immediately realise that this meant there was a very high chance that she would miscarry her babies and feels, looking back on events, that the doctors were not as straight with her as she would have liked. She gave birth to her twins, a boy and a girl, in the early hours of Tuesday morning when they were 20 weeks old. The staff were very kind and supportive and she was visited by the chaplain. She stayed in hospital for another day as she recovered physically, and emotionally started to come to terms with what had happened. One of the midwives was particularly kind, and offered to bring the babies for Liz and her husband to see them. They took pictures and are incredibly pleased that they saw their babies, as it helped them start to come to terms with their loss. Photographs that they took have also been helpful.

The hospital arranged a funeral which was attended by close family. They also had a full post-mortem. This was particularly important for Liz after all her fertility problems. The results showed that there was nothing wrong with babies, which was a relief. But they did show that Liz had a very rare virus, Q fever, which could have been the cause of her high temperature. But at least there was nothing wrong genetically with the babies. Liz took 6 weeks off work, spending a lot of time with her parents, talking and being looked after by her mother. But she soon felt that getting back to work would help her recovery too. A few months later, Liz felt strong enough to go back to the fertility doctor to ask about more treatment. She got pregnant quickly and had her first daughter 18 months after she lost her twins. She now has two daughters, aged 1 and 2 ¬Ω years at the time of the interview.

Liz had decided not to have a funeral but changed her mind and was really pleased she had an opportunity to say goodbye.

Age at interview 40

Gender Female

Liz asked her close friend to bring her new born baby to visit her to help her try and get used to being around other babies.

Age at interview 40

Gender Female

Liz opted for a post-mortem to help check whether anything went wrong that she was unaware of at the time.

Age at interview 40

Gender Female

Liz said she needed an extra night in hospital before she was emotionally strong enough to leave without her baby in her arms.

Age at interview 40

Gender Female