EDITOR/NEWSAUTHOR:MR.WANGBERK KINGHENRYBLAKE PACYS
1 min read
18 Jan
18Jan



By the time the 13-year-old arrived at the main children’s hospital in Vancouver, Canada, in early November, a bird flu infection had robbed her ability to breathe. Pneumonia shrouded her left lung. Her kidneys were failing, her blood platelets plummeting.




Within four days, the previously healthy teen, whose initial symptoms were pink eye and a low-grade fever, had deteriorated so dramatically that doctors at BC Children’s Hospital had to deploy a battery of medical interventions to save her life. She was put on a mechanical ventilator to help her breathe.






 When that wasn’t enough, medical teams turned to a last-resort treatment, and for 17 days, kept the adolescent alive with machines that forced air into and out of her lungs and oxygenated her blood externally to give her lungs a chance to heal.





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