After a two-month battle with COVID-19, 20-year-old Macenzee Keller from Manchester, NH, was able to meet her two-month old son, Zack, for the first time at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center (DHMC) in Lebanon on Feb. 3, 2022.
Days after being diagnosed with COVID-19 and shortly before her due date, Keller was rushed to Catholic Medical Center in Manchester, where she was put on a ventilator and her baby was born via cesarean section on Nov. 28, 2021. Unconscious and critically ill, Keller was transferred to DHMC before she was able to meet her baby.
โItโs a new experience, but Iโm excited to become a mom,โ Keller said after meeting her son for the first time. โHe was big!โ
For video of the Kellersโ reunion, click here.
Keller was not vaccinated against COVID-19 when she contracted the virus. She was planning to wait to get vaccinated until after she delivered, but after the ordeal she endured, she now wishes she had been, and wants to encourage others who havenโt been vaccinated yet to do so as soon as possible.
โNow Iโm definitely getting vaccinated,โ Keller said. โDefinitely get vaccinated. Being as sick as I was, was definitely scary, and I donโt want anybody to have to go through that.โ
At DHMC, Keller received lifesaving extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO), a highly specialized blood oxygenation treatment used on seriously ill patients, for 47 days.
โShe had a very extended course on the ECMO circuit, requiring a lot longer than weโve seen in the past,โ said nurse Ciaran Moloney, BSN, RN, a member of Kellerโs care team. โThere were times where we were wondering how or if she would be able to recover, but over the last few weeks, sheโs made an amazing recovery.โ
Kellerโs recovery and reunion with Zack has provided much needed positive news and inspiration for pandemic-weary DHMC providers and staff.
โIn the medical (intensive care unit), we have a lot of difficult and often tragic stories, and so when we get one like this, where someone has made such an amazing recovery and gets to meet their child for the first time, itโs a real special one for us, and one that really makes it easier to come into work the next day,โ Moloney said.
โNever give up hope,โ said Brandi Milliner, Kellerโs mother, who cared for baby Zack while her daughter was in the hospital. โMiracles happen every single day, and sheโs ours.โ
