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Mother, newborn son survive harrowing home birth

Mother, newborn son survive harrowing home birth
NOW. A MOTHER AND NEWBORN BABY ARE RECOVERING TONIGHT AFTER A TERRIFYING BIRTH STORY. IT’S AN ISSUE KMBC NINE INVESTIGATES HAS BEEN DIGGING INTO FOR MORE THAN A YEAR LONG WAIT TIMES. WHEN YOU CALL 911. GOOD EVENING. I’M LARA MORITZ AND I’M KRIS KETZ. MOM AND BABY ARE OKAY, BUT THEY FACE A LONG RECOVERY. WE BEGIN WITH KMBC NINE S ANDY ALCOCK WITH HOW THIS HAPPENED IN THAT TIME WE CALLED 911 THREE TIMES AND WE WERE PUT ON HOLD EACH TIME. DEVIN BROWN RECALLS THE NEAR-DEATH EXPERIENCE OF GIVING BIRTH TO HER SON, WELLS. WHAT WAS I GOING TO TELL WELLS STORY, BABY? AFTER A DIFFICULT HOSPITAL BIRTH FOR HER DAUGHTER, OLIVE, DEVIN DECIDED TO GIVE BIRTH TO WELLS AT HOME WITH A MIDWIFE. SHE NEARLY BLED TO DEATH. I THOUGHT TO MYSELF, I’M NOT GOING TO MAKE IT. AND HOPEFULLY MY SON DOES AND MY HUSBAND CAN RAISE THEM. UNABLE TO REACH KCMO 911, DEVIN, SISTER CALLED THEIR FATHER IN OVERLAND PARK. HE CALLED 911 THERE AND HELP ARRIVED, BUT WELLS WAS NOT BREATHING. IT WASN’T UNTIL I GOT TO THE HOSPITAL AND THE PARAMEDICS OPENED THE DOORS AND SAID, HE HAS A HEARTBEAT. THAT I KNEW HE WAS AT LEAST THERE. OUR LIVES ARE FOREVER CHANGED, RIGHT? EVEN IF THIS GOES AS WELL AS WE HOPE IT, IT DOES JUST THE FEELING OF OF HELPLESSNESS. IT’S HARD SHARING MY TIME BETWEEN THE NICU AND THIS LITTLE GIRL. FOLLOWING THE TRAUMATIC INCIDENT, THE FRONT STEPS IN FRONT OF THE HOME WERE CLEANED WITH BLEACH WHILE THE FAMILY WAS AT THE HOSPITAL, FRIENDS CAME AND COVERED THE BLEACH MARKS WITH CHALK TO COME HOME AND SEE THE RAINBOW DRIPS. INSTEAD OF A BIG BLEACH MARK WAS. WE’VE BEEN CALLING THEM GLIMMERS LITTLE THINGS EACH DAY THAT WE CAN HOLD ON TO THAT BRING US JOY. THE WHOLE FAMILY HAS BEEN ABLE TO HOLD WELLS, TO TOUCH HIM, TO SHOW THEIR LOVE FOR HIM, AND HE’S IMPROVING. BUT THE PERMANENT DAMAGE HE MAY HAVE SUFFERED WHILE WAITING FOR HELP IS NOT YET KNOWN. AND HE’S JOINING US NOW, AND WE ARE GLAD TO HEAR THAT EVERYONE IS IMPROVING. BUT THIS IS ALL TOO COMMON IN KANSAS CITY, LAURA. IT DEFINITELY HAS BEEN. AND AS YOU MENTIONED, WE’VE BEEN REPORTING ON IT FOR MORE THAN A YEAR. SO WE PULLED THE NUMBERS TO TAKE A LOOK AT WHERE WE’RE AT. THE AVERAGE WAIT TIME IN AUGUST WHEN SOMEONE CALLS 911 WAS 33 SECONDS ON THE DAY WELLS WAS BORN, AUGUST 31ST, THE AVERAGE WAIT TIME WAS LONGER 51 SECONDS. THE LONGEST WAIT THAT DAY, ONE HOUR AND 29 MINUTES AND 20S. NOW THE BROWN FAMILY’S HEART WRENCHING STORY HAS CAUGHT THE ATTENTION OF KANSAS CITY MAYOR QUINTON LUCAS AND THIS STORY IS FAR FROM OVER. THAT IS, FOR SURE, BECAUSE THE MAYOR PLANS TO BRING THIS UP TOMORROW AT THE BOARD OF POLICE COMM
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Mother, newborn son survive harrowing home birth
A mother says she and her newborn son are lucky to be alive after helpers were unable to reach 911 in Kansas City, Missouri, for emergency help.After a difficult birth with her daughter Olive in the hospital, resulting in her first six days in the neonatal intensive care unit, Devin Brown decided to give birth to her son, Wells Brown, at home with the help of a midwife.That childbirth in the early morning of Saturday, Aug. 31, became an emergency when Devin was heavily bleeding, and Wells was born not breathing.“We called 911 three times, and we were put on hold each time,” Devin said.Desperate for help, the mother's husband, Chris Brown, suggested her sister call her dad in Overland Park. He called 911 there.After 17 minutes, help arrived.Devin Brown and her newborn son, with both of their lives in peril, were rushed to Overland Park Regional Medical Center.“I got up while bleeding and my umbilical cord hanging out of me and walked out of our house and got onto a stretcher, and they took me and, I don't feel like I was in my body at that point,” Devin said. “I was in shock, and we didn't know if he was alive. It wasn't until I got to the hospital and the paramedics opened the doors and said he has a heartbeat, that I knew he was at least there.”But Wells Brown still had long odds to survive.He was undergoing therapy to keep his body cold and sedated to help his recovery.Wells had seizures and was given a second medication one night.“I didn't know if he was going to live through that night, or if he was going to be able to even have somewhat of a healthy and normal life. I got on my knees, and I just started praying, please, please protect my son, protect his brain,” Devin Brown said. “I can't go through this life losing my son. I don't know how I'll live or how I’ll be a good mom to Olive if we lose our son.”Sister station KMBC has been following the issue of long Kansas City 911 wait times for more than a year.It includes the case of Johnathan Scaletty, who, as KMBC reports, was beaten up outside Arrowhead Stadium before a concert. According to the newest numbers from the Mid-America Regional Council, the average wait time for a 911 caller in August was 33 seconds.On the day Wells was born, Saturday, Aug. 31, the average wait time was 51 seconds.The longest wait time that day was one hour, 29 minutes, and 20 seconds.“Our lives are forever changed, right? Even if this goes as well as we hope it does, just the feeling of helplessness and watching your wife next to you, knowing she's not okay,” Chris Brown said. “Your son laying on the floor and just pleading with everything and anyone. Being that close, I don't ever want anyone to have to experience that.”Chris and Devin Brown say their infant son is recovering.He’s being fed with a tube through his nose. The next step forward would be for him to eat with his mouth.It’s unclear at this point what permanent brain damage Wells may have suffered.“Just the idea it's 2024 and 911 is unreliable. It's just, insane,” Chris Brown said.A Meal Train has been set up to help support the Brown family as this ordeal is ongoing. This incident caught the attention of Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas, whose own mother had to wait for help due to a delayed 911 call response. Lucas plans to address this issue at the Board of Police Commissioners meeting on Tuesday.

A mother says she and her newborn son are lucky to be alive after helpers were unable to reach 911 in Kansas City, Missouri, for emergency help.

After a difficult birth with her daughter Olive in the hospital, resulting in her first six days in the neonatal intensive care unit, Devin Brown decided to give birth to her son, Wells Brown, at home with the help of a midwife.

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That childbirth in the early morning of Saturday, Aug. 31, became an emergency when Devin was heavily bleeding, and Wells was born not breathing.

“We called 911 three times, and we were put on hold each time,” Devin said.

Desperate for help, the mother's husband, Chris Brown, suggested her sister call her dad in Overland Park. He called 911 there.

After 17 minutes, help arrived.

Devin Brown and her newborn son, with both of their lives in peril, were rushed to Overland Park Regional Medical Center.

“I got up while bleeding and my umbilical cord hanging out of me and walked out of our house and got onto a stretcher, and they took me and, I don't feel like I was in my body at that point,” Devin said. “I was in shock, and we didn't know if he was alive. It wasn't until I got to the hospital and the paramedics opened the doors and said he has a heartbeat, that I knew he was at least there.”

But Wells Brown still had long odds to survive.

He was undergoing therapy to keep his body cold and sedated to help his recovery.

Wells had seizures and was given a second medication one night.

“I didn't know if he was going to live through that night, or if he was going to be able to even have somewhat of a healthy and normal life. I got on my knees, and I just started praying, please, please protect my son, protect his brain,” Devin Brown said. “I can't go through this life losing my son. I don't know how I'll live or how I’ll be a good mom to Olive if we lose our son.”

Sister station KMBC has been following the issue of long Kansas City 911 wait times for more than a year.

It includes the case of Johnathan Scaletty, who, as KMBC reports, was beaten up outside Arrowhead Stadium before a concert.

According to the newest numbers from the Mid-America Regional Council, the average wait time for a 911 caller in August was 33 seconds.

On the day Wells was born, Saturday, Aug. 31, the average wait time was 51 seconds.

The longest wait time that day was one hour, 29 minutes, and 20 seconds.

“Our lives are forever changed, right? Even if this goes as well as we hope it does, just the feeling of helplessness and watching your wife next to you, knowing she's not okay,” Chris Brown said. “Your son laying on the floor and just pleading with everything and anyone. Being that close, I don't ever want anyone to have to experience that.”

Chris and Devin Brown say their infant son is recovering.

He’s being fed with a tube through his nose. The next step forward would be for him to eat with his mouth.

It’s unclear at this point what permanent brain damage Wells may have suffered.

“Just the idea it's 2024 and 911 is unreliable. It's just, insane,” Chris Brown said.

A Meal Train has been set up to help support the Brown family as this ordeal is ongoing.

This incident caught the attention of Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas, whose own mother had to wait for help due to a delayed 911 call response.

Lucas plans to address this issue at the Board of Police Commissioners meeting on Tuesday.