Iraqi baby arrives in US for medical treatment
Posted on: Saturday, 31 December 2005, 17:54 CST
By Karen Jacobs
ATLANTA (Reuters) - An Iraqi baby with a life-threatening birth defect arrived in the United States on Saturday for medical treatment after being sent by U.S. soldiers who found her during a raid on her family's home.
The baby, 3-month-old Noor, was taken by ambulance to Children's Healthcare of Atlanta, a pediatric hospital that is donating surgery and other care for the infant, after flying into Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport.
Noor was born with spina bifida, a birth defect in which the spinal column fails to completely close, leaving part of the spinal cord exposed and susceptible to life-threatening infection. She has a large growth on her back.
Roger Hudgins, the hospital's chief of neurosurgery, said the baby would stay at the hospital overnight for a general evaluation of her condition.
"It's going to take a number of days (to evaluate) if things are stable," Hudgins said at a news conference at the airport. "This child is coming from a foreign country so we need to make sure that she's healthy and capable of withstanding surgery."
He said surgery to close the back of child's spinal column was tentatively scheduled to take place in about a week, but added that doctors could operate sooner if examinations uncover complications.
Hudgins said although the surgery would be a "significant undertaking," he thought Noor's chances of survival were good. The surgery to close the spinal column would take three hours, he added. If successful, the baby could likely return home in one or two months.
Noor, wearing an orange suit and carried by her grandmother, arrived to cheers at the airport. The baby's father also traveled to Atlanta.
Her path to the United States began earlier this month when soldiers with the Georgia Army National Guard's 48th Brigade Combat Team searched her family's home in a poor Baghdad neighborhood, looking for insurgents.
They found none, but the baby's grandmother showed the soldiers the purple pouch protruding from the child's back and the soldiers sought help in finding her treatment.
Without intervention, Noor would have died, Hudgins said.
On Friday, the infant and her relatives were flown by the U.S. military to Kuwait, where they boarded a commercial flight to the United States.
Childspring International, a children's medical charity, helped set up the trip and arranged for Noor and her relatives to stay with an Arabic-speaking family while the infant undergoes medical treatment in Atlanta.
Source: REUTERS
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