As if having a baby in the NICU weren't hard enough, parents of twins
and multiples get a double (or triple or quadruple) dose of stress when
the babies are separated.
Often times, one baby is ready to go home
from the NICU before another. Not only is this a joyous yet intensely
painful experience, but it's also a logistical nightmare. Here are tips
for coping when one twin or multiple goes home from the NICU first.
Prepare Yourself for the NICU Separation
If you have twins or multiples in the NICU,
be prepared for the idea that the babies will not all go home at the
same time. A NICU staff might not even think to warn you at first. The
fact is, two and especially three or more babies are unique. The odds
that they will progress on the exact same timeline are pretty slim.
Although it might seem to parents to make sense to keep the twins or
multiples together, there are many reasons not to. While some NICU
nurses and doctors might fudge it a little if the babies are pretty
close together by sending one home just a hair later than normal and
one a hair earlier, two babies cannot be in the NICU if only one should
be.
Insurance companies often call NICUs daily and seek a justification
for each NICU baby's daily stay. Parents also will have a big NICU
bill, even with insurance coverage. The daily expense of keeping a baby
in the NICU is astronomical.
Discuss the NICU Separation with Your Spouse and NICU Staff
The more you prepare for the possibility, the easier it will be.
Talk about what you will do for the first baby's homecoming, and how
you will continue to maintain regular visits to the baby or babies who
remain in the NICU.
Ask the staff beforehand to give you a few days' warning when they
anticipate a baby might go home so you can brace yourself. Get a
special gift for the NICU baby or babies who will remain, or even place
a picture of the homebound baby in the NICU baby's isolette.
Expect the NICU Separation to be Tough
It is an extremely bittersweet and painful to go home with just one
baby. On the one hand, you should have the ability to be overjoyed, but
that is overshadowed by the baby you leave behind. Don't be surprised
if you bawl when you leave that baby behind.
On some ways, having multiples in the NICU is reassuring. At least
the baby is not in the NICU alone. You may not even realize you have
that reassurance until you walk out with your NICU baby's NICU buddy.
Get Help at Home!
Once you get that baby home, that's when things really get sticky.
Most NICUs will not allow babies into the NICU because of the potential
of spreading germs and disease. So now you have two or more babies, but
you aren't even allowed to bring them together.
The double impact comes when pediatricians tend to recommend NICU
babies who were just sent home not leave the house except for doctor's
appointments, so you can't even bring the newborn to the hospital
waiting room to take turns visiting the NICU-bound baby.
That means someone has to watch one baby for you to see the other
twin or multiple. If you don't have help nearby, that means only one
parent can go to the hospital at one time.
Bottom line, this means you will both be run ragged and you will
suddenly have to see your NICU baby less just as you are coping with
guilt over leaving the NICU baby behind.
Give Yourself a Break
Even if you went to visit your NICU twins or multiples for every
feeding before, you just need to accept you can't do that now. You are
caring for a newborn at home and tethered to a hospital to see another
newborn.
Sometimes, you will need to just call to check on the status of your
baby instead of visiting. This is really hard, but don't let any NICU
nurse make you feel even guiltier about this. If they do, ask them why
they don't make it easier for parents of multiples to stay over at the
hospital.
Moms who are nursing and pumping milk for the NICU-bound baby will
be especially exhausted. Remind yourself how much you are doing just to
get through this NICU stay, and rest at any spare moment.
Yes, it is OK if you nap instead of going to the hospital just once!
Remember that a stressed mom doesn't produce as much breast milk!
And don't feel bad about feeling bad. Juggling a baby at home and a baby in the NICU is doubly hard.
I am continually amazed at how blessed we were when our twins were born. First, we didn't know I was carrying twins, so I didn't get proper twin pre-natal care, yes, I was seeing a doctor but that's a whole other thing. Second, they were only born 2 weeks early, which isn't premature by any standards. Third, because they weren't premies they didn't have to go to nicu, although they did have to stay after I left the hospital. But, they only stayed a week, and the hospital refused to release one without the other. I'm sure if it was for a longer period of time they would have. It would be nice if the babies could be moved from nicu to the regular nursery, so the parents could continue to visit both babies at the same time. It would be expensive, but not as much as keeping a baby in nicu, and it might help the parents.
NL http://roadtoscholarships.wordpress.com/