1 in 10 babies in Australia are born premature, and 15% of all babies will need some form of extra care at birth. Â
Today on Life & Faith, we venture into a place that will be unfamiliar to many – but all too familiar to some: the neonatal intensive care unit, or NICU. Dr Annie Janvier is a neonatologist (she takes care of sick babies); she’s also a researcher and ethicist, thinking about difficult decisions doctors have to make, and trying to understand the perspective and experience of parents in the NICU. Â
And 17 years ago, she also became the mother of an extremely premature daughter. Violette was born at 24 weeks – and her mother discovered that knowing how a respirator works did not help her to be the mum of a baby on a respirator. Â
Annie shares some of the emotions that arise from being a parent in NICU; and some of the questions that arise – about life, death, disability, and meaning – for people in this situation. And we have a bonus story for you here too: Andy Crouch describes the short, vulnerable, but deeply significant life of his niece Angela. Â
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Explore: Â
Annie’s book Breathe, Baby, Breathe! Neonatal Intensive Care, Prematurity, and Complicated PregnanciesÂ
Andy’s book Strong and Weak: Embracing a Life of Love, Risk and True FlourishingÂ