‘Raised From Dead’ Baby Now Five Years Old And Doing Fine!

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Remember the story five years back of David and Kate Ogg, whose baby Jamie was born prematurely and was pronounced dead by doctors?

Well, thanks to the quick and intuitive thinking of his parents, Jamie is alive today and celebrating his fifth birthday with his twin sister Emily.

After being born at 26 weeks, Emily let out a wail but Jamie was silent and not breathing. After working on him for 20 minutes, doctors said he was dead and went to take him away. But Kate and David stopped him and demanded that they hand over Jamie’s lifeless little body to them.

Kate cuddled Jamie to her chest and David took off his shirt, climbed onto the hospital bed and snuggled up close.

Within minutes, little Jamie gasped and started breathing. Back from the brink of death and all thanks to the power of touch!

Kate says: “I know it sounds stupid, but if he was still gasping there was still a sign of life so I wasn’t going to give up easily.  We were trying to entice him to stay. We explained his name and that he had a twin that he had to look out for and how hard we tried to have him. He suddenly gasped… then he opened his eyes. He was breathing and grabbing Dave’s finger. If we had let the doctor walk out of the room with him, Jamie would have been dead.”

The Daily Mail reports:

First-time parents Kate and David Ogg were heartbroken when they were told one of their twins – born two minutes apart at just 26 weeks – had stopped breathing and had just moments to live.

Thinking it was the only time they would have with the tiny boy they had already decided to name Jamie, Kate asked to be able to hold the lifeless child, and told David to climb into the hospital bed for a tender embrace.

What happened next was nothing short of a miracle.

Five years on, Jamie Ogg is a healthy, happy kid whose biggest problem regarding his troubled entry in the world is having a little brother who tells anyone who’ll listen that he used to be dead but now he’s alive.

After years of trying to fall pregnant, the Queensland couple were delighted to find out they were having twins – the ‘pigeon pair’ of a boy and girl.
But just six months into the pregnancy they found themselves in the delivery room and facing premature births…

Jamie was born first on March 25, 2010 and his sister Emily followed two minutes later.
‘They were both born in their sac but Jamie didn’t make a noise when they tore it open. Emily let out a big wail,’ Ms Ogg told Daily Mail Australia.
‘We looked over and everyone was crowding around Jamie – there was about 20 people in the room. The vibe wasn’t very good. He stopped breathing and his heartbeat was nearly gone. After 20 minutes they stopped working on him.’

The doctor sat on the end of Ms Ogg’s hospital bed and asked the couple if they had a name picked out. He then informed them that Jamie had tragically passed away.

‘I saw him gasp but the doctor said it was no use. I took Jamie off the doctor, asked everyone to leave. He was cold and I just wanted him to be warm,’ she said. ‘We had tried for years to have kids and I felt so guilty. I just wanted to cuddle him. I unwrapped him and ordered my husband to take his shirt off and climb into the bed. I know it sounds stupid, but if he was still gasping there was still a sign of life so I wasn’t going to give up easily. We were trying to entice him to stay. We explained his name and that he had a twin that he had to look out for and how hard we tried to have him. He suddenly gasped… then he opened his eyes. He was breathing and grabbing Dave’s finger. If we had let the doctor walk out of the room with him, Jamie would have been dead.’

‘Emily burst into tears, she was really upset and she kept hugging Jamie,’ Ms Ogg said.
‘They love to talk about when they were babies. They have a little brother Charlie who loves telling anyone who listens. He’ll say: “When I was born I was fat and the twins were skinny. Jamie was also dead but now he is alive”.’

Remarkably, Jamie has not encountered one medical problem in the five years since his birth.
‘He is absolutely fine… the biggest concern they had was cerebral palsy because of the lack of oxygen but there’s been nothing,’ Ms Ogg said.

The Ogg family have set up an online community called Jamie’s Gift to regularly raise funds for the Miracle Babies Foundation – an organisation that supports premature and sick newborns. ‘It’s absolutely astounding. This whole experience makes you cherish them more.’

Dave is currently training for an Ironman triathlon in Port Macquarie in May to raise funds.
‘He will put his body through a gruelling 3.8km swim, 180km bike and a marathon,’ Ms Ogg said.
For details on how to donate, visit Jamie’s Gift on Facebook.

 

 

Jacqui Deevoy

Jacqui Deevoy

My love of fashion and music led me - several decades ago - into working for some of Britain’s top-selling magazines, specialising in news, reviews, fiction, features, astrology and quizzes.

These days, as a journalist, writer and editor I write a wide variety of features, frivolous and serious. I work mainly for women's magazines and national newspapers and also enjoy writing for independent news outlets and websites - the sort that publish stories the mainstream media fail to report.

Email: jacqui.deevoy@gmail.com
Jacqui Deevoy

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