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Preventing Spontaneous Preterm Birth - Oscar-and-Felix

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Story By Liz (Oscar and Felix's mum)



My first two pregnancies were full term, so when my husband, Phil, and I found out we were expecting fraternal twins, a twin pregnancy with the lowest risk, we had no reason to be concerned.  

It wasn’t until my 20-week scan that everything started to fall apart. The doctors found something terribly wrong with one of the boys, who we later named Oscar. His heart hadn’t formed properly, and he wouldn’t survive the pregnancy. At every scan, we had to watch Oscar slowly fade until he passed away at 27 weeks.

The pain was unbearable. The only thing that kept us going was knowing his brother, Felix, was healthy. 

I carried both boys until 33 weeks when I went into early labour. Felix came out crying, it was the most beautiful sound we had ever heard, especially after the heartbreaking silence of Oscar’s birth. His cries carried all the hope and dreams we never had the chance to imagine for Oscar. Though Felix weighed just 4lb 6oz, he was breathing on his own and feeding well. He was small but healthy.

On the left, an image of Oscar's feet shortly after he was born sleeping. On the right, Felix lying in an incubator
Left: Our precious Oscar, born sleeping. Right: Felix, our hope for a happier outcome

 

We thought we’d be bringing Felix home for Christmas, but then in a single night, our beautiful boy was stolen from us.