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Erem Ali, 29, was 31 weeks pregnant when she was hospitalized in Guilford after a coronavirus infection and difficulty breathing, writes the British Metro.co.uk
She said she was more afraid of her baby in the womb as she could not feel it moving.
After a few days in the hospital, Erem’s condition worsened and the doctors put him in a ventilator and unconscious, to bring the baby to life through an emergency cesarean section.
She was later transferred to St Thomas’ Hospital, London due to complications of the disease.
Her baby Zorayz Ali, now eight months old, was born in February last year, weighing almost 2 kg.
‘I do not remember anything about the birth,’ Erem later says. ‘I just remember waking up three or four weeks later and being told I had sailed a baby.’
And in fact after three weeks Erem was awake from the coma, but still had to struggle to breathe, while suffering from other deficiencies caused by the disease.
For nearly five weeks she failed to see her baby, who was being held in another hospital.
Consequently Erem started eating, talking and walking again, and miraculously recovered from the hospital after a month and a half.
Erem from the southeastern British region of Surrey, says: “When I woke up and the doctors told me I had given birth to a baby I was very confused. I did not remember any surgery or birth. “I was still barely breathing and I was not allowed to see the baby.”
“When I saw him for the first time in a month I was liberated, I am sorry I lost the first part of his life.”
“It was also difficult for my husband Junaid not to come to see me or be there for the birth.”
Five weeks after Zorayz was born she could finally hold him in her arms.
“It was a very special moment, but also difficult to see for the first time. “It did not look like it had just come out of the womb but it was small and premature.”
“He moved a lot and opened his eyes. “It was incredible.”
The young mother has already returned home with her family, husband, Junaid, 31, and other children – Ariya, 5, and Zakaryia, 2 – and fortunately in good health.
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