Nurse Creates Keepsakes For Families of Stillborn Babies
Laurie Van Damme makes slide shows for families grieving stillborn babies. Here, she stands in a hospital storage room containing clothes for the babies. [BRIAN CASSELLA | Times]
Catherine E. Shoichet / St. Petersburg Times
August 22, 2008
Pastel colors cover the walls. Babies gurgle and cry. Parents coo and cradle them for the first time. Lives begin in the labor and delivery unit at Brandon Regional Hospital. • But in a storage room down the hall, it is quiet. There are bins stuffed with bonnets and booties, plastic bottles with “Holy Water” labels, doll clothes in pale shades of pink and blue. • This is where Laurie Van Damme goes when a baby dies. • Today the baby has a name. He is 15 ounces and 10½ inches. He died after 20 weeks in his mother’s womb. Today he will wear blue. He will lie beside a blanket. He will hold a rattle in his hand. • The beeping of Van Damme’s digital camera will be the only sound in the room.
Thirty years ago, people spoke of stillborn babies in hushed tones. Parents never saw their bodies.
“There was a general consensus that this was kind of a nonevent. Let’s get you busy having another baby. That’s the best way to deal with this,” says Dr. Kenneth Kellner, a professor of maternal-fetal medicine at the University of Florida. “The way we were taking care of moms was not what moms wanted.”
In a study, Kellner and a group of researchers surveyed parents of stillborn children.
Their reactions differed, but there was a common thread: They wanted to choose how to grieve, and they wanted to remember what they lost. More than 90 percent of mothers wanted to see their stillborn babies.
Gradually, as more research emerged, hospitals began to change their approach. Polaroid pictures became common.
As coordinator of Brandon Regional’s perinatal bereavement program, Van Damme took things a step further.
The labor and delivery nurse started following up with parents of stillborn babies after they left the hospital.
She asked the other nurses to call her whenever a baby died. She came in even if she wasn’t scheduled to work.
And last year, she began making video slide shows of stillborn babies and their families.
Some parents declined when she offered them the option. But she took a few photos anyway and kept them on file.
“One week, three weeks, five weeks later, almost every single patient calls and asks for them,” she says. “They need it for closure.”
• • •
Eddie and Donna Barker bristled when Van Damme suggested the idea after the death of their baby, Brandon.
“We really didn’t want to hold the baby and do all of that,” Donna Barker recalls. "She said, ‘Are you sure? Once this time is gone, you can’t get it back.’ "
Eventually, they changed their minds. Now Donna Barker keeps the DVD in a box in the bedroom of her Valrico home, with sonogram pictures, a baby blanket and a hospital bracelet.
“We’re very grateful that she was persistent,” she says. “We would have missed out on holding our baby.”
• • •
Van Damme tapes a bright white sheet to the wall of an empty hospital room.
She wears gloves and uses sterile cloths to clean the baby’s body, then weighs and measures him.
She helps his limp legs into blue doll clothes and lays him on a blanket. Then she turns on her camera.
Beep-beep. An image is captured.
She moves his arm slightly, so it touches his cheek.
Beep-beep.
She places a baby rattle in his right hand.
Beep-beep.
She takes off her gloves, gently lifts him off the table and heads toward his mother’s room.
• • •
Van Damme has taught other nurses at Brandon Regional how to make videos. Now she’s promoting the program beyond the hospital.
On her Web site, www.healinghearts media.com, hospitals can order the software she uses and see examples of her work.
“I really think it has the potential to catapult hospitals into a new era of bereavement care,” she says.
Images flash as a somber piano tune plays.
A father holds his daughter’s hand. A little boy kisses his sister’s forehead. A baby wears pink knitted booties with bows on them.
Italic white text pops out against a black backdrop: “There is no foot too small that it cannot leave an imprint in this world.”
In April, Hospital Corporation of America, the company that owns Brandon Regional, gave Van Damme its national humanitarian award for her work.
She presented the program at a recent conference for labor and delivery nurses in California and hosted training sessions for other nurses and doctors at Brandon Regional, emphasizing that families of stillborn babies need to grieve as much as parents who have lost a child at any age.
“I wanted them to understand the pain involved. There are really no words. The pain is so deep,” Van Damme says. “These moms have all of that same love, but they don’t have any of the memories to comfort them in that time of sorrow.”
• • •
In a hospital bed, a mother holds her baby for the first time.
Beep-beep.
She brushes her fingers across a lifeless face.
Beep-beep.
She cradles his tiny body in the crook of her left arm.
With her right arm, she gives Van Damme a hug.
© YellowBrix 2008
Kristinaveale
about 1 year ago
56 comments
This is a great idea! I have not yet had any children but I have known many people who have had a still born child. They all have trouble grieving. I think this is very helpful and will help various people in their grieving process! Way to go girl! It is nice to know that there are still people out there who think about others before themselves, just like you!
DaMomb
about 1 year ago
1234 comments
NILMDTS (Now I Lay Me Down To Sleep) a national and international foundation made of volunteer photographers doing this too. Newborn bereavement is healthy, and this is a beautiful way to always keep your child here on this earth with you. This woman and all of the others like her are angels from heaven! God Bless you all.
vmay569
about 1 year ago
2 comments
She's an angel from heaven.
nursesourcer
about 1 year ago
110 comments
Proud to read about one of our RNs efforts here on NL!
hwall
about 1 year ago
2 comments
Wow...It's about time. My niece had a still born child. How nice it would have been to have had something like this offered to her.
teddybear
about 1 year ago
2 comments
I too cried when I read this, I agree , more hospitals need this implimented if not just for the closure the famlies would get but also so that they dont miss out on the child that they lost laurie my hats off too you, wish you had been there 27 yrs ago when I lost my baby not one day goes by i dont think of him keep shating your work
coop79
about 1 year ago
26 comments
i cried when i read this, i think that more hospitals need this implimented if not just for the closure that the famlies would get but also like the article said so that they dont miss out on the child that they lost.
John1957
about 1 year ago
4 comments
My daughter and her husband lost their first daughter in an out-of-state hospital and family was not at her side when she was stillborn. She brought her ashes home to her two sons and only has a darkened photo taken from a distance of their daughter. Photos weren't made available to them at that time and your services would have been a blessing for our family. We do have a faded imprint of her tiny feet, the only memory left of her now. Bless you for your humanity and gifts of love.
AprilO3
about 1 year ago
4 comments
This is a very heart-felt thought of care and willingness to help the families that have to go through this. Your heart has traces of Jesus in it.The things you are doing are a "GREAT" way to help people start the healing prosess. God Bless You...
72sylvia
about 1 year ago
10 comments
Wow I'm crying this hit me like a brick. I lost 4 babies and wish I had something from them .You are an angel for real.One of my babies was bent in half and put into a contaner right in front of me and fourteen years later I still have nightmares about it. I wish my nurse was more like you . You are a nurse because god made you to be one .Thank You for thinking of the parents it has to be the worst thing anyone could go through a lost of a child ,alot of people say well it's only a baby but what they don't know is it could be one of there loved one's going through it.Over all the anger
and hurt because I lost one boy then two girls and one that I didn't know the sex of was wicked.
I even had two of my girl's in the same room just a year a part .I was so mad at the hospital for putting me in that room.Well the second girl was thirty weeks she is my angel.She has CP .I did something alot of people thought was weired I gave her,her sister's name .
MAMADAWN
about 1 year ago
3722 comments
Wow, that is too cool. I am so glad to know there is a nurse out there with such a big heart! I had a good friend whose baby died several hours after it was born. she never held it, and she regretted it for the rest of her life. I wonder if she even got a picture of her baby?
ladybugbow
about 1 year ago
18 comments
great idea.
AbusyRN2go
about 1 year ago
12114 comments
This is a good idea, I used to take a photo of the baby for the parents and cut a little piece of hair if there was any and even if the mom could not look at it now, I sealed it in envalope and encourage them to take home, one day I said this may be important to you and once the buriel has taken place you cannot go back.
dianakaye
about 1 year ago
4 comments
God Bless this little blonde angel with the invisible wings. I am a R.N. and worked for a period of time as a night Superviser and a young woman came into the ED at full term but bleeding profusely. She was young (18) had had a fight with her boyfriend and drove herself to the hospital instead of calling 911. Although I was extremely impressed by our staff in that they had her in surgery and that baby out in just under 8 minutes, it was for nought as the little girl died. I've never been witness to something so devastatingly sad in my life, but that mom and dad held thier daughter and dressed her and kept her in the room long enough for family to see her and take pictures. What a heartbreakingly wonderful idea, to have those pictures and not act as if she never existed. Again, God Bless her!
basiajune
about 1 year ago
104 comments
This is so great that this is being done. You need those pictures and that moment of memories for holding your child for a few minutes. It will be your last time! These mothers went through the pregnancy and delivered so they have a bind with their child. I also agree that it will help mothers after a stillbirth! I am glad that this lady (Laurie) had become a nurse. She seems very caring for her patients. With all the stories of Nurses neglecting patients it is good to hear and proof that there are nurses that actually care and love their career to help people!!!