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    Providers and Polar Bears give 'life' to Iraqi baby boy

    Providers and Polar Bears Give 'life' to Iraqi Baby Boy

    Photo By Sgt. 1st Class Angela Mc Kinzie | Spc. Carrielynn Spillis (left), a medic with the 210th Brigade Support Battalion...... read more read more

    By Staff Sgt. Angela McKinzie
    2nd BCT, 10th Mtn. Div. (LI) Public Affairs

    YUSUFIYAH, Iraq — Soldiers recently received something they least expected – a baby.

    Soldiers from the 210th Brigade Support Battalion, "Providers," and the 4th Battalion, 31st Infantry Regiment, "Polar Bears"-both units of the 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division (Light Infantry)-took care of a sick Iraqi baby boy at the Patrol Base Yusufiyah aid station.

    "The baby's mother brought him to us because he was very sick," said Maj. Casey Geaney, a native of Portland, Ore., who serves as a battalion surgeon currently attached to the 4-31st.

    Knowing that the baby, Sajad, was very ill and that the Iraqi medical system did not have the capabilities to care for the infant, Geaney decided that Sajad would become an in-patient.

    "Usually, this is not an in-patient facility," Geaney explained. "However, after discovering the child had an infection, we did not want him to go home."

    Sajad, who was seven months of age, was only the size of a two-month-old. He was believed to have suffered brain injury during his birth.

    "Sajad was very dehydrated and sick when we first saw him," said Spc. Carrielynn Spillis, a 210th BSB medic and native of Toledo, Ohio, as she held him in her arms. "We have been feeding him through a tube because he was too weak to feed from a bottle."

    Keeping Sajad was a huge responsibility for the team. He required around-the-clock attention, just as any infant.

    "We would take turns watching him," Spills explained. "One medic would stay with him at the aid station during the night and others would watch him during the day."

    Another medic shared her thoughts of caring for Sajad.

    "It's tiring to take care of him," said Spc. Erin Byers, a medic with the 210th BSB and native of Guysmills, Penn. "But it is a nice change of pace. I am used to dealing with Soldiers, but Sajad allowed me to be compassionate – it is a different mindset."

    After caring for Sajad for four days, Geaney decided he was well enough to return home. But before releasing the infant, Geaney and the medics taught Sajad's father how to care for him.

    "They (the doctor and medics) did a nice job," said Nasseir Alaobed, Sajad's father, as he was learning to feed his son through a tube. "The Iraqi hospitals do not have this kind of care and I am glad I brought him."

    Sajad was returned to his parents fully hydrated and with more strength. At one point, Spillis mentioned that Sajad was actually feeding from a bottle.

    Though the Soldiers were able to care for Sajad, the need for Iraqi children to see doctors is immense.

    "There are a lot of children with chronic problems and it is frustrating that we are seeing so many patients that need help," Geaney said. "But we do what we can to help."

    "Sajad has a better chance of survival," Geaney added with a smile.

    Sajad's parents were sent home with lessons on how to care for him along with infant formula that contained extra calories in order to help the infant gain weight.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 02.26.2007
    Date Posted: 02.26.2007 13:32
    Story ID: 9248
    Location:

    Web Views: 604
    Downloads: 523

    PUBLIC DOMAIN