A Calgary family praised first responders last week for helping deliver their son, who was five weeks shortly at their home in southeast Calgary. The couple’s following baby, Megan Claxton and Taylor Smyth, were expecting in the new year. When Megan went into labor early on Tuesday morning, at only 35 weeks along, those plans changed. ” Around four, four in the morning I was like,’ OK, I think everything is happening,'” said Claxton. ” I packed a bag, but by the time I finished packing the case about a half an hour after I was like,’ I’m not going anyplace,'” she added. Users talked to Smyth about how to deliver the baby if they didn’t arrive on time when the pair called 911 around 4:30 a.m. Smyth claims he was prepared for this job. He said,” I got the towels out and for a couple of days that I thought I was going to have to do it.” He said,” Piece of me, I think I was also a little bit asleep, but I don’t know if I fully understood what was happening, but it was a very interesting condition.” Just a few days after the visit, Calgary Fire and Calgary EMS arrived at the Seton neighborhood house. They helped give the six-pound infant son, named Hayes, at 5: 32 a. m., only 90 days after Megan went into workers. ” They helped deliver the baby safely, thank goodness, ( they ) made a scary stressful situation much less stressful, less scary”, Claxton said. Every single one of them did an outstanding job, Smyth continued,” I didn’t have a chance to congratulate them completely.” Trending Then
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In a speech, Calgary EMS told Global News they attend about 25 out-of-hospital birth every month. ” Alberta Health Services, EMS supports mothers with out-of-hospital birth around 20-25 times a month in Calgary. The couple’s then two-year-old child Tala was born well before her expected meeting, and doctors are trained in emergency birth and post-natal attention. Hayes is currently being monitored in the neonatal intensive care unit ( NICU) at the hospital because he can’t maintain his oxygen levels high enough while he sleeps. The family hopes he’ll get home by Christmas day. ” It would just be a Christmas miracle”, Claxton said. &, copy 2024 Global News, a section of Corus Entertainment Inc.