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Jennie was 22 weeks pregnant when an ultrasound showed her unborn son's abdomen organs protruded outside his body. Ten weeks later, Tyler was born via c-section. Physicians removed all but an estimated 6 cm of his small bowel. (A normal small intestine is 200 to 250 cm for an infant his age.) From the start, Total Parenteral Nutrition (TPN) gave Tyler complete nutrition support administered through his veins.
When Tyler was two months old, doctors told Jennie that he could either remain in the hospital or she could bring him home with health care support. Either way, he wasn't expected to live long.
Jennie chose home-and PHS. PHS provided materials, supplies, education, monitoring and support to administer TPN and enteral nutrition. Tyler returned to the hospital when he was 4 ½ months old for surgery to reconnect his bowel with his colon. His bowel had grown to nearly 40 cm.
Tyler remained on TPN until his liver faltered. Jennie led efforts to switch Tyler to a G-tube inserted directly into his stomach and continued home care through PHS.
Today, Tyler requires only oral supplements to meet his needs, and he's years past his original life expectancy with an optimistic future.
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