Lara Morris

Lara May's Ben Nevis challenge

Fundraising for Group B Strep Support
£30
raised of £250 target
Donations cannot currently be made to this page
Ben Nevis challenge , 9 August 2018
Group B Strep is the leading cause of life-threatening infection in newborn babies, causing sepsis, pneumonia and meningitis. Help raise awareness to protect babies from this preventable infection.

Story

My personal story on why I am so passionate about spreading awareness and raising funds to help educate people about group B Strep. 

was lucky enough to have found out early on in my pregnancy so I was prepared to have the IV antibiotics throughout my labour. However that still doesn’t mean your baby won’t develop an infection which could be life-threatening. 

If you are group B Strep positive your baby is supposed to be monitored for 12 hours after they are born to watch for signs of early onset or late onset GBS. When my baby was born she had signs of infection. 

Only till the next morning, around 8 hours later, did my baby start receiving treatment for signs of an infection. Her temperature kept on decreasing and she wasn’t feeding properly. My baby had to be put on a course of antibiotics for 5 days to level her temperature and decrease the signs of infection. Which it luckily did. 

I put my baby being fit and healthy right now down to the chances of me being tested for group B Strep, if I hadn’t of known I had this bacteria. My baby could of developed what started as a minor infection, turn to a life-threatening sort, such as meningitis, sepsis and pneumonia.

A background to GBS

Group B Strep is a natural bacteria that is carried by somewhere between 20-40% of women. It is not sexually transmitted. And in most circumstances it doesn't lead to any issues.

Unfortunately, in some cases it does - and it is passed to new born children through the birth canal.

These children then display very modest symptoms (tiredness, crying) and - left untreated - die. Usually within the first week.

There's a really simple way of dealing with it, which is carried out by the overwhelming majority of developed countries (USA, Canada, Australia, France, Germany, Spain, Hong Kong, Singapore etc) and even some less developed countries (like Argentina and Kenya, for example).

It involves a swab to test whether pregnant women carry the bacteria and, if they do, to administer antibiotics during labour. Countries that do this see the incidence of early onset GBS decline by around 85%.

The test costs £11 to the NHS, but the UK is almost the only developed country - aside from the Netherlands and Denmark - to not systematically perform it (the Netherlands are currently reviewing their policy because they recognise it's not working).

You can get it done privately, but because doctors in the UK rarely inform people about the issue, very few people do.

The net result is that every year 800 babies are infected who wouldn't otherwise be; 50% of these are left with permanent disabilities, 10% die.

You might be tempted to think that it's cost that's causing the UK to shy away from international best practice, but even that doesn't hold:

To test every pregnant woman in the UK would only cost around £8m a year. Yet a single compensation claim for permanent disability can regularly lead to a multimillion pound payout... and there are hundreds of these (let alone the incremental healthcare costs.)

The international medical community are nearly unanimous in their assessment of the best way forward. The economics are obvious.

Current policy is costing money and it's costing lives.

Please donate and help us change that.

About Group B Strep Support 

I came across a charity called Group B Strep Support (GBSS), who not only already do this, but are evidently an extremely competent and professional organisation. They are advised by - for example - the Emeritus Professor of Obstetrics at Imperial College (as well as a host of other prestigious medical professionals) and count people such as David Cameron and Theresa May as supporters.

While they haven't fully reached their goal of introducing a mandatory test for every pregnant woman, they have been tremendously influential in moving the debate in the right direction.

For example, they were one of the leading voices in the most recent revision to the RCOG (Royal College of Obstetrics and Gynaecologist's) guidance to at least provide every pregnant woman with information about GBS and, if found positive, to treat them with antibiotics.

They are an excellent, effective and (unfortunately) underfunded charity.

No matter how small or large. All donations are greatly appreciated ❤️


 

  

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About the campaign

Group B Strep is the leading cause of life-threatening infection in newborn babies, causing sepsis, pneumonia and meningitis. Help raise awareness to protect babies from this preventable infection.

About the charity

Group B Strep Support

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RCN 1112065
Group B Streptococcus is the UK's most common cause of life-threatening infection in newborn babies & of meningitis in babies under age 3 months. Most of these infections are preventable. Group B Strep Support informs families & health professionals about group B Strep to save tiny lives.

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£30.00
+ £7.50 Gift Aid
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£30.00
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£0.00

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