Story
]Thanks for taking the time to visit my JustGiving page.
Mini Athletics are holding an ‘Emergency Services Week’ at Mini Athletics (in aid of GOSH) from 13th - 19th May 2019.
Maia attended Mini Athletics Huntingdon/Peterborough and loved it! Due to health complications Maia has had to stop going but she is determined to get better and stronger to start these classes again on a regular basis!
Mini Athletics are making Great Ormond Street Hospital their charity in 2019 and are raising funds for a new defibrillator and a defibrillator tester - an amazing target of £12,682!!!
Maia's Story
Maia Wiggett was born in November 2014 at six weeks premature and weighing just 3lb 1oz. She spent the next few weeks growing and getting stronger in the family’s local special care baby unit at Hitchingbrooke Hospital in Cambridgeshire. During her time there doctors discovered Maia had holes in her heart. Due to Maia’s condition she had to be tube fed to help build up her strength.
Once she was well enough to leave Maia was transferred to Great Ormond Street Hospital in January 2015, where doctors performed an interim heart surgery to help Maia with her breathing as well as her growth. As the preparation for the operation was beginning, doctors at GOSH discovered that Maia also had a rare condition called long segment tracheal stenosis (narrowing of the trachea which provides air to and from the lungs).
A few days’ later surgeons performed a slide tracheoplasty, a pioneering surgery technique which shortens the trachea but makes it stronger, a technique developed at Great Ormond Street Hospital to widen the trachea and helps children to breathe.
Maia was then transferred to the hospital’s Cardiac Intensive Care Unit until where she was put on to a ventilator until she stabilised and went up to the Bear ward. After six weeks in hospital Maia was transferred to Hinchingbrooke Hospital until she was strong enough to leave to go home. Although it was hard for the family, Meera said: “the care Maia received both at Hitchingbrooke and GOSH was fantastic. All the staff and volunteers at GOSH are so caring and so personable. They kept us in the loop at all times about how Maia was doing and what the next steps would be. Where in the world would you get care like this, we are so lucky in this country to have a place like GOSH to provide the care we needed for Maia.”
Five months later Maia returned to GOSH for more surgery, this time surgeons repaired the holes in her heart. After a further few weeks in hospital Maia recovered and was able to return home. Maia’s mum Meera said: “the surgery changed Maia’s life and she was able to come off the tube feeding and started eating solid foods which she loved!” Meera wanted to thank staff specifically for her care saying “Our consultant always exp
How is Maia doing now?
Meera says: “Maia has regular check-ups, scans and echocardiograms on her heart, and at the moment she is doing really well. Her doctors from Great Ormond Street Hospital come up to our local hospital