Baby Faith: Surviving at 23 Weeks, She Was Lighter Than a Loaf of Bread

State   |   Steven Ertelt   |   Aug 29, 2013   |   5:13PM   |   Princeton, NJ

As Congress and several states grapple with bills that would prohibit abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy, babies like Baby Faith in New Jersey are surviving very premature births.

Born at 23 weeks, Faith was lighter than a loaf of bread when her mother Marie Massey went into labor four months early. Marie gave an interview to ABC News about her ordeal and the challenging birth that had a happy ending.

“They didn’t think she was going to be alive, but I knew she was. Because I just knew it,” Massey told ABCNews.com.

The day before, Massey, 42, stayed home from work because she wasn’t feeling well. She was 23 weeks pregnant and decided she only needed one day off, so she planned to return to her regular commute to Manhattan the following day.

But on the train from her home in Princeton, N.J., she didn’t feel right. She nearly asked a conductor to stop the train, but as a veteran commuter, she didn’t want to make everyone late for work, she said. She could wait 30 more minutes, she told herself.

Once she got to the bank where she worked, she leaned her chair back and rubbed her stomach.

That’s when her coworker turned to her and said the thing she couldn’t believe: “I think you’re in labor.”

“I said, ‘Are you sure? It can’t be. You’re wrong,'” Massey recalled, noting her coworker told her that she had “the look” his wife had before she gave birth.

Massey called her doctor, who suggested she go straight to NYU Langone Medical Center. A short cab ride later, she was lying in a bed and undergoing an ultrasound.

“Oh boy, that’s when everything started rolling,” Massey said.

Trying to keep Massey calm, a nurse gave her a pet name, “chicken,” and told her to relax. Then, Massey mentioned that she was feeling a little pressure, and the nurse said a little too calmly that she would be right back.

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Minutes later, the room filled with doctors, who told her the baby was positioned to come out. They tried pills to stop Massey’s labor, but it was no use.

Faith was born at 4:43 p.m. on March 7. She wasn’t even born in a delivery room.

After Massey kissed the tiny baby hello, doctors told her that babies born at 23 weeks rarely survive, and if they do, they run the risk of cerebral palsy, brain bleeds and other complications.

“The list went on and on,” Massey said. “So I’m laying there, and I kept saying to them, ‘She’s gonna be fine. Don’t worry.’ They said, ‘But you don’t understand Ms. Massey. There’s no chance here.'”

Massey joked that “like a dingbat” she calmly suggested doctors give her daughter oxygen, steroids and anything else that might help her.

She remembered the dream she had the night before going into labor. In it, she said God told her he would take care of her daughter, but she had to have “faith.”

And that’s how Faith got her name.

Read the rest of the story here.

LifeNews Note: Photo credit ABC News.