Life Flight

Each week 28 people need time-critical aeromedical care. With your support, the Westpac Rescue Helicopter and Air Ambulance Planes are there in their moment of need.

Meet Zachariah from Palmerston North

Meet Zachariah

After a month’s bed rest due to complications while pregnant, Palmerston North based Elisha started to get severe back pains. She was going into early labour. Elisha was quickly admitted to Palmerston North Hospital. It was decided it would be too risky to fly her to Wellington, as her baby’s foot was already on its way out; she was in full labour.

After an emergency c-section, Zachariah was born 16 weeks earlier than expected, weighing just 800 grams. Dad Aaron remembers thinking how small he was, “he was like a silicon mould; he could fit in my hand.”

His newborn son was rushed to Palmerston North Hospital, where they did everything to stabilise him. However, their NICU is not equipped for babies born at 24 weeks. They found that Zachariah needed more help with breathing than they could provide; he required specialist attention fast. A few hours later, Aaron saw the Life Flight team and Wellington NICU nurses arrive on the Westpac Rescue Helicopter to help Zachariah.

My wife was still in surgery and watching them work on Zachariah; I didn’t know what was going to happen. When I saw Life Flight come in with the Wellington NICU team, it gave me a lot of hope and reassurance that he was going to get where he needed to be.

-Zachariah’s dad, Aaron

It took another 2 hours to make sure Zachariah was safe to fly. Mum Elisha highlights that “it took them this time to stabilise him, treat him, and get him intubated so he could be put on a ventilator, and ready to be transported. They were amazing [with] how much they could do”.

The team needed to hurry him to Wellington to receive the urgent medical attention he needed. Aaron was able to walk with the crew to the waiting Westpac Chopper to say goodbye to his son. “I remember watching with my brother, early hours in the morning, (it was cold, wet, windy and dark) the helicopter taking off with our son… I had this crazy feeling of being so proud of the Life Flight team, and yet had a bunch of other emotions going on!”

Baby Zachariah spent eight weeks in Wellington Hospital, after which he was flown back on our fixed-wing Air Ambulance with mum, spending a further eight weeks in Palmerston North Hospital Neonatal Unit receiving treatment. He was then able to return to his family home, where his 8-year-old big sister eagerly awaited his return. “She’s like a mother hen. She’s been wanting a younger sibling her whole life.”

Aaron said that the pilots and the crew checked in on him and were great at keeping his spirits up during this stressful ordeal.

“They came to check in on me as a dad… I will be forever grateful to the Life Flight team.”

– Zachariah’s dad, Aaron

For such a tiny baby, Zachariah was a fighter. “The list he had… he had brain damage, he even had a brain bleed, and he recovered from that.” Now a happy and bubbly one-year-old, Zachariah is finally off oxygen.

A cliché is that we say we never would expect we would need Life Flight, but then you realise we are all those people, and when you need this service… it is just so important that they are there. Keep supporting. Support as much as possible.

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