In one way or another people affect us emotionally, that is something we know and expect. But this is the first time I have ever been so affected by a child as I have been by our beloved baby Jude, and that is incredible since he’s only 10 months old. At that age, a child is supposed to receive love, not give it to others, but that is exactly what Jude has been doing all these months that I have had the opportunity to get to know him.
He learned to recognize my voice before I even entered his room in the hospital, and when I greeted him with “Hi my beloved baby Jude,” his face most of the time cracked up in a smile, no matter his condition. And when I have held him, he has leaned against me in trust, and often even caressed my arms and hands even though he has been too weak.
Baby Jude has looked into me with his dark, beautiful eyes in love, but also to search for comfort in painful situations, and I am so grateful for the grace I have been shown by the Most High to be able to spend time with such a precious child as he.
In my eyes, he is a miracle child not “only” concerning his possibility to express love, but also that he, against all odds, is still alive, interested, and fully aware of what is going on around him. Those things all together leave me standing here with a determination that boldly makes me say, please don’t give up on baby Jude!
Continue to expect a miracle, because it’s not over until God says so!
Last night our beloved baby Jude was released from Hadassah Hospital to his home and family in Gaza, but before going home his mother wanted them to spend some time with us in our Jerusalem community house. Their return home will take place on Sunday, and it’s a huge blessing for us to once again have them here together with us.
In the morning when I, as I always do, greeted little Jude with, “Hi my beloved baby Jude,” his sweet face lit up in a big smile, and as so many times before, my heart melted. A couple of days ago, a Jewish nurse looked at him and said, “There is something special with Jude,” and I agreed telling her I love this little boy. He always makes me smile, and fills my heart with joy. When I hold him in my arms and look into his beautiful, dark eyes, it is impossible to take in the words spoken from the doctors: “I’m so sorry, but we have done all we can for Jude.”
I know they have and I honor them for it, but when I look at Jude I see something else. I see curiosity, awareness, joy, love, peace, and if this little precious boy, with all the negative experiences he has had throughout all this time in hospital, is still able to express that love at the same time he is dying…I don’t know the end of his story,
But I do know The One who is holding Jude in His hands. Every second I spend with this wonderful baby boy, I always come to the same conclusion that there is something special with this boy, “my” beloved little baby Jude…
I’ve heard it so many times now, “There is no hope for Jude,” and today I heard a doctor say it several times, “palliative care.”
But here I stand, filled with the peace of God, watching the positive signs in Jude. Yesterday, playing with his pacifier, smiling towards me not once but several times, and today moving like this…a long time has past since he last did those things!
Please, continue to praise God for the miracle of Jude’s healing. God IS the God of miracles, and as long as Jude breaths, we will ask God for his healing. Amen!
Coworkers Berith and Michiel went to Hadassah Hospital this morning to check on how Jude is doing.
Berith said the infection levels have increased to high numbers and his stomach is very swollen. According to Berith, Jude was in a lot of pain even yesterday. He was able to rest in her arms today however.
Please join us in our continuing prayers for this little warrior.
Jude’s doctors in the Children’s Ward of Hadassah Hospital gathered today to discuss his treatment plan, and his cardiologist will restart him on the diuretics which can reduce water around his heart, after a temporary break due to colon problems.
Meanwhile Jude’s fever has resolved and he’s taking more nutrition. We’re praying for wisdom as to whether Jude should return to his family in Gaza once his condition further stabilizes.
Coworkers Berith, MIchiel and I went to Hadassah Hospital to see little Jude in the Children’s Ward.
Dr. Hedwah said he can go home tomorrow or the day after. She said Jude had been dealing with a virus infection but this seems to be on the retreat now. His fever is gone.
She recommended not to bring him to the hospital anymore as each time this creates false hopes for Jude’s mother. The doctor’s advice was to take Jude home to die in peace.
Needless to say, we are continuing to pray for this little person and for his mother, for whom this is not easily to be endured, and for his family. Please join us as we trust God with his small creation, that his care is great and better than anybody’s.
Written by Berith:
Coworker Michelle and I spent time with sweet baby Jude today, and as always it’s such a blessing for me to hold him in my arms. He has a very special place in my heart this little fighter, and he seems to love when I sing for him, so I try to do that every time I see him. He also pay full attention to me when I whisper, so that is also something I like to do, whispering words of encouragement. And looking into his beautiful brown eyes, with the long tight eyelashes. And when he smiles, oh that smile…it just melts my heart. For the second time we were told today that there is no hope for Jude, but for me, there is no such a thing as “no hope.” I stand firm in my faith that has shown the opposite more than once, there is always hope. And as long as this precious little baby named Jude is breathing, I will stand here waiting for a miracle to manifest.
I bless all the medical staff in Hadassah Hospital, because I know by all my heart that they have done all they can for Jude.
Today we brought little Jude to Hadassah Hospital for a check-up. Whilst resting in his hospital crib, his eyes were ever aware.
Jude’s breathing has been a bit heavy over the last day and Jude’s mother was worried. Doctor Reuven checked him.
Jude also had a very slight fever yesterday which has subsided today. The doctor wants to do an X-ray of his lungs, and repeat the blood tests to see if Jude is safe to go to the Jerusalem community home or even back home to his family in Gaza. Results of both exams are not yet available. They are keeping him overnight for observation.
We continue as a community to keep little Jude in our prayers and to be of whatever service we can.
Coworker Michael and I brought our precious baby Jude from Gaza to Hadassah Hospital today for a checkup. They wanted to see how he has responded to the feeding sonde over the weekend. He had put on a small amount of weight, and they decided to give him milk for premature babies and some other nutrition since he needs to gain a lot of weight.
They asked us if we have seen any improvement according to his lack of apatite, and we told the doctor how much he liked the pasta sauce his mother let him taste, and we were told to give him whatever he likes to eat. He needs to find joy in eating, and tonight he liked the sauce we had for the chicken dish, so we gave him some of that too.
He needs to be covered by the protection of all the prayer warriors around the world right now. Please stand in the gap and fight for him as if he is your own child, and praise God for His healing miracle to manifest in this beautiful little fighter named Jude.
Our sweet little fighter Jude from Gaza had a feeding sonde placed yesterday in Hadassah Hospital, and it was so hard to look when they put it in.
The day before, he was smiling and I realized that during his week together with his family in Gaza, he had started to play with his feet. His mother confirmed my thoughts, he hadn’t been able to do that before.
Please don’t give up fighting for this precious little one. In this amazing little nine-month-old child is a warrior who is far above what you would expect from a child that age. He doesn’t seem to care about what the devastated doctor said on the 19th of June, that they have done all they can for him. Instead, Jude continues to surprise me, and he is not only able to receive love, he is also able to give it.
It’s not over until God says it’s over, and I still stand here expecting a miracle.
The sonde will help him gain the much needed weight increase, and take off the pressure on his heart from eating. I love this little boy! He gives me so much love and joy.
Today was Jude’s appointment at Hadassah Hospital so I traveled to Erez Border Crossing to collect him and his mother and delivered them to the hospital this morning.
Today’s check-ups included a gastrointestinal check with Dr. Tamar, a dietary counsel appointment, a blood test, in which coworker Berith reports that at least three samples of blood were taken, and possibly also an echo. Jude will stay in hospital at least two days to undergo these tests.
It is also possible that Jude will receive a sonde placement for more direct food and nutrition getting to his stomach; this, the less invasive procedure, was chosen rather than a PEG tube.
Our sweet little baby Jude and his mother went to their family and home (in Gaza) yesterday morning to spend a week with their beloved family. It has been months since Jude’s daddy held him in his arms or since Jude’s little brother saw him. The family in Gaza is big, with multiple aunts, uncles, cousins, a grandma and grandpa. They have been separated for a long time, so I can imagine the reunion is tearfilled and joyful, and I’m very happy on their behalf. Baby Jude has captured my heart, and I’m looking forward to seeing them in the Jerusalem community home again when the week at home has ended. Jude is truly a little fighter, his beautiful eyes bear witness of that.
We went to Hadassah Hospital with baby Jude today and I was hoping and praying for some kind of good news from the doctors, but there was none. The doctor was totally honest with us and he told us that Jude’s body is dying and there is nothing he can do about it. His heart is destroyed and barely functioning, and he said that his only hope is a heart transplant.
I listened carefully to what he said, and the only thing I felt was the peace of God. Abba has – in His mercy – filled me with His love towards this little precious boy, and it’s not only His love, but He has also filled me with His peace, and it has a huge impact on Jude.
I’m not going to say if Jude will live or not, but I have seen too much of the Most High to throw in the towel just yet. As long as Jude is on this Earth, I will continue to stand on the Rock, proclaiming a new heart to manifest in his body, and speaking to him about his future. Amen!
Please continue to keep baby Jude in your hearts, while fighting for him. He needs to be covered in prayers and blessings, day and night! I’ve just had a long chat with him, you know, like you do with children his age “peek a boo” and stuff like that, and this time he seemed amused.
He smiled several times, and I found myself drowning in his dark eyes totally focused on mine. I told him how wonderful it will be when we come home to Abba, and that we will spend eternity together he and I. But not yet. Our time hasn’t come yet. He was focused, listening to every word I spoke, and all the time he was exploring my hand with his fingers.
I love this little boy Abba, but how much more do You!
Jude was discharged from Hadassah Hospital and is staying in our Jerusalem Community House in Jerusalem, both he and his mother.
Tonight at the house, Jude’s mother made shawarma for the community dinner. It was very good.
After dinner, our resident Dr. Hison took little Jude’s blood pressure reading. The reading was fairly normal for a baby, and Jude is eight and a half months right now, weighing in at about 5.2 kilos.
Jude has been taking a bit of milk from a bottle each day, continuing to take his medications and his cry is getting more distinct and audible.
Your continued prayers for his heart to be made new are greatly appreciated. Another update to follow soon….
Last night in the Children’s Ward of Hadassah Hospital, Jude had a rough night. He was throwing-up heavily so medical staff gave some medication to stop that. He is getting IV fluids of saline and dextrose to restore and maintain his electrolyte balance. The doctors will try to find out what is causing the stomach upset. I was told that tomorrow they will try feeding Jude via his mouth.
Thank you for your continued prayers for this little guy. Please keep his mother in your prayers also.
Jude was moved from the PICU of Hadassah Hospital to the Pediatric Ward. We visited him there today. He has been experiencing some fever and was not able to keep his food down yesterday. He is receiving antibiotics as an overall medical treatment.
His SpO2 or his saturation of peripheral blood is 80% with the oxygen support of four liters per minute, and yet Jude seems very weak. He is losing weight and would appear not to be thriving.
We prayed for him and ask you to join us in doing so for this little person, his mother and his family waiting for him in Gaza.
Little Jude looks wide-eyed and aware, has little or no trouble breathing, has been out and about in a stroller to the waiting room on the PICU floor and everything looks like a good recovery. So he is, in fact, improving clinically. His mother took him to the waiting room in his stroller while we were there visiting today.
But underneath his outward appearance, he has a heart that is barely functioning according to the doctor who spoke with coworker Jonathan at Hadassah Hospital. The doctor said Jude is very vulnerable right now. If he were to contract a virus, it would not go well for him and could possible end his life.
Jude’s mother is ever attentive and faithfully looking after her son at every moment, always hoping, always waiting for better news but not really hearing any. Your prayers are highly coveted for this little soul, praying for either a miracle of healing or for a heart transplant to become available. Please continue to be praying with us for Jude.
This big-eyed, skinny, silent, tired and startled-looking infant is playing calmly with a red balloon. He is taking 10 litres of oxygen per minutes and SpO2 is still under 85%. And his body weight is decreasing. This means his engine (heart) is failing to feed his whole body. So the body is decreasing its populations of cells until the engine could afford all of them. We still don’t know all of those processes nor which ones are the best for this infant but we are humbly presenting Jude in front of our Adonai.
Little Jude was having his diaper changed when we entered his ICU room at Hadassah Hospital this afternoon. He has lost much, much weight. His eyes were wide open, and it seemed he was searching into the souls of those he glanced upon and was studying them. Or maybe he was searching for someone to release him from the network of wires, feeding tubes, beeping machines and harsh lights of the ICU.
His mother propped Jude up so he could look around himself. She handed him a few toys which he was able to grab and look at for a moment.
Jude is stable, and things seem well enough, but not so. He’s still needing a new heart, literally a heart-transplant. Nothing else will answer his problems according to the doctors at Hadassah. And little hearts ready for transplanting are extremely few if available at all. His prospects are slim without a miracle from God. So your prayers are deeply appreciated for this little person. We’re praying for his healing.
Coworker Berith and I visited Jude and his mother at Hadassah Hospital in their ICU. We found Jude very thin, resting on his side, holding a stuffed animal and wide awake.
Prior to entering his room however, Berith and I were stopped by a doctor in the hall outside. He explained that Jude’s heart has basically failed and all their attempts to rebuild Jude’s health within the post-surgery arena and time frame, are not succeeding. He said the medical staff is just beginning to discuss things today with Jude’s mother, although she is not fully aware of their conclusions. They will instead communicate them slowly, and with as much sensitivity as possible over a period of time.
Without a transplant, he won’t make it according to this doctor. There are two heart-recipient lists he said, one for Israeli children and one for Gaza children and neither of them have many options as smaller heart donations are almost non-existent. Berith took time to pray over Jude. Jude’s mother needs our prayers also.
To expand his collapsed lung, physiotherapies were done frequently to Jude at Hadassah Hospital’s ICU. Today they examined his abdomen and kidneys and they were in good condition. Also a doctor came and was examining his heart as a routine echocardiogram.
Look at this struggling boy and please pray also for him to recover faster and fully.
Little Jude was serenaded by an Israeli lady today at Hadassah Hospital. She said she enters hospital rooms to sing to children, that it’s a soothing things for kids to hear music rather than the beeping of the machines around the. She sings in the language belonging to the child, so the song was in Arabic. Very lovely ministry.
Jude is still receiving oxygen therapy for a partially-collapsed lung.
Jude has a very complex heart disease. The first step of a two-step surgery has been completed but left Jude with a partially-collapsed lung, requiring physiotherapy to expand it again.
The therapy is a procedure known as PEEP, or Positive End-Expiratory Pressure (seen above) which is applied into both Jude’s nostrils in order to further expand both lungs.
After successful stabilization, Jude will be discharged to await his second operation in a few months. We pray for Jude to further stabilize and grow up a bit more and gain strength for his next operation.
Jude is still in ICU and recovering fast. He was very calm and looked far less edematous than before.
But his SpO2 (oxygen saturation) is not high enough in his extremities. He has single ventricle and for elevating oxygenation up to his extremities, they decided to give him some RBC supplements, that is, a transfusion. Please pray for his fast recovery !
Our little Jude seems to have improved pretty well after his surgery five days ago in Hadassah Hospital. When we came into his room, he just woke up and was fully conscious, looking right into our eyes, seeking for his mother. Whenever he lost sight of her, he started to whimper for her and made actual sounds!
Since he got some milk yesterday, which put him over the top and raised his blood pressure, he can’t take anything orally anymore, including meds, but has to receive through tubes.
Right now Jude is receiving oxygen support but a nurse explained that they want to reintubate, however non-invasively, that is, a nasal intubation therapy. This way his lungs get a bit more rest and Jude’s throat is spared the harsh effects of traditional intubation.
But for now he is taking a lot of rest and enjoying having his pacifier again. We thank God for Jude’s step by step recovery. Please keep on praying for him!
Today I found Jude successfully breathing on his own for the first time after his surgery at Hadassah Hospital. Nonetheless his mother was in tears following a cyanotic episode this morning, and the result of an echo which then showed there is some leakage from his heart valve that was repaired during his surgery.
I reassured her there are always ups and downs following surgery, and that it is the Lord who reigns over all things, and that we can thank him in good times and bad (our Muslim neighbors firmly believe this). Please join in our prayer for healing for Jude, and peace for his mother.
Jude was resting in his Pediatric ICU room at Hadassah Hospital. He was still intubated, however medical personnel stated that they wanted to try extubating him at some point during the day.
Meanwhile, Jude was from time to time appearing to cry and struggle with something. He was given some pain medicine and that calmed him down.
I observed his tiny little foot peeking out from under the blanket. Not a part of him wasn’t connected to something of importance as it related to keeping him well and stable.
We continue to trust that this little one will come through this. Prayers appreciated.
He looks like he has a swollen face and eyelids and it is relatively common after Glenn procedure because of the SVC (Superior Vena Cava), a draining big vein of his head, is cut and re-connected to pulmonary arteries. Due to abnormal high pressures of pulmonary arteries, SVC could have some “traffic jam” for a while and that’s probably why Jude has a swollen face and neck.
As time goes by, high pressure of his right ventricle would be normalized and then his facial edema will be gone away. Jude looks like he’s improving fast however so we’re thankful for that and we continue to pray for his complete recovery !
Early this morning, I took the bus to Hadassah Hospital to be with Jude’s mother today during his surgery. When I arrived in his room, Jude was peacefully sleeping in the arms of his mother – he didn’t know what was about to happen. But in his mother’s eyes, I could read all her emotions, they didn’t need any words. She held her baby boy close to her heart, not knowing when and if ever she will be able to hold him again. She went through this before, but it is hard every time.
A little later they brought us downstairs in the surgery preparation room where a doctor explained to her again about the surgery and the risks included. I listened to the lady who translated that there is risk of serious damage to his heart, his brain – and then she stopped and slowed down – and there is risk of death. I never recognized so much as I did today how heartfelt those conversations also have to be for the medical staff. To tell a mother who is holding her beloved baby for the last minutes before the surgery that they will take good care of that child but they can’t promise anything.
After being certain she understood everything, Jude’s mother got dressed up in protective clothes while I got to hold Jude for a last moment and then she was allowed to carry him to the OR and wait with him until he fell asleep.
When she came out she had tears in her eyes and there wasn’t much more to say than we will pray!
It was long waiting hours and towards the end his mother kept saying that she knew something was wrong, but there wasn’t a problem. After around six hours the surgeon came out and explained that everything went well and his heart looks good. It was quite a big surgery though, starting with the Glenn procedure in which they connect the superior vena cava (the vein that returns blood from the upper part of the body) directly to his pulmonary artery. They also repaired one valve and also completed the DKS procedure in which they successfully joined the aorta and pulmonary artery. All of this is a big change in Jude’s blood circulation so his heart will need some time to adjust to all of it and will most likely not be an easy post-surgery recovery. After two more hours Jude was stable in his room in the ICU and we were allowed to see him again – his mother very relieved!
We pray for Jude’s healing, and are thankful for the care he’s been given thus far; for God’s protection in his life. We pray for strength to be restored after this surgery and for peace to be with Jude’s mom who is going through all of this with him.
Today my daughter Yieun visited little Jude at Hadassah Hospital. Jude was surprised at our visit and played with us.
The doctor said if Jude’s abdomen seems to be in a good state, he could have his heart surgery this Tuesday. We pray for Jude’s good surgical outcome and recovery.
We visited Jude at Hadassah Hospital and found him happy and resting. His fever has passed, and he’s started drinking milk on his own, praise God! It’s drop-fed to him through a small plastic teat, and he drinks with such enthusiasm that it’s all gone within seconds. He’s up to 15 ml a day, with the amount being increased in steady increments as he grows stronger and capable of handling more.
If all continues well, and if he continues growing at this pace, he may have his surgery as early as next week–welcome relief for his mother, who’s eager to go home!
Sister Miriam and I prayed over Jude, and we marveled at how beautiful he is. He wasn’t quite sure what to make of us, but he was peaceful during our visit. Pray that he’ll continue growing healthy and strong!
This handsome and peaceful boy, Jude, from the Gaza strip, has had persistent fever and is now under special monitoring in Hadassah Hospital’s Pediatric Ward. The medical staff was considering NEC (necrotizing enterocolitis) for the most possible cause of a spiking fever, but now his signs and symptoms are far better so no more NEC is suspected.
To identify any cause of high and recurrent spiking fever (over 38 degree Celsius, 100 Fahrenheit ), they performed a CT scan last week but found no localized abscess or collection of puss, in his body.
If the fevers are not solved easily, they are trying to examine further by PET scan, which is usually done in cancer patients to localize areas of high turnover and metabolic rate. Those areas would be brighter than other areas, so they can find some hidden inflammatory or malignant area in the patient.
Also, another problem for Jude is that he cannot eat by mouth until his fever has gone, so he is on TPN (Total Parenteral Nutrition). We pray Jude would be recovered without any complication and would be a successful candidate of definite heart surgery afterwards.
Little Jude has improved a little in his health lately. He is feeling better again and doesn’t have a fever anymore. Unfortunately he is loosing weight and the doctors at Hadassah Hospital don’t know why. He can’t eat by himself right now, but gets food through a tube. Doctors are hoping that if his fever doesn’t come back, they can finally remove the feeding tube beginning of next week so he can eat by himself again. Hopefully Jude will be fine soon.
This month he should also have a big heart surgery to correct the blood flow in his body. Please pray for his preparedness for the surgery which he needs soon.
Little Jude had his diagnostic Catheterization on Monday 27 March at Hadassah Hospital in Ein Karem. Complications arose however just after the cath, including fever and blood in his stools.
Doctors are keeping him under observation as they try to find the reasons why. Sending up our prayers for this little life and for some clear answers to begin the best treatment for him.
Today we brought our little sunray Jude to Hadassah Ein Kerem for tests, because tomorrow they will do a diagnostic catheterization of his heart. Please pray for Jude and his loving mother. Pray for a good result.
Today I brought little Jude to Hadassah hospital for his echo. He was sleeping the whole drive there even though it was storming outside. At the hospital he was patient throughout his echo and didn’t cry a lot. His kind doctor told us Jude is doing well, but he has to have a diagnostic catheterisation before his big surgery. The procedure will already be on Monday so Jude and his mother will stay in our Jerusalem House until his admission on Sunday.
Please pray for them in this time away from their family and for a successful cath.
Because of his echo today Jude and his mother spent last night with us in our guesthouse in Jerusalem. This morning we took them directly to Hadassah hospital for his check up, which we thought he was supposed to have today.
After a long time of waiting, we finally met his doctor who was a little confused to see Jude today. Because he had an echo just two weeks ago, Jude wasn’t supposed to come back until two and a half months from now. Unfortunately there was a little mistake in the echo report which said that Jude should have come back in three weeks instead of three months. Turned out we were a little to early for his next echo.
But still the doctor did the echo for him anyway and was really friendly to us and even apologized several times for this mistake. At least we were relieved that Jude is okay and that he’s recovering well from his surgery.
Jude was really calm during the whole echo and wasn’t crying at all. After the echo it still took a long time until Jude and his mom could finally go back to Gaza as we had to wait several hours for a car to come, and pick them up to bring them to the border. Since it was a really long day Jude was getting really tired but thankfully fell asleep soon.
While waiting this long, Jude’s mom disappeared several times to buy some things for Jude and get some coffee and food for us. So in the end I got to spend some time with Jude. His mom got the right things which she wanted to take to Gaza. Even so, it was a long day; Jude and especially his mom were waiting patiently.
Please pray for Jude, that he can return to his next appointment safely.
Today little Jude came from Gaza for a plastics check-up. He is looking very well, and his shoulder wound has healed up nicely. The doctors removed his stitches in about five minutes, and then sent us on our way. Though the appointment itself didn’t take very long, it was very difficult to get to the appointment.
Jude’s mother and I went to the plastics department on the seventh floor of one building, only to be told that the right department was on the seventh floor of a completely different building.
Thank God, He sent an Arab woman who also spoke Hebrew and English to show us the way – it was quite complicated. Once we arrived at the right clinic, I went up to the secretaries to ask if they could tell me where Jude’s appointment was. Unfortunately, neither of the secretaries spoke English. But thank God, yet again He sent someone to help. This time it was a kippa-wearing young Jewish man, who offered to translate. It took a long time for the secretaries to understand about Shevet Achim, but finally they sent us to the right doctor.
When the short appointment was over, I realized I didn’t know the way back. Fortunately, yet again, God provided a Jewish lady to set us in the right direction. Praise God! And we are also thankful that Jude’s shoulder is looking good.
Please pray that his echo tomorrow will go just as well.
Our little Jude had an echo check-up at Hadassah Hospital today. There were some difficulties about getting him the right appointments at the right times, so we took him to the echo clinic and asked if they had an opening for us.
After waiting a while, a very kind doctor took time for us out of his busy schedule. He answered a few of Jude’s mother’s worries, and told us that everything is progressing normally, and that Jude will be ready for his next operation after six months. He should return in three months for another echo.
Before Jude was okay to go back to Gaza, we also needed a doctor from the plastics department to make sure that Jude’s shoulder is healing the way it should be. We went to the pediatric department where Jude was hospitalized before his discharge, and asked who his plastics doctor is. They didn’t know, but they were very helpful with figuring out some details about Jude’s medicines, and they also told us where to ask about the plastics appointment.
We went up to the department and asked if they could make sure it was safe for him to go home. Even though it was a slightly unorthodox way of doing things, they were incredibly helpful.
Jude’s shoulder is healing well, and he can have his stitches out after a week or two. He will have to return here for that, though we don’t know exactly when yet. Thank God for all of the helpful and self-sacrificing doctors at Hadassah today! May God bless them for their good work. And praise God for Jude’s recovery – may he continue to do well after his return home to Gaza.
Jude had his follow up appointment at Hadassah Hospital today with the plastic surgeon for his shoulder.
He is having a fast healing in his shoulder and the doctor wants to see him again in 10 days so they can decide what will be next for him, and if a second surgery will be needed.
Jude also had scheduled for the end of the month, his first follow up appointment since his heart surgery.
Until then, Jude and his Mom will stay with us in the Jerusalem guesthouse. Please continue to pray for him and for his Mom who has been having some fever in the last days because of a virus. Our prayer is that Jude won’t catch the same.
Little Jude had a surgery at Hadassah Hospital today to fix the infected wound on his shoulder. After his initial surgery at Hadassah, a misplaced IV opened the opportunity for a bacterial infection, which escalated to become a large wound. He has been on antibiotics and topical medications for a while now, but he hasn’t been making the progress the doctors wanted him to.
They decided to do a surgery to clean and close the wound. Yesterday, when I asked them about it, they said they would do a skin graft from his leg. However, they didn’t have to! They were able to clean and close the area without skin grafts, and he’s doing well so far.
When I first came in to visit today, he had been out of surgery for two hours, and he wasn’t allowed to eat yet. He was very hungry, and in a lot of pain from his shoulder as he woke up from his sedation. While I was there, he was sucking on his pacifier so strongly that it went in and out of his mouth. His mother said, “It hurts him, but he’s so strong.”
After I left the room, two doctors came in to do a blood test, after which he was allowed to eat. Jonathan and coworker Grant went in to visit him afterwards, and watched him have his first food after surgery. He was very hungry, and after calmed down a bit. Thank God for our sweet little boy’s good surgery!
Please pray that the infection will respond well to the antibiotics and that he will be able to go home soon.
Jude will have an appointment with a plastic surgeon today to repair a needle wound sustained in early October during surgery at Hadassah Hospital. He also still has a bacteria and needs to be in isolation. Jude and his Mom need to wait in the room for the doctors to visit him, and evaluate the situation.
The doctors will decide the day when he will have the plastic surgery, they already confirmed that the surgical intervention is better if they will do it as soon as possible and not wait until after he will be discharged from Hadassah Hospital to Gaza. An appointment for the next weeks or month should be made because they think in Gaza this wound could get worse if it’s not treated properly.
Jude’s Mom notified the nurses about some change in Jude’s heart beat, they checked him and he seemed pretty normal. We continue to pray for his complete healing and wisdom for Jude’s doctors to decide for the next step.
Little Jude is continuing to improve well in most areas, but today he vomited a couple times. His doctor thinks he might have a virus. But that is one of the only things standing between him and being discharged from the hospital, as long as the sore on his shoulder gets looked at by a specialist. He is doing well, though for now he is in a special isolation room in the pediatric ward because of his virus.
When I came in, he was peacefully sleeping, and his sweet mother and I sat and talked quietly for a few minutes. Please pray that little Jude will recover quickly from whatever is causing his vomiting, and that he will soon be able to go home.
Today we visited Jude at Hadassah Hospital with my coworker Tineke. Jude is having an improvement, he’s eating from the bottle and he’s not using the sonda anymore. He has to make some stops to finish the bottle because he gets tired, he’s still learning how to do it. Jude was moved from the Pediatric ICU to the pediatric hospital wing.
Jude was staring at Tineke almost all the time. When we went to the room, the nurse was cleaning a wound in Jude’s shoulder, this appears because during the surgery, a needle came out. Because of this, the nurses and doctors asked us to be careful and the next time to avoid entering his room with personal belongings. The person in charge of the infection’s department is worried about this issue because this is a resistant bacteria and could be transmitted easily; this is why Jude is isolated.
Praise God, Jude is already extubate and eating by his own; our prayer now should be for wisdom for the medical staff to take the correct next step for him, now is uncertain.
Today at Hadassah Hospital, I first met Jude’s mother in the floor kitchen, chatting with the grandmother of another child here. They were very kind and immediately offered me a cup of coffee. Then Jude’s mother and I went to visit Jude.
Jude was crying a bit, so I went over to pat his head and talk to him while his mother began to prepare his milk. It turns out Jude wasn’t hungry yet, he was just tired. He fell asleep quickly, and then his mother and I sat and chatted for a while.
She showed me pictures of Jude’s older brother and father, and I showed her pictures of my family. After we had been chatting for maybe ten minutes, Jude’s oxygen dropped from 70% to 50%, which made the alarms on his screen go off. A nurse leaned in and asked us to wake him up a bit to see if that would improve his oxygen level. It did, and he jumped back up to 78%.
But as soon as he fell asleep again, it dropped back down. The nurse came in and turned him onto his back – it worked like magic, and he was sleeping peacefully with good oxygen levels in no time.
Jude’s mom says he is eating well, though it remains a time-consuming process. Please pray that this sweet boy will continue to improve, and that God will encourage his mother while she is away from the rest of her family.
Our adorable little Jude is doing very well after his surgery at Hadassah Hospital. Today the doctors were helping his mother to teach him how to drink milk. They gave him the nipple from a bottle to train his mouth how to drink. When I came in to visit today he was comfortably snuggled on his mom’s lap. He is even able to drink mother’s milk, only using some formula to fill in the gaps.
Today he needed a special bottle to help him drink. The doctor gave me a handwritten note with the specific details written down, along with a bit of money to pay for it. I told her that Shevet could pay for it, but she shook her head and said, “No, no, I want to help!” Jude’s mother was very happy and thankful to have the bottle. It’s beautiful to see how well the doctors care for this baby. Since he has hypoplastic left, Jude will most likely need at least two more surgeries, but for now he is doing very well.
Please pray that he will continue to recover, and that his learning to drink will go well.
Jude’s mother was able to swap places with Jude’s Grandpa has been with Jude at Hadassah Hospital since his arrival there last week.
When we arrived at the Gaza border this morning, Jude’s mother was not there. Moments later, it became clear that she was sitting at a bus stop near Ashkelon, together with a cousin. Her cousin wanted to accompany her to the hospital, and he also speaks English.
When they arrived in Jerusalem, Jude’s Grandpa had already gone outside the hospital, a very big place, and was nowhere to be found. On the ward, Jude’s mother was taken under the care of a dear sister. We had time for a quick photo of Jude in an electric bouncer, and then we went looking for grandpa, because we were set to return him to Gaza and the border would close at 3 pm. We found him eventually, and returned him in time to the crossing.
We pray for Jude and his mother. that Jude also feels his mother’s presence. Thank God for all He has done thus far.
Today Jonathan and I visited Jude at the Hadassah Hospital PICU unit. He seems to be doing okay with the help of a little extra oxygen, but his breathing is still shallow and rapid.
Please pray for this beautiful little man, that our father would watch over him as he recovers and help stabilize his breathing so he can safely move to the next stage on his road to wellness and growth.
Father we thank you for your hand on this little precious life.
When I arrived at Jude’s room in the ICU at Hadassah Hospital this morning, his grandpa was eager to welcome me in to show me that Jude is breathing on his own! He came off the ventilator last night and is now just receiving some oxygen support through the nose. At the time of my visit, he was snoring softly and enjoying a nap with his new bright red toy octopus.
Jude’s doctor is very pleased with his progress and says he’s improving even a little better than expected. Now that he’s off the ventilator, they will try to begin feeding him by mouth soon. His grandfather told me that Jude is becoming more and more active and is almost always moving his arms and legs. Jude still has a long road ahead of him, but we’re grateful for this steps in the right direction.
Jude had his first surgery today, and surprised us by coming out of the OR already by 11:30 am. Upon beginning the operation, the surgeons discovered that they were able to do a simpler surgery than expected, and they are very pleased with the result. Jude has several defects in his heart, and the doctors decided to proceed with the difficult series of surgeries needed to reroute blood to the lungs to accommodate a single-ventricle heart rather than attempt reconstruction with two functional ventricles. For now, Jude is on his way to recovery in the ICU at Hadassah with his grandfather by his side:
Pray for a full recovery for this little guy, who still has quite a long road ahead of him.
Even though Hadassah’s new surgeon Prof. Serraf will only arrive from Sheba on Sunday, they accepted Jude to their cardiac critical care unit on Friday:
It turned out on echo that Jude has a hypoplastic heart, the most difficult defect to treat:
Jude’s on the schedule for surgery Thursday, the day after Yom Kippur, and will be the first child operated on by the new surgeon. Hadassah has a new pediatric cardiac ICU with eight beds that is empty at this point, so they have great potential to bless Israel’s neighbors:
Please pray for four newborns in Gaza, with difficult diagnoses who are all awaiting transfer to a hospital in Israel for urgent heart surgeries. After a lengthy delay while we searched for a place, Hadassah hospital has accepted little Jude, who has multiple heart defects and will be transported to Hadassah tomorrow God willing:
We hope the other children will also be accepted soon. Please pray for the shepherd’s staff of protection over all these precious babies and their families.