TOT HORROR

Mum shares heartbreaking photos of baby son fighting for life as a stark warning to other parents

HEARTBREAKING photos show three-week-old Alfie Gee fighting for life in hospital.

The tot was battling meningitis and sepsis, which can be fatal.

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Alfie Gee in hospital with meningitis and sepsisCredit: Instagram/MiniFirstAid
The three-week-old displayed symptoms such as 'grunting', lethargy and rapid breathingCredit: Instagram/MiniFirstAid
Mum Caroline Gee, from Scotland, with little AlfieCredit: Just Giving

He fell ill not long after being born in Elgin, Scotland, in November 2021.

But his parents had no idea quite how serious his condition was until it was almost too late.

On the day his symptoms started, mum Caroline, 29, had what she described as a "normal" few hours visiting her sister and husband.

She spent time playing with her older son Arthur, three, and chatting to her relatives.

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It wasn't until they returned home that evening that she noticed something was wrong.

Caroline told the blog : "I put my older son to bed while my partner Chris cuddled Alfie downstairs.

"I then fed Alfie and went to bed myself – those newborn days are exhausting.

"Chris then went to work as he was on a night shift, so I breastfed Alfie in our bed and ended up falling asleep with him.

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"I woke up an hour or so later because of the heat of Alfie against my arm.

"He was really hot, hotter than either of my boys had ever felt."

Thinking he may have simply overheated, the primary school teacher quickly stripped him of his fleecy sleepsuit.

It was then that she noticed his ribs and neck "sucking in" with every breath.

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In a panic, Caroline sent several videos to Chris - but neither spotted that his skin was also pale and mottled as by this point it was dark.

Alfie's health quickly worsened and he began breathing rapidly and making "grunting noises".

Unsure what to do, Caroline phoned 111 and was told her son needed to go to hospital.

"The call handler asked if grunting was normal for Alfie and I burst into tears," she said.

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"I was in shock. I could tell by her tone it was serious.

"She said the ambulance was on its way and I needed to tell my husband to come home now to be there for Arthur."

The fear we felt while Alfie was fighting for his life was horrendous.

Caroline Gee

The paramedics arrived and they got Caroline to lie in the back of the ambulance with Alfie on her chest to try to regulate his temperature.

Once at A&E, the newborn underwent numerous blood tests, which revealed "his numbers were so bad they thought there must have been an error".

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"Unfortunately, there was not and he was transferred to another hospital," Caroline said.

Doctors informed the family their little boy was suffering from sepsis, but they didn't yet know where the infection had come from.

All they knew was that he needed to be treated urgently.

"There were concerns he had a gastrointestinal issue due to his abdomen becoming so distended - you could actually see his veins through his stretched skin," Caroline said.

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Alfie was airlifted from Aberdeen to Edinburgh while his parents made the three-and-a-half-hour journey by car.

Caroline added: "The fear we felt on that journey, being separated from Alfie while he was fighting for his life, was horrendous.

"That's a drive I never want any other parent to have to repeat."

LIFE-THREATENING INFECTION

They later learned Alfie had E.Coli meningitis caused by an infection that originated in his bladder.

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He spent two weeks in hospital in Edinburgh, then another two weeks of daily check-ups and IVs closer to home.

Thankfully, he made a slow recovery.

But his mum and dad want to educate other parents on the symptoms of meningitis and sepsis so no other family has to endure the same pain.

According to the NHS, the most common symptoms of sepsis in babies and young children are:

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