The Sisterhood of Temple Beth El invites the Public to its BEHIND THE HEADLINES h Sinai's Quints Continued from preceding page FIRST ANNUAL PARTY PLANNING SHOWCASE 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Sunday, January 29th Handleman Hall Temple Beth El, 14 Mile and Telegraph A Unique, First-time Event in the metropolitan Detroit Area Ask Questions, Consult and Preplan your next Special Occasion with a Myriad of Participating Exhibitors including: Florists Bands Limousine Companies Caterers Confectioners Room Decorators Party Planners FREE ADMISSION An Ideal Time for Planning Weddings, Bar Mitzvahs and Anniversaries Mucous is suctioned from one of the quints. discussed, including nursing requirements, personal security, media relations and legal rights. Additionally, departments to be involved in Mrs. Wilson's care were identified. By the 24th week, a basic plan existed. By the 26th week, the plan was corn- pleted, with refinements in communications, security and media relations. A network of 60 paging devices was the web which linked virtually every Sinai department to the plan. Twelire nurses from labor/ delivery carried pagers at all times. Three were on call at once, with the others reac- tivated when their turns came. A similar on-call plan was instituted for the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, where five nurses, one for each baby, would be needed. Besides Drs. Salesin, Goldsmith, Schwartz and Goyert, five -neonatologists were linked to the network, as were anesthesiologists, , seven respiratory therapists and four technicians from the Biomedical Engirieering Department to assure all equipment was operational. Other plan components in- cluded a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit "annex" adjacent to the delivery room. Its con- tents were removed and five stations established, each with equipment necessary for sustaining the babies. Then, the room was sealed. A drill in early December smoothed the plan's remain- ing wrinkles. Sinai was ready. . TRENDS APPLEGATE SQUARE WINTER CLEARANCE 30% t0 50% OFF • All Outerwear (Includes leather) • Sweatshirts (Blanc Bleu, Code Bleu Bugle Boy) PLUS • Selected Shirts, Sweaters & Slacks No Charges - All Sales Final 352-4244 28 FRIDAY, JANUARY 13, 1989 B y mid-December, Ma- ry Jo Wilson was rea- dy, too. "She was tired of being here and was physically un- comfortable," said Joanna Copes, a clinical nurse specialist who coordinated her care. "It was holiday time and she was ready, knowing the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (for babies) at 28 weeks gives you good outcomes. "She set a goal of Dec. 29 as a delivery date, having miscarried previously on a Dec. 29," she added. About two weeks prior to delivery, Mrs. Wilson's con- tractions increased. "We were at our limits for her medically in the dosages of drugs that we could use orally," Dr. Goldsmith said. "We used some other seda- tions to slow the contractions, but we knew we couldn't use them on a frequent basis either. "On Wednesday night (Jan. 4), I got a call that she was contracting every three minutes. We tried one other dose of medicine and when that didn't help, we transfer- red her to labor and delivery" Drs. Goldsmith, Salesin, Schwartz and Goyert conven- ed and, after consultations, placed Mrs. Wilson on- magnesium sulfate in- travenously to slow the contractions. "We were now at 31 weeks and needed to know how much longer we should go with this medicine. We also felt that an amniocentesis to determine lung maturity in the babies was important," Dr. Goldsmith said. Through the injection of steroids into Mrs. Wilson beginning in her 26th week, lung maturity was ac- celerated, he added. At 2 a.m. Thursday (Jan. 5), amniocentesis was performed on the fluid in two sacs. Evaluation of the fluids were inconclusive and a second analysis later that morning showed the key LS ratio (which measures the relation- ship between the presence of lecithin and sphyngomyelin) was strong, indicating lung maturity. "At that time, she was breaking through the magnesium sulfate (with con- tractions) and at about 4 p.m., we decided that in view of the mature ratios, delivery would be soon," Dr. Goldsmith said. "Nature was telling us something." Nature was telling Drs. Goldsmith, Salesin and Sinai's staff in more ways than one. Ominous forecasts warned of _a mammoth ice storm heading Detroit's way. Freez- ing rain, sleet and snow could arrive by 6 p.m. glazing streets and sidewalks and downing power lines. "We wanted to base our decision on a medical need — what is good for this patient," Dr. Goldsmith said. "Secon. darily, we did think about the time of day from a staffing point of view. Yes, there was a winter storm warning, but we felt there was still plenty of time to get people to the hospital." At 4:30 p.m., the network of pagers beeped. After weeks of seeing test patterns on the readout, the pagers flashed the magic "55555." S howtime!" Dr. Salesin quips at 5:50 p.m., just before entering the delivery room, where anestheologist Dr. Rob Tuwill and senior resident Dr. Brian Brown are preparing for the epidural Mary Jo Wilson would receive. Elsewhere in