Thirty-two weeks and two days.
That's how long everything seemed fine before a pregnant Tiffany Tonsager of Oakdale "just felt something was wrong." A clinic visit on Aug. 2 confirmed that "he wasn't moving around like he should." After more tests in the hospital, Tonsager had a Caesarean birth on Aug. 3.
But tiny Ian, who fought so hard, died the next day of hydrops fetalis, a prenatal medical condition in which abnormal amounts of fluid build up, placing tremendous pressure on developing organs.
"We were able to spend a little bit of time with him," said Tonsager, 27, "He held our hands and we sang to him, but eventually it was just too hard for his heart and lungs."
As she and husband, Ben, plunged into grief, Tonsager found comfort by performing a remarkable act of giving. Since early August, she's been pumping — and donating — about 30 ounces a day of life-sustaining breast milk to the Minnesota Milk Bank for Babies (MMBB).
Hers and other donated breast milk is delivered to hospital neonatal intensive care units, special care nurseries and well-baby units, where new mothers use it as a bridge for their medically vulnerable newborns until they are able to breastfeed or breast-milk feed on their own.
"Moms just need a little bit of time for their bodies to figure out how to make milk, and babies just need a little bit of time to learn how to take it," said the milk bank's executive director, Linda H. Dech.
"Research has been more and more clear about the impact of human milk for human babies," said Dech, an international board certified lactation consultant who has worked for more than 20 years in breastfeeding advocacy and support.