Brooke, the kids and their dad are all doing great and feel like they can handle anything that’s thrown at them.

Brooke was apprehensive about this whole home-visit thing. A couple of people had suggested that she contact Nurse-Family Partnership® for support, but she hesitated.

She finally made the call to Fargo Cass Nurse-Family Partnership when she was 27-weeks pregnant with her twins.

“When I called, they said, ‘Your nurse will be Kara,’ and they scheduled a time when she would come over,” Brooke said. “I thought, ‘Am I supposed to make her coffee?’ ”

Only after nurse Kara came to her home in Fargo, North Dakota did Brooke understand.

Serving coffee was not part of the program. Instead Brooke found in Kara a friend who told her what to expect during her pregnancy, how to prepare for labor and delivery, and how to handle the challenges that lay ahead when she would bring little Lennox and Linkin home.

“When we first met, she acted like we already knew each other and she made me feel comfortable,” Brooke said. “I don’t know why I was so nervous.”

From that point on, Brooke said, “Kara came weekly, and every time she brought all this information. Then, when the babies were in the NICU, she came to be with us. She was pretty awesome.”

Brooke and her partner, Kellen, had looked forward to becoming parents, but they were speechless when at her first ultrasound at 21 weeks, the technician mentioned that he saw twins in there.

“We kind of giggled awkwardly and didn’t say anything for about five minutes,” she said.

Frequent ultrasounds for the rest of the pregnancy revealed that Linkin was not growing at a normal rate, so her doctor recommended they induce labor at 35 weeks. After 24 hours of labor and with signs of stress on the boys, Brooke had an emergency C-section.

“It was scary,” she said, “but Kara gave me a lot of information about everything before it happened so I would know what to expect. I was clueless. Everything was completely new to me.”

After 14 days in the NICU, it was time to take the babies home, and Brooke and Kellen began what was to be an odyssey of caring for two adorable but frail little boys.

“Feeding was a big issue,” said Brooke, who recalled learning how to breastfeed, pump milk around the clock for supplemental feedings, and how to enrich the milk with formula and bottle-feed the boys to help them gain weight.

“We had to monitor their weight and it was great because Kara came weekly and brought a scale with her so I didn’t have to take them out in the ice-cold weather to be weighed,” she said.

The boys had frequent respiratory problems. Brooke said a simple runny nose could spiral into cold-induced asthma and severe breathing problems, requiring urgent care, steroid medications, nebulizers and many long nights.

Kara helped them deal with those challenges and taught them how to access speech therapy and other services when the boys showed signs of falling behind in some developmental stages at around six months.

The boys had numerous food allergies, a neck condition known as torticollis, an eye condition that required surgery, and went through a rough phase of biting each other.

“Kara always had good ideas,” Brooke said. “She had suggestions from her own experiences as a parent, and she brought pamphlets and lots of information from the research she would do.

“She told me, ‘You’re not going to be perfect. Being a mom is hard. But you always bounce back from everything and you will bounce back from this.’ ”

At 2, the boys are thriving, Brooke said, “You would never know they were preemies.”

She recently returned to her job as an oral and facial surgery assistant and enrolled the boys in day care. She and Kellen, who works as an HVAC technician, are a talented team, juggling the breakfast duties and supporting each other as the boys come home with the inevitable colds and viruses that toddlers share at day care.

“We were all getting a little stir-crazy,” Brooke said, admitting that she was ready to return to work.

“I thought the boys would have a hard time, but they’re doing really well. The transition has been really good.”

The boys were nurse Kara’s first set of twins and she cared about them so much. She never gave up on anything.

In two years, Brooke said she went from “clueless” to a “very confident” mother, and much of that transformation was due to Kara’s help.

“The boys were her first set of twins and she cared about them so much. She never gave up on anything,” Brooke said.

“If I had a question, I would ask Kara. I could talk to her about anything. I was never shy or scared. If she didn’t know the answer, she would find out.

“Now, the kids are so great and their dad and I are so great. We’ve been through a lot. Anything that’s been thrown at us, we can handle.

“We’re absolutely living our best life right now.”

Contact us to learn more, or so we can get you connected with your personal nurse.

* Disclaimer for 28 weeks or less pregnant: Some exceptions may apply please check with your local Nurse-Family Partnership network partner for more information.


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