Grab
yourself a cup of
eggnog or hot cider,
sit back and read
this story written
by Joseph McDougall,
as told by a respected
physician who practiced
medicine in Maritime
Provinces in the last
half of the 20th century.
The author noted in
his introduction,
that this "is
unlike any other I
have ever seen."
Read on and experience
a miracle as it unfolds.
Finally,
one day that December,
I had to tell her.
Medically, we were
beaten. The decision
lay with God. She
took it quietly, lying
there, wasting away,
only 23, and the mother
of a year old child.
Eleanor Munro (the
name has been changed)
was a devout and courageous
woman. She had red
hair and had probably
been rather pretty,
but it was hard to
tell anymore, she
was that near to death
from tuberculosis.
She knew it now, she
accepted it, and just
asked for one thing.
"If
I'm still alive on
Christmas Eve,"
she said slowly, "I
would like your promise
that I can go home
for Christmas."
It
disturbed me. I knew
she shouldn't go.
The lower lobe of
her right lung had
a growing tubercular
cavity in it, roughly
one inch in diameter.
She had what the doctors
call open TB, and
could spread the germs
by coughing. But I
made the promise,
and, frankly, I did
so because I was sure
she'd be dead before
Christmas Eve. In
the circumstances,
it seemed little enough
to do. And if I hadn't
made it, I wouldn't
be telling this story
now.

Eleanor's
husband had the disease
when he returned to
Nova Scotia from overseas
service in World War
II. It was a mild
case and he didn't
know he had it. Before
it was detected and
checked, they married.
She caught the disease
and had little immunity
against it. It came
on so fast and lodged
in such a difficult
place that confounded
every doctor who tried
to help her.
To
have a tubercular
cavity in the lower
lobe is rare. When
they took her to the
provincial sanitarium
in Kentville, it quickly
became obvious that
the main problem was
how to get at it.
If it had been in
the upper lobe, they
could have performed
an operation called
thoracoplasty, which
involves taking out
some of the upper
ribs to collapse the
lobe, and put that
area of the lung at
rest. Unfortunately,
this operation couldn't
be used for the lower
lobe because it would
have meant removing
some of the lower
ribs, which her body
needed for support,
and in any case probably
would not collapse
the cavity.
With
thoracoplasty ruled
out, they tried a
process called artificial
pneumothorax, which
employs needles to
pump in air to force
collapse of the lung
through pressure.
Although several attempts
were made, this process
didn't work because
previous bouts of
pleurisy had stuck
the lung to the chest
wall, and the air
couldn't circulate.
Finally
they consider a then-rare
surgical procedure
called psneumonectomy
- taking out the entire
lung - but rejected
it because she was
too sick to withstand
the surgery, and steadily
getting worse. Their
alternatives exhausted,
they reluctantly listed
her as a hopeless
case and sent her
back to her home hospital
in Antigonish.

I
was 31 then and I
hadn't been there
and I hadn't been
there very long when
she arrived. I graduated
from Dalhousie University's
medical school in
1942, joined the Royal
Canadian Air Force,
and then completed
my training as an
anesthetist in Montreal
once the war was over.
A native of Sydney,
N.S., I accepted a
position with St Martha's
Hospital in Antigonish.
I was to provide an
anesthesia service
and take care of the
medical needs of the
students at two local
colleges. I was also
asked to look after
a small TB annex at
the hospital, a place
for about 40 patients,
most of them chronics
with little hope of
being cured. That's
how Eleanor Munro
came to be my patient
in 1947
She
had weighed 125 pounds.
She was down to 87
the first time I saw
her. Her fever was
high, fluctuating
between 101 103 degrees.
She was, and looked
very toxic. But she
could still smile.
That, I'll always
remember. If you did
her the slightest
kindness, she'd smile.
Maybe
that encouraged me.
I don't know. But
I did know then that
I had to try to help
her.

I first called Dr.
I. Rabinovitch in
Montreal because he
was a top expert on
the use of the then-new
drug streptomycin.
Early information
was that, in certain
circumstances, it
might help cure TB.
Dr Rabinovitch told
me the drug wasn't
available. When I
described the case
he said he would advise
against its use anyway.
I then phoned a doctor
in New York who was
experimenting with
a procedure called
pneumonperitoneum.
Pneumonperitoneum
consists of injecting
needles into the peritoneal
cavity to force in
air and push the diaphragm
up against the lung.
If we could get pressure
against that lower
lobe, we could hope
to force the TB cavity
shut. If we could
do that, nature would
have a chance to close
and heal the cavity
by letting the sides
grow together.

At
the hospital we considered
the risks and decided
we had to face them.
The operation took
place the day after
my phone call. We
pumped air into the
peritoneal cavity,
but it nearly killed
her. It was obvious
that the amount of
air she could tolerate
could in no way help.
Every doctor in the
room agree we shouldn't
try a second time.
We were licked.
It
was then that I told
her medical science
had gone as far as
it could go. I explained
why in detail and
she appreciated it.
She listened with
a quiet dignity and
an amazing resignation.
I told her that her
Creator now had the
final verdict and
that it would not
necessarily by what
either of us wanted,
but would the best
for her under the
circumstances. She
nodded, and then exacted
from me that promise.
Amazingly
she was still alive
on Christmas Eve,
but just barely. The
cavity was still growing;
her condition still
worsening. But she
held me to my promise
and, with renewed
doubts, I kept it.
I told her not to
hold her child and
to wear a surgical
mask if she was talking
to anyone but her
husband. His own case
had given him immunity.
She
promised and off she
went by ambulance,
wearing that smile
I can't forget.

She
came back to St Martha's
late Christmas Day,
and she kept ebbing.
No one could have
watched her struggle
without being deeply
moved. Every day her
condition grew just
a bit worse, yet every
day she clung to life.
It went on, to our
continued amazement,
for weeks.
Toward
the end of February
she was down to or
below 80 pounds; she
couldn't eat - and
a new complication
developed. She became
nauseous, began to
retch and vomit even
without food in her
stomach. I was stumped.
I called in a senior
medical consultant
and when he examined
her he was stumped
too. But with a grin,
almost facetiously,
he asked me if I thought
she could be pregnant.
I
can still remember
exactly how I felt;
the suggestion was
utterly ridiculous.
Everything I knew
about medicine added
up to one conclusion;
she was so ill, so
weak that she couldn't
possibly have conceived.
Her body just wasn't
up to it. Nevertheless
I did take a pregnancy
test - and to my astonishment
it was positive. On
the very outer frontier
of life itself she
now bore a second
life within her. It
was about as close
to the impossible
as you're ever likely
to get, but it was
true.
When
I told her she smiled
and sort of blushed.

Legally,
medically, we could
have taken the child
through abortion because
it imperiled a life
that was already in
jeopardy. At that
time, TB was the No.
1 medical reason for
doing so. But we didn't
do it. The patient
and husband were against
it. We doctors at
St Martha's were against
it, not only on religious
grounds, but because
we were certain the
operation would kill
her. Besides, she
was so far gone, we
were sure her body
would reject the child
anyway.
So we fed her intravenously, and watched her fight to sustain two
lives in a body in
which only some remarkable
strength of character
or divine intervention
had allowed her to
sustain even one.
The struggle went
on for weeks, and
never once did we
alter our conviction
that she was dying.
And she kept her child.
And then an incredible
thing began to happen.
By late March, 1948,
I was confounded to
find her temperature
beginning to go down.
For the first time
we noted some improvement
in her condition,
and the improvement
continued. She began
to eat, and to gain
weight. A chest x-ray
showed that the growth
of the TB cavity had
stopped. Not long
after, another x-ray
showed that the diaphragm
was pushing up against
the lower lobe of
her diseased lung
to make room for the
child she bore. Nature
was doing exactly
what we'd failed to
to with pneumoperitoneum;
it was pressing the
sides of that deadly
hole together. The
child was saving the
mother!
The
child did save her.
By the time it was
born, a normal healthy
baby, the TB cavity
was closed. The mother
was markedly better,
so much better that
we let her go home
for good within a
few months. Her smile
had never been brighter.
I
still find it hard
to believe, and I've
never heard of a comparable
case since. I never
discussed it with
the young woman, even
when she came in for
checkups, which confirmed
the full return of
good health. And never,
until recently, have
I cited the case publicly
to make a point. The
child didn't destroy
its mother. It saved
her. Call it the will
of God, call it human
love, call it the
mystic quality of
motherhood, the turning
in upon herself to
fight still more because
she had still more
to fight for, call
it what you will;
it happened. It doesn't
matter if it never
happens again. Indeed,
it is not likely to
happen again now that
we have the drugs
to cure tubercular
cases like hers, but
that's not the point.
It happened, I'm convinced,
because there is a
force in nature, a
wisdom, a balance,
a mystery beyond man's
comprehension - and
man should recognize
and accept it.

If
I need any convincing,
that woman convinced
me. I still wonder
at what she did and
at the unfathomable
force it signifies.
And I still remember
with delight the Christmas
cards she sent me
for years. They were
just ordinary cards,
with the usual printed
greetings and her
name. But, to me,
they were like monuments
to a miracle of Christmas!
END
OF STORY

What
an amazing account
of our heavenly Father's
divine intervention!
It's a strong reminder
that God is always
working His purposes
and changing lives.
This is the time of
year when we celebrate
one of the most important
of those events, when
"the Word became
flesh and made His
dwelling among us"
(John 1:14) 2000 years
ago in a small Judean
town. The apostle
Paul describes that
wonderful occasion
in these terms: "When
the time had fully
come, God sent His
Son, born of a woman,
born under law, to
redeem those under
law, that we might
receive the full rights
of sons" (Galatians
4:4-5) Because of
Jesus' birth - and
His sinless life,
His prophesied death
and His glorious resurrection
- those who put their
trust in Him can look
forward to an eternity
with the God of the
universe. Now, that's
a Christmas miracle!
May
the Lord provide you
and your family with
constant reminders
of His work in your
lives - in big and
small ways - this
Christmas.
....
Sincerely,
James
C. Dobson, Ph.D.
ENDNOTES
Joseph
A. McDougall, as told
to Douglas How, "How
an Unborn Baby Saved
Its Mother's Life,"
from Joe Wheeler,
Christmas in my Heart,
Vol 9, (Colorado Springs,
CO: Focus on the Family
2000), pp 167-174
Used
With Permission from
Focus on the Family


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