Mary Mihok had four tiny reasons for walking in the March of Dimes March for Babies on Saturday morning.
Kinley, 2 pounds, 4 ounces; Kale, 2 pounds, 2 ounces; Aiden, 2 pounds, 8 ounces; and Eli, 1 pound, 15 ounces. The quadruplets were born July 20 at 28 weeks of gestation at Centennial Hospital in Nashville. That’s 12 weeks premature.
“I believe that the research they’ve done has gotten my babies healthy,” Mihok said just before beginning the walk at Phil Moore Park, pushing the babies as she walked. “Twenty years ago a baby born at 28 weeks would have serious health problems.”
About 500 walkers here helped raise more than $50,000 for the organization, said Melissa Martin, spokeswoman for the Barren River division of the March of Dimes. The Bowling Green walk was one of seven over the weekend, with others in Elizabethtown, Ashland, Somerset, Frankfort, Owensboro and Middlesboro.
Andreas Carothers and Tamieka Seton found out about the walk from hospital personnel at The Medical Center, where their daughter Dreniaha Carothers is still being cared for after being born nine weeks early.
Their older daughter, 1-year-old Adrean Carothers, smiled, stuck out her tongue and guzzled water in her stroller while her parents walked. She was also born early at 30 weeks. But to look at her now, she’s a happy baby proud to show off her front teeth.
“I came out to show support because I have two preemies,” Carothers said. “I myself was a preemie.
“I believe every child deserves a fighting chance,” he said.
Liz Wooldridge, a respiratory therapist in The Medical Center’s neonatal intensive care unit, organized the hospital’s walking team, which raised more than $8,400 for the cause.
“It’s important for us to be here because we’re trying to fund the research to be able to care for our babies better and to help in supporting the March of Dimes,” Wooldridge said. “Their research is vital to what we do.”
Stephanie Richards of Bowling Green walked in honor of her preemie, Kayleigh Ann Richards, who was born at 32 weeks.
Richards started to go into labor at 29 weeks, and doctors were able to prevent Kayleigh’s birth for four weeks to give her additional time to develop.
“They (March of Dimes) help families like us that have to be in NICU,” Richards said.
“It is amazing,” she said of the organization’s research. “We are very thankful.”
Richards’ team raised more than $2,000 for the walk.
Mandy Kucela has lost two babies: Brenner, whose heartbeat stopped three minutes prior to delivery that came three months too early, and Baby Bunny, lost to a miscarriage at eight weeks. Kucela is now 20 weeks pregnant with Brooke.
“The March of Dimes is my entire life,” Kucela said. “It’s my past, present and future. There is no way I could be a mother without the organization.”
She credits March of Dimes research for helping medical staff determine why she couldn’t carry a baby full term. She had a surgical procedure to correct the problem and gives herself daily injections of a medicine to prevent pre-term labor.
Kucela went to work for the Barren River division as the director late last year.
“Now I go to work every day to save babies,” Kucela said.