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NEWS RELEASES
Texas Children's Hospital Nurses Caring for the Tiniest Patients

    

News media contact:
Carol Wittman, 832-824-2040

   
 

HOUSTON (Apri1 19, 2007) – In the world of patient care, especially pediatric, the role of a nurse is integral in not only medical care, but they also serve as a guide through the sometimes frightening process of health care. For many nurses, a bond is developed with a patient and their families that lasts a lifetime. In the case of Karen Moise and Bella Belleza-Bascon, lead nurse coordinators with the Texas Children’s Fetal Center, they have begun to form these relationships with their tiniest patients long before they are born.

The Texas Children's Fetal Center provides integrated, multidisciplinary care for mothers carrying babies with birth defects requiring therapy before or immediately after birth. A vital aspect of our service to patients and referring physicians is the coordination of care facilitated by a registered nurse. The nurse coordinators are the primary contacts and liaisons between the various points of care delivery: specialists, diagnostics, social workers, the hospital and the referring physicians.

They provide patients with necessary support to make the experience at Texas Children's Fetal Center a seamless one. The coordinators guide the patient through the entire process from coordination and explanation of complicated procedures to housing and transportation arrangements. The patient has direct access to the coordinator assigned to her by phone and e-mail at any time.

For Bella and Karen, this is more than an occupation – it’s a calling. “We are treating cases that are on the forefront of modern medicine. When we can help a mother bring a healthy baby into the world, there just aren’t words to describe a feeling like that,” said Bella. “I have worked in nursing for more than 16 years and found the most fulfillment in what I do now.”

For fellow registered nurse Karen Moise, her role in fetal treatment developed throughout her more than 30 years in nursing, many as a labor and delivery nurse. It is also no coincidence that she works side by side with her husband, renowned fetal interventionist, Dr. Kenneth Moise. During the fall of last year, the couple packed their belongings and moved to Texas from North Carolina, in order to reach a greater number of patients.

“For my husband and I, this is our life’s work,” emphasizes Karen. “When I tell people I’ve had a good day at work, that means I’ve been able to make a positive difference in the lives of both a mother and her unborn child.”

Some 150,000 babies are born each year with birth defects. Complex birth defects, which affect about three percent of newborns, are the leading cause of death and illness in babies’ first year of life. Preventing or lessening such incidents of birth defects is the goal of fetal interventionists and fetal surgeons at the Texas Children's Fetal Center.

For additional information about the Fetal Center please visit www.texaschildrenshospital.org/fetal.

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