Young Boy Can't Speak Without Lip Surgery | Temple Street Children's Hospital | Real Responders

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  • Опубликовано: 1 фев 2020
  • Long-term patients arrive back in the hospital, including three-year-old Grace, who first became a patient when she was just two weeks old, and a boy who returns for a further procedure on his palate.
    Temple Street follows the highs and lows of the hospitals daily routine and shares in the journey of some inspiring, insightful and unique cases. We meet the staff members who devote their lives to the children in their care, we see the struggle and joy of families who give up everything to see their child get better and we share in the happy and inspirational times, as we are confronted with the hope and courage of some very brave young patients.
    Content produced and licensed by Sky Vision to Little Dot Studios.
    Any queries, please contact us at: owned-enquiries@littledotstudios.com
    #TempleStreet #RealResponders
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Комментарии • 60

  • @amitzyraizy7774
    @amitzyraizy7774 4 года назад +20

    These doctors r real heroes omg. Love and bless all these cute and beautiful kids. Big hugs to them all.

  • @angelogandolfo4174
    @angelogandolfo4174 2 года назад +2

    These doctors, nurses, and all the other medical professionals Involved are absolute heroes. What a meaningful, devoted life.

  • @colleenpiechowski8511
    @colleenpiechowski8511 4 года назад +6

    All beautiful children.

  • @zephyrr914
    @zephyrr914 4 года назад +28

    They did such a beautiful job fixing his lip!

  • @Kales0505
    @Kales0505 2 года назад +3

    Grace is too precious❤️I wanted to give her the biggest hug watching her❤️

  • @tjstevenson515
    @tjstevenson515 4 года назад +5

    My little brother has ggd global development Delay “ he won’t walk or talk “ he was told by doctors he can walk and his speech has come along way proud of this girl she’s so brave

  • @puddlespickles8810
    @puddlespickles8810 4 года назад +15

    I remember my gran saying her nephew died by not having a pàlate, sadly it was an era when medical science wasnt as good as it is today,

  • @zt2791
    @zt2791 4 года назад +10

    Awww grace has my heart ❤️

    • @lovelyjanuary
      @lovelyjanuary 4 года назад

      I know, right?!!! 💕💕💕💕 What a sweet beautiful little girl. God bless her 🙏🏻💟

  • @sophiesebaggala450
    @sophiesebaggala450 Год назад

    Bless the health care works ,and the families 👪 🙏🏾

  • @willtemsmom2538
    @willtemsmom2538 4 года назад +4

    God Bless her

  • @Kkjhg226
    @Kkjhg226 3 года назад +1

    God bless all the lovely kids may Allah protect them ameen

  • @loopylou6841
    @loopylou6841 4 года назад +18

    I had no idea cleft lip and palette could cause so many issues.

    • @madisonclarke2090
      @madisonclarke2090 4 года назад +2

      Yea it can happen I was born with a cleft palate and I struggled to feed cause it would come out of my nose

  • @oceanbluelady7760
    @oceanbluelady7760 4 года назад +2

    The bad thing about watching your video's is that you can barely hear the narrator speak, because the music is so loud!

  • @maryannewebster4278
    @maryannewebster4278 Год назад

    Hi everyone it's Maryanne here that cute little boy has the same Irish mickey mouse teddy like me 😍 love it well done i hope you all get better❤ very soon❤ 😊 xxxxxxx❤

  • @kristenellie
    @kristenellie 3 года назад +2

    I soo wish that my tounge tie was done under general anesthetic... it was not... it was a horrible nightmare & they couldnt complete it because of the pain... I was a child... do I have to say that Im terrified of dentists now?!!

  • @marniedyne5307
    @marniedyne5307 4 года назад

    I think that’s the same doctor from mercy ships? The cleft doctor

  • @zephyrr914
    @zephyrr914 4 года назад +3

    Clip their tongues as newborns. It’s so much less trauma. Omgosh

    • @katiobrien7854
      @katiobrien7854 4 года назад +1

      I was 71 and being fitted for dentures when I found out that I was tongue tied. I was not born in a hospital, so no one thought about it.

    • @SpeedDemonStar
      @SpeedDemonStar 4 года назад +7

      Sometimes it's so mild that it isn't noticed until they start talking. Unless it extends all the way to the tip or is connected in more than one place, it's actually quite hard to see it unless you're trained to look for it.

    • @EEsmalls
      @EEsmalls 4 года назад +2

      My baby sister was tongue tied all the way to the tip at birth, but they didn't realize it for like 2 weeks. My mom was having real difficulty breastfeeding, my baby sis kept losing weight and not gaining. Mom saw a couple doctors but nobody helped. It wasn't until she saw an actual lactation consultant that it was diagnosed. And it took the consultant all of 5 minutes to realize what the problem was, thank goodness for her, no speech delays at all.

  • @Zodqueen
    @Zodqueen 3 года назад +2

    to be straight i was born with a cleft pallet .I wish i had these type treatment .i had to wait almost 15 years in my life time to get this type treatment .first when i born then 14 years later . i had to do a bone transfer from my hip to the lip.these days parents should be lucky that there kid doesn’t t have speech impediment .thats were i got my adhd and depression . because of that i always got bullied for 17 years .I always tried making friends but they all just laugh at me and called me no lip .thats what really hurt . Delt it my entire life . so dont tell me that these kids are getting better treatment then i had 17 years ago

    • @matty__sharpe__
      @matty__sharpe__ 3 года назад

      i was born with one too! i was born in 2006 so i didn't have to wait as long

  • @iforgotmyoldname
    @iforgotmyoldname 3 года назад +1

    No mother gives up,

  • @TiaJacksonTheRealOneAndOnly
    @TiaJacksonTheRealOneAndOnly 3 года назад

    🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾

  • @jkka1477
    @jkka1477 4 года назад

    Poor children
    who thinks they should recover from surgery?

  • @nicolafilippi2053
    @nicolafilippi2053 4 года назад +4

    I have a cleft palete, it's a genetic thing. I was bullied no end because of it

    • @imeldawelch1817
      @imeldawelch1817 4 года назад +1

      My brother was born with a cleft and lip palette too, he was bullied all the time, now my grandson also born with a cleft and lip palette, he has surgery when he was 3 months old, then he undergo another surgery when he was 3 years old because food still coming out to his nose, now he's 4 and doing well, but he's still in speech therapist although we u understand the words coming out his mouth, sometimes there's still some air in the words his saying. He is very happy kid, my brother I know how he endured those bullied, I know it hurts him but he stay positive, I love him very much and he knows it, my grandson is very much love ,and he's very active and smart boy. Be strong

    • @lovelyjanuary
      @lovelyjanuary 4 года назад +1

      I am so sorry that you and that your brother were bullied because of, like the doctor said, such an actually “common” (if that really means anything anyway! lol. None of us are actually “NORMAL” right?! Which I think is the best part about life!) issue that children are born with often 💕 I grew up with a really beautiful little girl who was born with a cleft palate and went to a relatively smaller private school here in the US growing up, so actually, for us, even though we obviously knew that she had been born with some physical differences because she wasn’t able to grow the same way like we all did when we were “in our mom’s tummies” (lol) that the good thing is that when she was born they were able to help her with a surgery (and then of course a few more later on in childhood) so that she could smile and talk and everything just like us! “Yay!” and we were told it was called a “cleft palate” and educated (to our appropriate level obviously) what that meant to doctors and in the medical terminology etc. so, I think, for us (at least for me) having had multiple (relatively minor) ear surgeries as a child already and having ongoing issues and further surgeries etc (to come later much to my *unbelievable enjoyment and happiness* of course 🙄🤦🏻‍♀️) and knowing of some of my other friends who had similar relatively early issues like that, it seemed like she was just like us but with something a little more special and a little more complicated and that most of all it was really really important for us to remember that she’s getting better and pretty much “all fine” now like us and that it’s not something that we should try and pay attention to at all with her or even have to say anything at all because now we knew the special story that she had when she was born and then after that pretty early childhood time (like age 4 or 5 honestly at first, then a little more explained in first or second grade ish, mostly by our parents and also we had like “counselor” classes where we talked about life things and religion and respectfulness and the like, etc.) we really much to my great gratitude and relief now didn’t have any really reason at all not to treat her always as just “totally normal” 😉🤷🏻‍♀️ but unique and special too, like all of us were.
      - I have to say, by the way, that I ABSOLUTELY AM NOT IN ANY WAY attempting to “brag” or take credit or receive any merit or some sort of silly other thing like that at all from my saying this story- it was more to give credit to our school and our teachers and parents for just simply talking to us like real (little) people and making something that could seem very “different” or “scary” to us as little kids, and therefore, obviously, then subject for unending rejection and relentlessness in terms of of it being a “reason” that might cause some boisterous and extra self-involved little “adorable” narcissists among us (of which there were quite a little small handful to be sure 😑) to ostracize someone out of not understanding or placing the clearly blameless “responsibility” or personal “blame” on the other child for being (more outwardly noticeably) “different”. I am endlessly grateful for the knowledge that it gave me as well because I remember quite clearly as a young child knowing exactly what a cleft palate was .... “because our friend (we’ll call her “P” 💕) was born with one too and now she’s all better and going to be getting even better if she still needs to in the future because we have amazing doctors and incredible specialist surgeons and nurses and hospitals for all these kinds of things and isn’t that interesting!!!! ....” - me as the little adhd talkative one lol 🤣🤷🏻‍♀️

    • @Kales0505
      @Kales0505 2 года назад

      I am so sorry that people are so cruel😞I wish I could take that verbal pain away from you❤️

  • @ricktimmons458
    @ricktimmons458 4 года назад +3

    my son had the muscle correction surgery and several; others to get his speech. he was shunned in school but maintained his above average grades! While gifted in computer and electronics he is very introverted now staying online for hours. refuses to get a drivers license.

    • @philipbrazis8732
      @philipbrazis8732 4 года назад

      I am Ruth, these days many youth we parents have to really encourage youth to learn to drive

    • @SpeedDemonStar
      @SpeedDemonStar 4 года назад +1

      That's not unusual for today's youth (or even previous generations), regardless of physical condition.

  • @zephyrr914
    @zephyrr914 4 года назад +5

    God bless beautiful parents that don’t just abort! Children are so very precious!

  • @alexisarchibald8254
    @alexisarchibald8254 4 года назад +3

    First and aw

  • @LuLu-oc4ke
    @LuLu-oc4ke 4 года назад

    Why not use Passy-Muirs to they can speak w/ a trach?

    • @SpeedDemonStar
      @SpeedDemonStar 4 года назад +3

      She already has a speech valve, that's what the device covering the hole on her trach is for. They said (and you can see from the video) that she has severe developmental delays, so it's likely that she'll probably never have a great vocabulary. In this video, you can see/hear that she can say a few vocal sounds and simple words, so she has the anatomy, it's just a matter of not having the brain power. It's entirely possible that she understands most or even all of what is said to/around her, but is unable to speak. You see this a lot in children with developmental/cognitive delays and autism spectrum disorders. She might do well with a communication board or cards, or eventually an aac device though.

  • @zephyrr914
    @zephyrr914 4 года назад +2

    Grace looks cold in her bed. Mom has a sweater :(

  • @muimasmacho
    @muimasmacho 4 года назад

    Crank up that shit --music-- noise!
    I can almost the dialog trying to drown it out!

  • @chantellehartgen8855
    @chantellehartgen8855 4 года назад +5

    I thought he was a she with all that hair

    • @lottejohnson250
      @lottejohnson250 4 года назад +7

      Its 2020, girls can have short hair and boys can have long hair. Get with the program

    • @lovelyjanuary
      @lovelyjanuary 4 года назад

      Lotte Johnson I totally agree! It’s just SUCH pretty hair lol! I mean that in such a great way, too honestly! I need to get with the program I guess with what/how I am trying to say exactly lol but what is it with the little boys always having the most beautiful luxurious hair with endlessly floating long curls and waves or just so big and incredible and natural curls or whatever else!!! Lol. My best friend’s firstborn son had the most incredibly beautiful bright blonde light as a feather fine head of (eventually pretty “long” like this little guy) waves and curls- and *not a soul* ever wanted to see it eventually have to get cut even for a little first trim!!! Hahah and we’re in a pretty “conventional” US little city too hahah!!! It’s just impossible to resist with some little ones!!!! All of the women were like “ummm my hair never even came close to this in my wildest dreams!” 🤣💕

  • @giantprocedure5728
    @giantprocedure5728 3 года назад

    do not enter surgeries forspeak or for having a child if you are not dying from causes of sicknesses or it will affect your important health

  • @kyleeoneal4974
    @kyleeoneal4974 4 года назад

    The name is not a&e the name is emergency department

    • @SpeedDemonStar
      @SpeedDemonStar 4 года назад +11

      For the US, this may be true, but this video (and the entire series) doesn't take place in America. Different countries, even ones that speak the same language, still have different words for the same things. The US is really the only country that uses "mom" instead of "mum" for instance. Neither one is wrong or right, just different. Like how some people have the same name but they spell it differently, it's the same thing.

  • @kyleeoneal4974
    @kyleeoneal4974 4 года назад

    The name is not ward the name is floor

    • @hellosweetheart3350
      @hellosweetheart3350 4 года назад +7

      Your so isolated LMAO.. didn't want to say stupid

    • @LovelyLaura1710
      @LovelyLaura1710 3 года назад

      You can have several wards on one floor of a hospital.

  • @kyleeoneal4974
    @kyleeoneal4974 4 года назад +1

    The name is not operating theater the name is operating room

    • @LovelyLaura1710
      @LovelyLaura1710 3 года назад +1

      The is more to the world than the US. In Ireland, it is called an operating theater or just theater.

  • @kyleeoneal4974
    @kyleeoneal4974 4 года назад

    The name is not General aesthetic

  • @kyleeoneal4974
    @kyleeoneal4974 4 года назад

    The name is not Mum the name is mom

    • @Chumber3403
      @Chumber3403 4 года назад +15

      The country name is Ireland, not America.

    • @lottejohnson250
      @lottejohnson250 4 года назад +5

      You are wrong, on all your comments.

    • @EEsmalls
      @EEsmalls 4 года назад +3

      @@lottejohnson250 Right?? What is the point of all these comments except to troll?

    • @Lsaizul
      @Lsaizul 4 года назад +1

      @@EEsmalls I went and looked at her "page" she looks real young, maybe 9?

    • @EEsmalls
      @EEsmalls 4 года назад

      @@Lsaizul that might explain it then 🤷