Something was wrong. “Code Blue
for neonatal at Operating Theatres,
Women’s Tower, Level 2,” blared
the public announcement system
at the KK Women’s and Children’s
Hospital (KKH) on April 3.
Twice, the hospital’s security and
fire safety department sounded
the alert. A baby, just born, was in
respiratory distress.
While the rest of the hospital
went about its business, a multidisciplinary
resuscitative care team of
doctors and nurses from the Neonatal
Intensive Care Unit (NICU)
swung into action. They rushed to
the operating theatre to stabilise
the baby, so the infant could be taken
to the neonatal unit for further
assessment and follow-up care.
A profound sense of responsibility,
both for the baby and the parents,
goes through a team member’s
mind when responding to an emergency, said Dr Nirmal Kavalloor
Visruthan, a senior consultant
at the Department of Neonatology.
“Our top priority is to provide the
baby with the best possible care, as
rapidly as we can, for the best possible
health outcome.”
Indeed, the hospital says its mission
is to lead in excellent, holistic
and compassionate care for women
and children.
Founded in 1858 as a general hospital,
KKH became a dedicated maternity
hospital in 1924, opening on
Oct 1 with 30 beds and 12 children’s
cots. It is Singapore’s largest tertiary
referral centre for obstetrics,
gynaecology, paediatrics and neonatology.
Five babies – three Malay, one Japanese
and one Chinese – were
born in the hospital on its first day.
In 1934, its 10th year as a maternity
hospital, the numbers soared to
2,826 admissions and 2,579 deliveries.
From 1924 to 2024, KKH delivered
over 1.6 million babies in Singapore.
On average, it still witnesses
the birth of 30 to 35 babies daily.
KKH healthcare administrator
Soren Chua, who is in her 30s, gave
birth to her ninth child in KKH on
April 16, 2024.
She said: “All my children and I
were born at KKH, and we have just
welcomed the birth of our baby
girl. I was overjoyed to carry this
new life added to our family.”
Madam Chua, who is married to
Mr Mohamad Faizul Ali, a bus captain,
has six boys and three girls,
ranging in age from one to 18 years.
Professor Alex Sia, chief executive
officer of KKH, said that as Singapore
progressed, KKH’s focus
evolved in tandem with the nation’s
health concerns.
Prof Sia said: “In the early 1900s,
KKH’s various efforts were aimed
at tackling high maternal and infant
mortality rates. Today, we are
addressing the burgeoning metabolic
and mental health issues faced
by our population, as well as falling
birthrates.”
For couples with fertility concerns,
the KKIVF Centre at KKH,
one of Singapore’s largest, supports
couples through assisted reproductive
technology, and holistic, multidisciplinary
treatment.
KKH embryologists have developed
a virtual reality (VR) training
programme for Intracytoplasmic
Sperm Injection (ICSI) training. In
ICSI, a single sperm is injected into
a mature egg, and the VR programme
allows embryologists-intraining
to independently hone
their ICSI skills in an efficient and
risk-free virtual environment. Design of the programme began in
November 2021, and a prototype
was completed in June 2023.
Trials are still ongoing.
The VR environment, with the
use of haptic gloves, helps trainees
strengthen their dexterity and improve
their hand eye coordination
in a safe space without needing an
in-person trainer.
For women giving birth, the hospital
implemented uSINE in 2023,
an artificial intelligence-powered
ultrasound system to help doctors
deliver spinal anaesthesia accurately
to women undergoing caesarean
sections.
Doctors use the ultrasound system
to scan a patient’s spine vertically
and horizontally to look for
the right spot where the anaesthetist
should administer the injection.
uSINE has been used in 10 per
cent of the total number of spinal
anaesthesia cases at KKH since its
implementation a year ago.
“While I was apprehensive about
spinal anaesthesia, the entire KKH
team of doctors and nurses handled
the overall process meticulously.
The team guided me
throughout the process and made
me much more comfortable than I
thought I would be,” said Madam
Minu Murali, 33, a business analyst,
who gave birth to a boy on
April 17, 2024.
In recent decades, there has been
an emphasis on skin-to-skin contact
between the mother and her
newborn baby, which has been
shown to promote better weight
gain and development for babies
who are born early or of low birth
weight. At KKH NICU, South-east
Asia’s largest NICU, mothers are
encouraged to practise kangaroo
care, which consists of holding
their babies close to their chest
against their skin. In 2023, the neonatal
unit was recognised in the
Singapore Book of Records for the
Longest Cumulative Duration of
Kangaroo Care for Premature Babies
in a month (305 hours 9 minutes)
from Oct 2 to 31, 2023.
Madam Jesica Glenny, 35, a housewife,
said being able to hold her
baby, skin to skin, for the first time,
evoked mixed feelings.
Her second child, Raykennen
Ways, was born prematurely at 24
weeks, weighing 600g, with under-
developed lungs.
“The moment I did my first kangaroo
care, I was so excited and
overwhelmed with happiness as I
was finally able to hug my baby.
Yet, at the same time, I found myself
feeling very sad,” she recalled.
“Such a simple gesture like hugging
your newborn baby that a
mother can normally do straight
away after delivery, I needed to
wait for two months due to Kennen’s
breathing issues. He was so
small in the beginning, and watching
him grow slowly till this moment,
where I was able to hug him
– that was a very long journey for
all of us.”