Voiceless Child: No one dreamed she might survive, might talk. Except two ordinary people ... True story.:No one dreamed she might survive, might talk. Except two ordinary people ... True Story
"I spoke soothing words and touched her pale fingers. The silent weeping stopped."

The baby's chest heaved as she struggled to breathe. Airway scarring rendered spoken language impossible. Heather wasn't my child, but her distress tattered my heart. Fourteen months old, the little one lay swaddled in a blanket, forgotten and lost amongst unchanging hospital routines.

Chance meeting turned tragedy to miracle. I wrote the book about our search to give the Voiceless Child a family, to find a surgeon who could reconstruct her airway. Otherwise she would never speak, never swim. When I met her, she'd never been outside, never seen the sun, never seen the moon. She could not even move a finger. She'd always lived in a hospital on a breathing machine, fed by a tube in her tummy. No one dared dreamed she might survive and have a family of her own. Sometimes dreams come true, more fantastic than envisioned.

Meeting Heather tumbled my husband an me into a troubling maze never envisioned. Might we adopt her? Were the damning medical prophecies true? How could we navigate through any villains who stymied any progress?

There is a newer subspecialty, pediatric otolaryngology. These ear, nose, and throat surgeons are dedicated to preserving a child's voice, airways, and hearing.

"Heather's story is heartwrenching, captivating, frustrating. I was impelled to read on to discover who would help or hinder her recovery. What I learned applauds the magical minds and hands of innovative surgeons. The inspiring story of perseverance is relevant to anyone who is facing a challenging obstacle.

Dar Walks Out, Lakota Sioux, Pine Ridge, S Dakota

Voiceless Child is a thoughtful exploration of the grace and imperfections inherent in medical care systems and individual providers. Heather epitomizes the motivation for devising surgical procedures that eliminate a parent's constant worry of death associated with airway disorders.

Dr. Robin Cotton, pediatric otolaryngologist

1129324258
Voiceless Child: No one dreamed she might survive, might talk. Except two ordinary people ... True story.:No one dreamed she might survive, might talk. Except two ordinary people ... True Story
"I spoke soothing words and touched her pale fingers. The silent weeping stopped."

The baby's chest heaved as she struggled to breathe. Airway scarring rendered spoken language impossible. Heather wasn't my child, but her distress tattered my heart. Fourteen months old, the little one lay swaddled in a blanket, forgotten and lost amongst unchanging hospital routines.

Chance meeting turned tragedy to miracle. I wrote the book about our search to give the Voiceless Child a family, to find a surgeon who could reconstruct her airway. Otherwise she would never speak, never swim. When I met her, she'd never been outside, never seen the sun, never seen the moon. She could not even move a finger. She'd always lived in a hospital on a breathing machine, fed by a tube in her tummy. No one dared dreamed she might survive and have a family of her own. Sometimes dreams come true, more fantastic than envisioned.

Meeting Heather tumbled my husband an me into a troubling maze never envisioned. Might we adopt her? Were the damning medical prophecies true? How could we navigate through any villains who stymied any progress?

There is a newer subspecialty, pediatric otolaryngology. These ear, nose, and throat surgeons are dedicated to preserving a child's voice, airways, and hearing.

"Heather's story is heartwrenching, captivating, frustrating. I was impelled to read on to discover who would help or hinder her recovery. What I learned applauds the magical minds and hands of innovative surgeons. The inspiring story of perseverance is relevant to anyone who is facing a challenging obstacle.

Dar Walks Out, Lakota Sioux, Pine Ridge, S Dakota

Voiceless Child is a thoughtful exploration of the grace and imperfections inherent in medical care systems and individual providers. Heather epitomizes the motivation for devising surgical procedures that eliminate a parent's constant worry of death associated with airway disorders.

Dr. Robin Cotton, pediatric otolaryngologist

31.99 In Stock
Voiceless Child: No one dreamed she might survive, might talk. Except two ordinary people ... True story.:No one dreamed she might survive, might talk. Except two ordinary people ... True Story

Voiceless Child: No one dreamed she might survive, might talk. Except two ordinary people ... True story.:No one dreamed she might survive, might talk. Except two ordinary people ... True Story

by Ann Giganti
Voiceless Child: No one dreamed she might survive, might talk. Except two ordinary people ... True story.:No one dreamed she might survive, might talk. Except two ordinary people ... True Story

Voiceless Child: No one dreamed she might survive, might talk. Except two ordinary people ... True story.:No one dreamed she might survive, might talk. Except two ordinary people ... True Story

by Ann Giganti

Hardcover(Hard Back, Black and White Photos ed.)

$31.99 
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Overview

"I spoke soothing words and touched her pale fingers. The silent weeping stopped."

The baby's chest heaved as she struggled to breathe. Airway scarring rendered spoken language impossible. Heather wasn't my child, but her distress tattered my heart. Fourteen months old, the little one lay swaddled in a blanket, forgotten and lost amongst unchanging hospital routines.

Chance meeting turned tragedy to miracle. I wrote the book about our search to give the Voiceless Child a family, to find a surgeon who could reconstruct her airway. Otherwise she would never speak, never swim. When I met her, she'd never been outside, never seen the sun, never seen the moon. She could not even move a finger. She'd always lived in a hospital on a breathing machine, fed by a tube in her tummy. No one dared dreamed she might survive and have a family of her own. Sometimes dreams come true, more fantastic than envisioned.

Meeting Heather tumbled my husband an me into a troubling maze never envisioned. Might we adopt her? Were the damning medical prophecies true? How could we navigate through any villains who stymied any progress?

There is a newer subspecialty, pediatric otolaryngology. These ear, nose, and throat surgeons are dedicated to preserving a child's voice, airways, and hearing.

"Heather's story is heartwrenching, captivating, frustrating. I was impelled to read on to discover who would help or hinder her recovery. What I learned applauds the magical minds and hands of innovative surgeons. The inspiring story of perseverance is relevant to anyone who is facing a challenging obstacle.

Dar Walks Out, Lakota Sioux, Pine Ridge, S Dakota

Voiceless Child is a thoughtful exploration of the grace and imperfections inherent in medical care systems and individual providers. Heather epitomizes the motivation for devising surgical procedures that eliminate a parent's constant worry of death associated with airway disorders.

Dr. Robin Cotton, pediatric otolaryngologist


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780999606469
Publisher: Ann Giganti
Publication date: 11/16/2017
Edition description: Hard Back, Black and White Photos ed.
Pages: 330
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.88(d)

About the Author

The Author, Ann Giganti:

As a registered nurse, Ann worked with women giving birth, then switched to the in-home care of critically ill children. Unanswered questions nagged at her and prompted graduate school studies to become a nurse-practitioner. An accomplished nurse-practitioner, certified in both family practice and pediatrics, she has cared for more than fifty thousand patients.

In Peoria, IL, she tended children undergoing critical heart surgery and those in lung failure. For ten years, Ann worked in general pediatrics with a physician who emigrated from India. Travel assignments take her to clinics in major cities or remote areas such as the Lakota Sioux Indian reservation in Pine Ridge, SD.

Publication credits: Woman’s Day, Bildwoche, and Woman, nursing journals, and adoption literature. “Airway Suction: Not So Simple,” for one of two hundred research posters displayed at Academy of Otolaryngology's national meeting.

Ann resides with her family in a beachside community on Florida’s east coast.
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