A
ventilator kept Robyn Benson breathing for weeks so the baby growing inside her
could survive.
Doctors
delivered the brain-dead Canadian woman's son on Saturday. She died the next
day.
"On
Sunday, we had to unfortunately say goodbye to the strongest and most wonderful
woman I have ever met," her husband, Dylan Benson, wrote on his website.
Their
newborn son, Iver, is in a neonatal intensive care unit in Victoria, British
Columbia, a hospital spokeswoman said. He could be hospitalized for eight more
weeks, Dylan Benson told CNN on Tuesday.
"He's
doing well, still learning to breathe and all those things. ... But he's the
cutest little man," he said.
The
Benson family's ordeal began shortly after Christmas.
Robyn
Benson complained of a "terrible, terrible headache" and sent her
husband out to get some Tylenol. When he returned, she was unresponsive, but
still breathing.
At the
hospital, doctors discovered she suffered a brain hemorrhage. She was later
declared brain-dead.
The
situation left Dylan Benson in an unimaginable position, counting down the days
until the birth of his son -- and the death of his wife.
The case
drew some comparisons to the case of Marlise Muñoz in Texas, another pregnant
woman who was declared brain-dead and hooked up to machines that kept her heart
and lungs working. But there were two key differences.
In Muñoz's case, her husband wanted her taken off a
ventilator, and the hospital acknowledged the fetus she carried was not viable.
A court ultimately ordered the hospital to disconnect the ventilator.
In
Benson's situation, family members and doctors agreed to keep her on a
ventilator until they could deliver the baby via a cesarean section. And the
life inside her was growing normally.
On
Tuesday, Dylan Benson told CNN he was grateful for the support he'd received as word spread about his family's story.
"I
feel very, very, incredibly thankful. The message of positivity has been
incredible, and it's made it easier to get through these past few weeks,"
he said.
An
online fund-raising campaign to support the Bensons began this month.
The Baby Iver Fund started with a goal of $36,000. By
Tuesday afternoon, it had already raised more than $150,000.
The
money is slated to be used to pay for bills, baby supplies, day care, housing,
food, transportation and an education fund for Iver.
"I
hope that it makes it so he can have the life he deserves," Dylan Benson
said. "I want to thank everyone around the world."
If Robyn
Benson were still alive, he said, there's no doubt about what she'd think.
"She would be very
proud of our son," he said. "I think she would be happy that there
were so many people all over the world that want to see him healthy and happy.
"
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