This article is from the archives of the UB Reporter.
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Saving a young life, building a future

UB staff member Sarah Augustynek is grateful for the life-saving care her son received at Women’s & Children’s Hospital. Photo: DOUGLAS LEVERE

  • “The care was unbelievably top-notch, with constant, one-on-one attention.”

    Sarah Augustynek
    Assistant Director, Employee Relations

By ANN WHITCHER-GENTZKE
Published: Nov. 8, 2012

Two years later, it’s still difficult for Sarah Augustynek to talk about the terrifying moment when her 9-month-old son, Adrian, was rushed to the hospital and subsequently diagnosed with bacterial meningitis. Thanks to the quick thinking of her pediatrician and expert care from a team of specialists at Women’s & Children’s Hospital of Buffalo, Adrian survived and is now a happy, healthy toddler.

Augustynek recalls the “very, very sudden” onset of Adrian’s illness. “He had low-grade fever but he was eating. He just didn’t look right, though, so I took him to our pediatrician. The doctor took one look and knew something was wrong. In about a day, Adrian went from being irritable to almost nonresponsive.”

Her son’s condition clearly an emergency, a team from Children’s Hospital met the family at nearby Millard Fillmore Suburban Hospital because of its proximity to the pediatrician’s office. “The Children’s stat team then rode with us to Children’s Hospital. They wanted to make sure he would make it,” Augustynek says. “He was in the ICU for four days and spent another seven days at Children’s. Then for about six weeks, he received at-home nursing care.

“The care in ICU was unbelievably top-notch, with constant, one-on-one attention,” she remembers. “Every day he saw a phalanx of specialists—from an infectious-disease specialist, otolaryngologist, neurologist and physical therapist, to a speech therapist and an occupational therapist.”

Adrian permanently lost hearing in one ear and sustained some nerve damage as a result of his illness, but otherwise he’s doing fine. In fact, her son now tests “at par or better” for speech and language, his mother reports. He continues to see an audiologist; ear, nose and throat specialist; and a neurologist—all connected with Children’s, of course—as part of his follow-up care.

There’s more reason for joy and gratitude in the Augustynek household. Adrian will soon be joined by a little brother. Augustynek and her husband, David, are expecting their second child in January, a day after Adrian’s third birthday.

Thanks to donations to the UB Employees Campaign for the Community, Women & Children’s Hospital of Buffalo will continue to be aided in its efforts to assist children like Adrian across the community.

The campaign allows UB faculty and staff to contribute to any of more than 600 health, human service, educational, environmental and cultural organizations. Employees can:

  • Make a donation by Nov. 13 either online or with a paper pledge form, also available on the campaign’s website, to qualify for drawings for an HP Photosmart printer (Nov. 14) and a Nook (Nov. 21).
  • Read more about the impact of their gift.
  • Read personal stories about fellow UB employees who have been helped by the campaign.
  • Check out the campaign scorecard showing the progress of each unit.