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Coronavirus Kent: Broadstairs woman Natalie Crichton, 30, who has down's syndrome, survives Covid-19 after 15 days on ventilator

It's the middle of the night and Linda Crichton, unable to sleep, is desperately searching for some hope.

She's just been told her daughter Natalie, who has down's syndrome, is likely to die, alone, of Covid-19 on the intensive care unit at the QEQM in Margate.

Natalie in hospital, unable to even lift her hand off the bed or talk
Natalie in hospital, unable to even lift her hand off the bed or talk

In utter despair, and feeling helpless at home in Broadstairs, she scours site after site online, longing to find stories of survival which will give her some glimmer of light in what she now says were her darkest hours.

She admits it was hard to find any.

Natalie, a healthy 30-year-old who loves to dance, had pneumonia on both her lungs caused by Covid-19 and was in a coma on a ventilator.

Linda, unable to be at her bedside due to restrictions, had been told by a consultant by phone that her daughter was critically ill and her chances of survival slim.

"It's like your worst nightmare," she said. "You feel so helpless and numb.

Linda Crichton's daughter, Natalie, was in hospital for weeks
Linda Crichton's daughter, Natalie, was in hospital for weeks

"It was so distressing - the most difficult thing I've ever had to deal with in my life.

"I called up a nurse from social services and asked if I could go to see Natalie, because if she's not going to survive, then we would like to see her.

"My son was really distressed. He was saying 'Mum, can't we bring her home?'"

But as for all families of Covid patients in ICU - and despite the fact Natalie has learning difficulties, meaning she needs more support than others - the answer was no.

Natalie had previously been very healthy, only visiting the doctors once a year for her flu jab.

Natalie, 30, loves music and dancing
Natalie, 30, loves music and dancing

But she had started suffering symptoms of coronavirus at the end of March.

She was checked over twice after calls to NHS 111 but by March 31 had become even more unwell, with her breathing rapid, so Linda called 999.

"A CT scan was taken and it showed she had pneumonia on both lungs.

"It was so stressful. She didn't understand what was happening to her and was unable to verbalise like we would, and that made me feel absolutely terrible."

Natalie was initially put on oxygen on Sandwich Ward but with her condition deteriorating she was intubated, put on a ventilator and taken to ICU.

"When they sedated her I held her hand and then I left as it would have been too difficult to watch the tube go in," said Linda.

"As I walked away I was crying and one of the cleaners called after me 'you want a cup of tea?' and I just thought how kind all these people are."

That night, Linda received the devastating call to say Natalie was critically ill and that not many people with Covid-19 who are put on a ventilator survive.

"It's almost like being kidnapped - not being able to hear us, but all these strange voices and machines."

She admits she dreaded the phone ringing again.

The mum-of-four says another huge concern was how her daughter, rarely without a family member by her side, would be feeling.

"We felt distraught knowing how frightened she would be in ICU and desperately helpless not being able to do anything," she said.

"I found a report in the New York Times about how people on ventilators, even though they can't see anything, can still hear.

"That made me so distressed to think how scared Natalie would be. It's almost like being kidnapped - not being able to hear us, but all these strange voices and machines.

"I thought 'we've got to get our voices onto ICU' but you're not allowed WiFi there."

Natalie with her physio at the QEQM
Natalie with her physio at the QEQM

So Linda instead had family and friends record get well messages which were put on a CD, and her nephew, a paramedic, took the disc and a CD player in.

The staff at East Kent Mencap in Thanet, a group Natalie attends, also put together her favourite songs and spoke about what they mean to her.

"Knowing my daughter could now hear our voices and the music she enjoys brought us all considerable comfort," said Linda.

"A kind consultant also set up a video link so every day he would phone me and I could see her."

Days passed and Natalie surprised medics when her condition started to improve.

An attempt was made to take her off the ventilator, but when she came round, terrified at being surrounded by strangers in unknown surroundings, she tried to pull her tubes out and get out of bed.

"They had to put her back on the ventilator," said single parent Linda.

"I said, 'Every time you try to take her off, if she doesn't have someone she knows, she'll be frightened and she's not going to stay calm'.

"I have pre-existing health conditions so I couldn't go but the consultant eventually agreed that her dad could go in."

Natalie giving a present to the ward matron before leaving the QEQM
Natalie giving a present to the ward matron before leaving the QEQM

But just as the family's hopes were rising, Natalie developed ventilator-associated pneumonia and she was put back on it for another eight days.

When she eventually came off the machine, she was moved to a ward, but due to being so weak, suffered a third bout of pneumonia.

Linda said: "After being on a ventilator for 15 days she couldn't even lift her hands off the bed or talk because she was so weak and had muscle loss.

"She's had to learn how to sit up, walk and talk again."

Linda was finally allowed by her side on the non-Covid Quex Ward, but admits she was anxious of thinking her daughter was out of the woods.

"I was too frightened to build my hopes up in case she got very ill again," she said.

But last Thursday, five weeks after being admitted - two of those spent in a coma - Natalie came home.

The family all ready for her homecoming - a day they thought would never come
The family all ready for her homecoming - a day they thought would never come

"I never thought this day would happen," said Linda.

"It's been really traumatic. I have a 12-year-old daughter at home and my son, whose 27, became ill with Covid-19 too, so trying to shield my youngest while taking care of him and having Natalie in hospital was very hard. It's been quite a journey."

Linda says Natalie still has a long way to go, but is grateful to the "amazing" NHS staff that she's made it this far.

"Three weeks ago she couldn't even lift up a pen; now she can feed herself, pull herself up, she's so much stronger and she can walk with a frame," she said.

"She's very tearful, very emotional - she's traumatised. When she was in ICU, she could hear everything and there would have been people who died when she was there.

"But she's home and doing really well. She's phoning her friends."

Linda says she still feels nervous, though.

Natalie back home with brother Harry
Natalie back home with brother Harry

"It's just so unbelievable," she said.

"She survived and so many people haven't. And not all elderly, some were fit and healthy doctors and nurses.

"The point of me wanting to tell her story is to give people hope.

"If someone is trying to find a positive story, like I was, then this can be it."

Read more: All the latest coronavirus news

Read more: All the latest news from Thanet

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