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Intensive Care Nurse Discovers New Colleague Is Actually A Baby She Treated

Intensive Care Nurse Discovers New Colleague Is Actually A Baby She Treated

Vilma Wong was four years into her nursing career when she first met Brandon Seminatore - who is now back at the hospital as a doctor

Rebecca Shepherd

Rebecca Shepherd

You never realise how tiny this world we live in is until you meet someone in Spain and not only do they know your hometown but they went to school with your auntie Hilda.

Or maybe even when you realise that your new colleague is the baby you looked after 28 years ago - I mean, what are the chances?

That's exactly what happened to neonatal nurse, Vilma Wong who once treated her co-worker, Dr Brandon Seminatore, 28.

SWNS

Vilma, 54, has been a NICU nurse for 32 years and four short years into her career was when she first met Brandon who was born at 29 weeks in April 1990.

No one could really blame him for having his favourites in work now, could they?

Brandon, who is completing his residency at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital in Palo Alto, California, was treated in the hospital's NICU for over a month because he was so premature.

Vilma, of Fremont, California, immediately recognised Brandon's name after the pair began working together earlier this month, but could not figure out how she knew him.

The nurse put two and two together when Brandon, of San Jose, California, told Vilma that he had been a patient in the unit 28 years ago.

Anyone else got goosebumps? This could be a bloody film.

SWNS

Brandon, who is specialising in child neurology, even fished out an old photograph of the pair together. How adorable?

Vilma said: "A few weeks ago Brandon joined my team and was taking care of one of my patients. I asked who he was and his name and last name sounded very familiar.

"I kept asking where he was from and he told me that he was from San Jose, California, and that, as a matter of fact, he was a premature baby born at our hospital.

"I then got very suspicious because I remember being the primary nurse to a baby with the same last name.

"I asked him if his dad was a police officer and there was a big silence and then he asked me if I was Vilma. I said yes.

"Apparently, his mother asked him to look for nurse Vilma in the NICU, but he told his mom that I had probably retired by now.

"I was in shock initially but overjoyed to know that I took care of him almost 30 years ago and now he's as a paediatric resident to the same population he was part of when he was born."

Brandon added: "Meeting Vilma was a surreal experience. I never expected to meet a provider who took care of me when I was a baby.

"When Vilma recognised my name, I remembered the photos my parents had shown me and I truly sunk in that I was one of these babies.

"I've come full-circle and I'm taking care of babies with the nurse that took care of me."

Mum-of-two Vilma said it was extremely satisfying to see patients like Brandon, who was critically ill at birth, thrive.

Vilma said: "I love my job as a NICU nurse and I consider myself very lucky to be in a profession that I love and make a difference in somebody's life.

"It's really special to see that almost thirty years later Brandon has a passion to treat patients who are in the same position he was all those years ago."

Brandon added: "Meeting Vilma showed me the dedication and love she has for her career.

"She cares deeply for her patients, to the point that she was able to remember a patient's name almost three decades later.

"Not all of us will get the chance to see our patients grow up, and I was so happy to be able to share that moment with her."

Stop it, you guys.


Featured Image Credit: SWNS

Topics: Doctor, Feels, Community, US