82-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 5, 1993 Three-Year-Old Swallows Acid Retains Smile, Voice, Life In A JOYCE BUPP York Co. Correspondent GLEN ROCK (York County) Rebecca Watkins is a pleasant, outgoing three-year-old. She smiles a lot, loves to sing and especially enjoys playing with the calves and cats on the Glen Rock R 2 farm of her grandparents, Bar bara and H. Gene Taylor. But in the few life-changing seconds last November, Rebecca Watkins came close to losing her smile, her voice her life. In the milk house while her mother. Lona Watkins, and her grandmother were finishing the evening dairy chores, Rebecca decided she was thirsty. She picked up a cup of what she thought was water and drank one swallow of acid pipeline cleaner. “She screamed once,” recalls Lona, who had a little earlier acci dentally poured out the cup of pipeline cleaner instead of santiz er, and set the cup aside on the sink for later use. Barb Taylor was just a foot away preparing calf-feeding bot tles. Even as she and Lona real ized what had happened, the little girl’s lips were blistering from the caustic acid. With Rebecca already vomiting the liquid. Gene raced the little girl and her mother toward York Hospital, alerted that they were on the way. He made the more than ten-mile trip north on 1-83 in ten minutes, through pouring rain, flashers and horn warning other vehicles that yielded to the distress signals. Emergency personnel met them at the door and whisked the dark haried little girl to immediate care. Thougth they tried to pump her stomach, Rebecca’s throat had already swelled too thickly to June Dairy Baby Debuts Lancaster County Dairy Princess Jill Hamlsh, left, presents a basket of dairy pro ducts to Gary, Julie and baby Jesse Ryan Zimmerman of LttHz. Baby Jesse won the race to become the June Dairy Baby, the first baby bom on June 1, among five county hospitals. He weighed In at 8 pounds 9 ounces at 2:14 a.m. His mother holds a picture of his 2-year-old brother Joel. The county Dairy Promotion Committee distributed 30 dozen T-shirts with the “I Love Milk” slogan, which will be given to all babies bom at the five hospitals during June In celebration of June Dairy Month. allow insertion of the tubes. Ster oids were administered in an attempt to reverse the swelling. “When they got ready to admit her to Intensive Care, 1 realized just how bad it was," Lona remembers. She would later learn that Rebecca’s bums, third-degree to the stomach and esophagus and second-degree in her mouth, were the worst of this type that the York Hospital emergency personnel had ever seen. “The family and several chur ches were called for prayers for Rebecca.” emphasizes grand mother Barb Taylor. “The next day, Friday the 13th, was the day they told me she might not make it,” Lona adds. On Saturday, Rebecca was loaded into an ambulance and moved to Penn State’s Hershey Medical Center. “The entire area of her esopha gus had been corroded away, with some corrosion of the stomach, from the caustic ingestion,” explains Dr. Peter Dillon, assistant professor of surgery and pediatrics at the Penn State Children’s Hos pital at Hershey. “It made the whole esophagus and stomach quite inflamed, which in turn had to form one big, thick scar.” After three days in ICU at “Her shey Bar Hospital,” as Rebecca called the medical center, doctors were seeing some improvement. A week after her admittance, she was eating and allowed to go home. Doctor Dillon had told Lona that Rebecca’s prognosis ranged from possible full recovery on her own to the worst-case sce nario of having to remove esopha gus and stomach, where the caus tic acid had completely destroyed the linings. “The injury is done within split seconds of swallowing such a sub- Rebecca Wall is >«.. is a. ippy, jolng personality after three hospital stays and esophagus transplant surgery following a farm accident. stance,” adds the surgeon. “There is not much a family can do once it happens, except to come to a children’s center for care. Do nothing else to intervene; inducing vomidngt is bad because it may just further expose the esophagus to further damage. You have to let the body run its course, and then treat the damage. It’s a matter of time.” Through her ordeal, Rebecca remained amazingly calm and cooperative with doctors and nurses through continuing sometimes-painful medical proce dures and administration of vari ous medications. 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