Let me tell you about Doudou's test results.
Today I took Doudou to the Provincial Maternal and Child Health Hospital to see an expert for a check-up. The result was that he had moderate autism and his score was 85.
He was not up to standard in intelligence, language, motor skills and growth and development.
I only got 55 points on the intelligence test, and the passing score is 90 points.
The EEG showed a borderline EEG, with various bands being moderately or severely different from those of normal people.
Ever since I discovered this symptom of his, I suspected that it was a sequelae left over from his birth.
Because when my wife and I went to the hospital to give birth, it was past the due date, but there was no sign of labor, not even regular contractions.
In 2019, many people were giving birth and the hospital was overcrowded, so we were arranged to stay on extra beds in the corridor.
Her mother was not used to the whole night's stay, and when she did routine tests the next day, she was diagnosed with fetal distress. The doctor didn't know if he was too busy or what, but he didn't notice the abnormal result until the evening, and he urgently arranged a cesarean section.
In this surgical record and admission record, I only saw the fetal heart rate check when he was admitted to the hospital. I could not find the fetal heart rate changes in the intraoperative surgical record, so I don’t know whether he really suffered from intrauterine hypoxia.
And I don’t know whether the test result was from the first day or the second day, so I don’t know how long Doudou was deprived of oxygen in his mother’s belly during this period. I’m afraid only the doctor knows, but she didn’t tell us, nor did she take any remedial measures after birth.
Intrauterine hypoxia can cause brain damage, the severity of which depends on the duration and degree of hypoxia.
But we knew nothing about this at the time. We were only immersed in the joy of the baby's birth and were completely unaware of the huge hidden dangers.
If some timely remedial measures had been taken at that time to repair the damaged brain nerves, perhaps the outcome would have been completely different.
Doudou is now 3 years, 7 months and 18 days old. We originally planned to send him to kindergarten in the second half of the year.
But now his performance has been getting worse and worse, his temper has been getting more and more violent, and it is obvious that he is out of control. I don’t know if his language skills have regressed or he is just impatient. When we call him, he hardly responds, or he responds very quietly.
He has forgotten a lot of things now, including what was taught before, and is no longer interested in some of the interactive games we played before.
Today I found a Peppa Pig storybook that I bought for him when he was over eight months old. He loved the story of the red monkey in the book very much when he was a child, and he would giggle every time I read it to him.
Today I found this book with a torn cover and read this story to him. Although he didn't laugh, he pointed at the red monkey again and again after I finished reading it and asked me to do it again.
Once upon a time, there was a red monkey.
He jumped on a rocket and flew to the moon.
He swam in the seabed.
He also climbed the highest mountain.
After repeating it dozens of times, I felt my nose getting a little sore.
Doudou is perhaps not even as good as he was when he was eight months old.
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(End of this chapter)