When Ashlee Dahlbergâs 8-year-old son, Liam, came home from school with just a headache, she never imagined it would be the last evening theyâd ever share.
By the next morning, Liam was barely responsive. The Indiana family rushed him to the hospital, where doctors made a horrifying discovery: Liamâs brain and spinal cord were covered in invasive bacteria.
He had contracted a rare and aggressive infection known as Haemophilus influenzae â commonly referred to as Hib.
It can cause upper respiratory tract infections, but it can also lead to serious and potentially life-threatening conditions like meningitis and sepsis.In Liamâs case, the bacteria quickly developed into deadly meningitis.
âAt that point in time, thatâs when there was nothing they could do,â Ashlee told WHTR. âAnybody that contracts it usually dies within 24 hours.â
Despite Liam being fully vaccinated, doctors believe he may have contracted the infection from an unvaccinated childâ something thatâs becoming more common as vaccination rates decline across the U.S.
A silent, fast-moving killer
Hib is not the flu, despite its name.
In Liamâs case, it moved rapidly âturning a simple headache into a fatal brain infection overnight.
Doctors performed an MRI and found that the bacteria had already spread too far.
âThey discovered the amount of bacteria that was covering his brain and his spinal cord,â Ashlee said. âThatâs when there was nothing they could do.â
âI would never wish this kind of pain on my worst enemy ever,â she continued.
âTo have sat there and listened to the doctor say, âYou did everything right, but there was just nothing we could do,â and then to lay there with him as they took him off life support. And I could feel his little heartbeat just fade away.â
âFeel I have failed my Childâ
Ashlee is now channeling her grief into a mission: urging parents to make sure their children are fully vaccinated against Hib and similar illnesses.
âThereâs no words that can describe that pain,â she said. âI feel I have failed my child because I could not protect him from everything that would cause harm.â
According to pediatrician Dr. Eric Yancy, Hib was âabsolutely devastatingâ before the vaccine was introduced in 1985.