LadyEdgeworth
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3:04pm
In a second statement, she said she was asked about the feeding of Child G, and how she had been taught to feed her baby daughter via a syringe, in a way she did not receive too much milk too quickly.
She said sometimes she would be allowed to feed via the syringe, but Lucy Letby "always held the syringe" during feeding time.
3:08pm
A statement from Child G's father is read out to the court.
He said there had been concerns at week 9 of the pregnancy when the mother began bleeding, and they feared there might be a miscarriage. The mother was taken to the Countess of Chester Hospital where the baby was seen to be doing fine in a scan, and the mother stayed there until the bleeding stopped.
The mother began bleeding again later in the pregnancy and was transferred to Arrowe Park Hospital by ambulance. The father drove himself to the hospital.
He left the mother at the hospital at 8-9pm, and later received a phone call to say the mother had gone into labour and given birth.
He said he jumped into the car and drove to the hospital. Child G was 'stable' and the parents went to see her in the ITU. The mother had to be wheeled in.
The father says Child G was not due to give birth until September 21 and had "only a 5% chance of survival".
3:10pm
The father said Child G was "no bigger than your hand..[she] looked like a tiny person."
Child G was kept in for 11 weeks at Arrowe Park and although "they thought she was going to die", with her having "ups and downs" and underdeveloped lungs, she was "much more stable after a couple of weeks".
He said he only picked her up for the first time when she weighed 2lb, "as she was so small".
www.chesterstandard.co.uk
In a second statement, she said she was asked about the feeding of Child G, and how she had been taught to feed her baby daughter via a syringe, in a way she did not receive too much milk too quickly.
She said sometimes she would be allowed to feed via the syringe, but Lucy Letby "always held the syringe" during feeding time.
3:08pm
A statement from Child G's father is read out to the court.
He said there had been concerns at week 9 of the pregnancy when the mother began bleeding, and they feared there might be a miscarriage. The mother was taken to the Countess of Chester Hospital where the baby was seen to be doing fine in a scan, and the mother stayed there until the bleeding stopped.
The mother began bleeding again later in the pregnancy and was transferred to Arrowe Park Hospital by ambulance. The father drove himself to the hospital.
He left the mother at the hospital at 8-9pm, and later received a phone call to say the mother had gone into labour and given birth.
He said he jumped into the car and drove to the hospital. Child G was 'stable' and the parents went to see her in the ITU. The mother had to be wheeled in.
The father says Child G was not due to give birth until September 21 and had "only a 5% chance of survival".
3:10pm
The father said Child G was "no bigger than your hand..[she] looked like a tiny person."
Child G was kept in for 11 weeks at Arrowe Park and although "they thought she was going to die", with her having "ups and downs" and underdeveloped lungs, she was "much more stable after a couple of weeks".
He said he only picked her up for the first time when she weighed 2lb, "as she was so small".

Recap: Lucy Letby trial, Thursday, December 1
The trial of Lucy Letby, who denies murdering seven babies at the Countess of Chester Hospital neonatal unit and attempting to murder 10 more,…