A 10-year-old girl named Miracle has been hailed a hero after she bravely helped her pregnant mother deliver her baby sister at home.
When Viola Fair, 30, from Jennings, Missouri, went into labor three weeks early on October 23, her daughter Miracle Moore jumped into action. The fourth grader called 911 and connected with dispatcher Scott Stranghoener.
‘Hi, I think my mom is in labor,’ she said at the start of the recorded call, which was played on the Today show Thursday as part of Hoda Kotb’s ‘Morning Boost’ segment.
Miracle Moore, 10, from Jennings, Missouri, helped her pregnant mother, Viola Fair, deliver her baby sister after she went into labor at home
Fair was three weeks away from her due date when her water broke on October 23
Miracle unlocked the front door for the emergency responders and stayed on the phone with Stranghoener for nearly 11 minutes as she waited for the ambulance to arrive.
She calmly followed his instructions and explained to her mother that she needed to lie down on her back in the center of a bed or on the floor.
Stranghoener advised the little girl to grab towels or blankets and place them underneath her mom’s body because she was struggling to lie down.
Fair could be heard screaming in pain in the background while Miracle balanced comforting her and carrying out the dispatcher’s directions.
Miracle called 911 and was connected with dispatcher Scott Stranghoener (pictured), who helped her care for her mom while waited for the ambulance to arrive
Miracle calmly followed his instructions and comforted her mother as she screamed from pain in the background
‘She’s coming! she’s coming!’ Miracle yelled as she helped deliver Jayla. ‘She’s here! She’s poking out’
‘It’s OK, Mama, it’s OK!’ Miracle assured her mom before telling Stranghoener, ‘I think her water broke…’
‘She’s coming! she’s coming!’ she yelled, firmly insisting that her mother needed to lie down. ‘She’s here! She’s poking out.’
Miracle was initially taken aback when Stranghoener told her he would help her deliver the baby over the phone.
‘Huh?’ she asked, but she remained calm.
‘She’s out!’ Miracle yelled. ‘She’s breathing and she’s crying now.’
Miracle checked to make sure Jayla was breathing and wrapped her in a clean towel
Speaking to NBC affiliate KSDK, Fair opened about how proud she is off her oldest daughter – a Miracle who helped deliver another miracle
‘We have a set of protocols that we follow, and she followed all of my instructions to a “T” and did an amazing job,’ Stranghoener said of Miracle
Stranghoener advised her to gently wipe off the newborn’s mouth and nose.
‘Be very careful,’ he said. ‘Don’t drop the baby, OK?’
Miracle also made sure the umbilical cord was not wrapped around her baby sister’s neck before she wrapped her in a clean towel and covered her head per the dispatcher’s instructions.
When the first responders arrived, she directed them to her mother’s room.
‘You did a very good job,’ Stranghoener told her.
Speaking to NBC news affiliate KSDK after the delivery, Stranghoener shared how impressed he was by Miracle.
Miracle was given two awards for bravely helping deliver her baby sister
The fourth grader is already considering a future career in the medical field
However, for now, she is happy to just be a big sister to her younger siblings Taylor and Jayla
‘She’s really cute. She doesn’t cry a lot, and I get to hold her a lot,’ she said of her newborn sister
‘I learned pretty quick that we had a serious situation,’ he explained. ‘We have a set of protocols that we follow, and she followed all of my instructions to a “T” and did an amazing job.’
Fair, who named her baby girl Jayla, also opened up about how proud she is off her oldest daughter — a Miracle who helped deliver another miracle.
‘It was definitely a miracle because once I had the baby, she came out, I couldn’t really grab her and pick her up and then Miracle came and she wrapped her up in a towel,’ the mom recalled. ‘She wiped her off and rubbed her back a little bit so she could cry. So, she was really helpful. I am very thankful.’
Miracle was given two awards for her actions that day, and she is already considering a future career in the medical field. But, for now, she is happy to just be a big sister to her younger siblings Taylor and Jayla.
‘She’s really cute. She doesn’t cry a lot, and I get to hold her a lot,’ she said of her newborn sister.