![]() Morgan said she and her husband want the AirMed team to know that they are "eternally grateful" for volunteering to bring Haiden back to Utah. Seven-month-old Haiden was there, a puddle of chubby cheeks and limbs, wide-eyed at the people gathered around him. On Friday, the Morgans reunited with the staff at University of Utah Heath Care who helped bring their son home. On Friday, mother Emily Morgan recalled feeling a flood of relief, but she questioned the man, saying they had never met or even spoken. He said the team had talked about it and wanted to be the ones to bring Haiden home. ![]() The young parents were frantically raising funds to bring their son home on another medical transport flight - with projected costs of $50,000 or more - when they got a call.Īn AirMed crew member from University of Utah Health Care was on the other end. Then there was the question of his survival - a race for the nearest port in Puerto Rico and a medical flight to Miami.įinally, there was the matter of getting baby Haiden home.Īfter father Chase Morgan was forced to return to Utah for work, his wife followed a short time later to help take care of their daughter. ![]() SALT LAKE CITY - Haiden Morgan's young life is already the result of more miracles than his parents can count.įirst there was his birth: Barely into the start of a seven-day cruise through the Caribbean last August, Emily Morgan went into labor and gave birth to Haiden nearly four months premature. ![]()
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