A baby with less than a ten percent chance of survival when she was born at 22 weeks has beaten the odds and is thriving, her parents said, the BBC writes.
Imogen weighed 515g when she was born at a hospital in Swansea, Wales on September 6.
Now, after 132 days in hospital, the six-month-old has returned home to Bridgend.
"Imogen has been through so much and more than we will ever go through in our lives and she broke it," said her mother Rachel Stonehouse, 28.
Imogen was born just minutes after arriving at the hospital and was immediately placed in a womb-mimicking incubator bag.
Rachel said seeing her new, tiny baby in the intensive care unit and taking her extremely fragile and transparent picture was "like an out-of-body experience".
She said she remembers thinking, "This baby should be in my belly, but it's not. This fetus is now my baby in front of me and now I have to trust all these people around me."
Rachel and her partner Corey were told their baby had a third degree bleed on the brain.
During the 98 days she spent in intensive care, she overcame countless obstacles, including a heart murmur, pulmonary hemorrhage, sepsis and numerous blood transfusions.
"She was poked and prodded all day, every day, but I had to remember that this was to make her better," Rachel said.
"It was the scariest time of my life, but I didn't know that because of how amazing the staff were with me and my family. They always trusted me as a mom and my instincts," Rachel said.
Imogen is now at home but still needs oxygen, and Rachel said doctors are happy with her organs and that there are no problems with her sight or hearing.
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