Oliver Rodriguez-Ocampo, like any infant, was more interested in playing with his cake than eating it, even though the treat marked a major milestone in the 515 days since he was born.
Dressed in a black cap and gown, Oliver was "graduating" from intensive hospital care at HCMC in downtown Minneapolis, marking the longest stay for a preemie at the hospital for the past 18 years.
He was born at 25 weeks on July 20, 2017, and doctors were initially concerned that he would not survive. "We don't know how we got to here but it is a miracle," said his mother, Manuela Ocampo of Bloomington. "The doctors didn't think that he would be able to make it."
That was back when Oliver weighed just 1.2 pounds. Now he is at 22.5 pounds, and apart from a nasal cannula stretched across his face that supplies oxygen, there are few outward signs that the hospital is the only home he has known. Just minutes before the congratulatory cake was cut, Oliver was acting as if he were some infant motivational leader, clapping his hands to get a round of responses from his care team that had gathered around. They clapped and laughed in response, at the same time capturing the moment on their cellphone cameras.
"I am not exaggerating — he has been the happiest baby," said Lindsay Powell, one of the registered nurses who has cared for him. "He makes everybody laugh constantly. It is going to be so weird without him."
After being born at the hospital, formerly known as Hennepin County Medical Center, he spent his first 10 months in the newborn intensive care unit. He was one of the only five to eight premature babies born at 25 weeks that HCMC cares for each year.
Most preemies are discharged by the time they reach what would have been 40 weeks gestation, which is the typical length of a pregnancy.
But every baby is different and Oliver stayed longer. He eventually outgrew the newborn unit and was transferred to the pediatric intensive care unit, which cares for children of all ages, including accident victims.