
In 2010, when Jessica discovered she was expecting her first child with her husband, it felt as though "all the Christmases and the joy had come at once".
Right up until the birth, the pregnancy had been relatively complication-free. Jessica's baby daughter Meadow was born six weeks premature, which had caused a decent amount of stress, but apart from that it was a "fairly textbook" birth in Jessica's eyes.
What she didn't yet know was that giving birth to her child and the big hormonal changes associated with the pregnancy had triggered a life-threatening condition that had previously been lying dormant. It was something called autoimmune hepatitis.
12 weeks into being a new mum, it was quite the blur for Jessica - not much sleep, not eating and drinking regularly, adjusting to breastfeeding and overall feeling rundown. She put it down to being a new mum. And part of it was that. But another part came down to her body's immune system seriously struggling.
"On the day of my daughter's christening I went to hospital. I was seriously jaundiced (yellow skin), tired and had lost some weight. It wasn't the christening we had expected for Meadow. And it was the start of what would be a very different parenting journey than either my husband or I had imagined," Jessica said to Mamamia.
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The last 12 years have been incredibly challenging for Jessica and her family - more than a decade marked by ill health, near-death episodes, and a massive amount of anxiety.