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Nonprofit There With Care provides everyday help for parents of critically ill children

Tri-Valley mom seeks to support families after baby daughter’s death

More than a year after the death of her only child who succumbed with a critical illness while hospitalized as an infant last year, Danville resident Blair Patzner is seeking to aid other families in the Bay Area who find themselves in the same position she and husband Brett were in during their daughter Chloe’s short lifespan.

Danville residents Blair and Brett Patzner lost their first and only daughter Chloe Patzner following a terminal diagnosis at Stanford Children’s Hospital last year, with Blair Patzner now seeking to support other families with critically ill children in that region as a volunteer with There with Care. (Contributed photo)

Danville residents Blair and Brett Patzner lost their first and only daughter Chloe Patzner following a terminal diagnosis at Stanford Children’s Hospital last year, with Blair Patzner now seeking to support other families with critically ill children in that region as a volunteer with There with Care. (Contributed photo)

Tri-Valley mom seeks to support families after baby daughter’s death – by Jeanita Lyman

More than a year after the death of her only child who succumbed with a critical illness while hospitalized as an infant last year, Danville resident Blair Patzner is seeking to aid other families in the Bay Area who find themselves in the same position she and husband Brett were in during their daughter Chloe’s short lifespan.

The Patzners became first-time parents on Dec. 29, 2021 with the birth of their daughter, and were eager to bring her home and kick off their lives as a family of three. But Chloe experienced medical complications early.

“She was fine except for she needed a surgery on her jaw, so we were told this because we noticed she was having these little quick dips in oxygen and then she’d go back up,” Blair Patzner told the Weekly. “They had an expert come look and they were like ‘it’s no big deal; it happens when they’re six to eight weeks in the womb forming.'”

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Impact of Care | By the Numbers

Since 2005 There With Care has:

  • Served more than 5,220 families; 20,880+ people
  • Received $6,528,296 in donated in-kind items from the community
  • Received $5,611,855 in donated volunteer and professional service hours

57% of families self-identified as people of color: 33% Hispanic/ Latino; 11% African American/Black; 1% Asian/Pacific Islander; 4% Native American; 8% Other; and, 43% White.

Please consider joining the Care Club, where your recurring monthly gifts ensure families will have a safety net throughout the year.

Join the Care Club at: Donate Today!

Family Care By the Numbers:

5 average age of the patients we serve
30% of families have single parents
$4,126 average cost to serve a family through crisis
122 average days a family receives There With Care support
720 families served in 2020
991 families served in 2021
83 families served in 2021 facing critical mental illness with their child
200 average number of families served daily
85% families we serve who live at or below 300% of the Federal Poverty Level

100% of families are referred by hospital social workers based on need and circumstances

*Data measured through 2020 and 2021.

Honored with a
GuideStar Platinum Seal of Transparency
There With Care prioritizes funding in its programs that serve families.

76% Programs17% Fundraising7% Administrative

Images:

Danville residents Blair and Brett Patzner lost their first and only daughter Chloe Patzner following a terminal diagnosis at Stanford Children’s Hospital last year, with Blair Patzner now seeking to support other families with critically ill children in that region as a volunteer with There with Care. (Contributed photo)

Danville residents Blair and Brett Patzner lost their first and only daughter Chloe Patzner following a terminal diagnosis at Stanford Children’s Hospital last year, with Blair Patzner now seeking to support other families with critically ill children in that region as a volunteer with There with Care. (Contributed photo)



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