A Nurse and Patient Reunion 30 years in the Making by Ariel Dun - City News Group, Inc.

Community Calendar

FEBRUARY
S M T W T F S
01 02 03 04 05 06 07
08 09 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
View Events
Submit Events
directory

A Nurse and Patient Reunion 30 years in the Making

By Ariel Dun, Community Writer
September 4, 2020 at 10:54am. Views: 75

Rob Newbold, RN, had no interest in using social media until last year when his wife, Jeanne Newbold, told him that one of his former patients was searching for him on Facebook.  In a May, 2016, Facebook post, Christina “Mouse” Jennings shared a black-and-white photo of herself holding a poster that read “Searching for Nurse Robb who worked at Loma Linda University Medical Center Peds Intensive Care Unit, 1986-1987.”

Jennings, 31, a revenue analyst at the University of Iowa, was a baby when Rob Newbold took care of her at Loma Linda University Medical Center’s pediatric intensive care unit (PICU). She and her mother relocated from Rancho Cucamonga, California, to Dubuque, Iowa in 1992.

According to the poster’s handwritten message, Jennings had been born with tricuspid artresia, a congenital heart disease. “During one of my many hospital stays, Nurse Robb saved my life!” she wrote, inviting the public to share the photo using the hashtag #findnurserobb.  “I told Rob he needed to respond to Christina,” Jeanne Newbold said. “I’d helped him set up a Facebook account in February much to his dismay, and after learning about Christina’s search I helped him begin to use it.”

There was no doubt that Newbold was Nurse Robb — in the mid-1980s he was the only person named Rob who worked in the medical center’s PICU.  Newbold had worked as a PICU nurse at LLUMC for 20 years after graduating from College of the Desert in Palm Desert with his RN degree in 1983. He later joined the staff of Kaiser Permanente Medical Center – Fontana in 2002, working in the ER and later, in the operating room. In 2006, he began working in the operating room at Redlands Community Hospital before retiring in 2010.

Newbold and Jennings began chatting on Facebook occasionally, and less than a year after the #FindNurseRobb campaign began, he reconnected with his former patient during an extended trip to Chicago to visit his brother Jim Newbold.  On June 28, he borrowed a car from his brother and made the three-and-a-half hour drive to Dubuque. The initial reunion took place at the hotel where Rob was staying. “Reconnecting with Nurse Rob was an amazing feeling — I had tears in my eyes,” Jennings said. “My husband, Ryan and I both felt like we had known Rob all our lives.”

Leonard Bailey, MD was Jennings’ surgeon, and taking care of sick babies and children with cardiac conditions was commonplace for every PICU nurse, Newbold said.  A highlight of Newbold’s visit came when he held Christina and Ryan’s 7-week-old daughter, Elleora. “I held Christina 30 years ago in the PICU just like I held Elleora,” he said.  Meeting Newbold was also meaningful to Jenning’s mom, Beth Gilbreath. “Nurse Rob had a major impact on my life and on Christina’s as a compassionate, respectful, caring and above all, kind nurse,” Gilbreath said.

She shared a memory of an event that took place after her daughter’s first surgery, when Jennings was about 4 months old. Christina began experiencing complications after she was admitted to the PICU. During her stay she had problems eating and would sometimes stop breathing, Gilbreath said, "One day Christina was stable and Newbold encouraged Gilbreath to go to the cafeteria to get something to eat. When she returned about 20 minutes later, a nurse stationed outside PICU asked her to wait as a procedure was being done on a patient. A few minutes later Newbold told Gilbreath that her daughter had coded and paddles had been used to restart her heart."

“While I don’t remember the family or an incident they describe when Christina experienced cardiac arrest and was given CPR during my shift; meeting her as an adult with a new baby felt great,” Newbold said.

During his two-and-a-half day stay in Dubuque, Jennings and Gilbreath, a real estate agent, told Newbold about their lives and showed him the sights including the property where the 1989 movie Field of Dreams was filmed. “Before I left, it felt like they were family,” Newbold said.  Jennings, who has had four major cardiac surgeries, the most recent at age 25, said she has outlived doctors’ predictions about how long she will live several times. “While six-month checkups with my pediatric cardiologist are a reminder of my heart condition, I now feel the healthiest I’ve ever felt,” she said.

 

Related Articles

Photo Courtesy of: Loveland Church

By Carl M. Dameron, Contributing Writer

February 20, 2026 at 03:16pm. Views: 448

The keynote speaker is Chad Brown, who will share insights on his “radical, innovative, and cutting-edge’ approach to social progress.

Photo Courtesy of: Beasternchen

By Jonah Whitman, Community Writer

February 18, 2026 at 05:30pm. Views: 324

When love is rooted in faith and commitment, it becomes a story that never fades with time.

Photo Courtesy of: Pexels

By MedLine, Community Writer

February 18, 2026 at 05:30pm. Views: 235

When pressure builds, your body keeps score, pause, breathe, and take back control before stress takes more than it should.

Photo Courtesy of: Leopold Boettcher

By Samuel Everly, Community Writer

February 18, 2026 at 05:31pm. Views: 218

A simple thumbs up can shine brighter than you think, lifting someone’s spirit with just one small gesture.

Photo Courtesy of: City News Group

By Anthony Romano, Community Writer

February 18, 2026 at 05:31pm. Views: 312

Crispy, salty, and surprisingly addictive, these baked kale chips turn a simple green into a guilt-free snack favorite.

Photo Courtesy of: City News Group

By Lena Brooks, Community Writer

February 18, 2026 at 05:31pm. Views: 223

Wrinkles don’t stand a chance when you know these quick closet hacks that smooth your look in minutes.

Photo Courtesy of: City News Group

By Patrick Boone, Community Writer

February 18, 2026 at 05:31pm. Views: 224

Stop the drip and save the day, sometimes a simple tighten-and-seal is all it takes.

Photo Courtesy of: Planet Fox

By Ellis Greenwood, Community Writer

February 18, 2026 at 05:31pm. Views: 276

From sandy stretches to clay-heavy ground, Southern California soil tells a story every gardener should learn to read.

Photo Courtesy of: City News Group

By Paige Mercer, Community Writer

February 18, 2026 at 05:31pm. Views: 254

Bright washi tape patterns turn everyday light switch covers into playful design accents that instantly refresh a room.

Photo Courtesy of: Geralt

By Graham Holt, Community Writer

February 18, 2026 at 05:31pm. Views: 749

Hydrogen-powered cars offer a glimpse into a future where clean energy and long-distance driving finally meet.

Photo Courtesy of: City News Group

By Lucas Hart, Community Writer

February 18, 2026 at 05:31pm. Views: 268

Children can learn and have fun at the same time with this cool science project!

Photo Courtesy of: City News Group

By Margie Miller, Your Realtor, Community Writer

February 18, 2026 at 05:31pm. Views: 244

Offering both visual appeal and emotional resonance, well-staged homes not only sell faster, but they also sell smarter.

--> -->