Complex surgery
It was during her stay there that British surgeon David
Nott realized that Landina would likely die within days if she did not
receive an operation, Channel 4 News reported. Her skull had been so
damaged by the house fire that it left her brain exposed to the risk of
a fatal infection.
Since the complex operation could not be carried out in quake-ravaged country, the doctor helped to set her up with a British charity that specializes in craniofacial reconstructive surgery.
The charity, Facing the World, did not know where Landina's family was or if any of her relatives were even alive. With her medical records destroyed in the quake, they didn't even have names to work with.
Facing the World brought the baby to London, paying for her travel and medical costs and acting as her temporary guardian.
In March, Channel 4 News' Inigo Gilmore returned to Haiti to help the charity hunt for Landina's family.
With the publicity surrounding the story, several people pretended to be family members, thinking they could benefit from the relationship.
Gilmore interviewed people at the first hospital Landina had been treated at and was told that her mother was possibly living in a slum area of Port-au-Prince called Bizoton. He put out a radio announcement and located Seignon, a 26-year-old mother of four.
Seignon had an admission card from the hospital bearing Landina's name, Channel 4 News said.
"When the notice was put out on a radio, a friend raced to my house and said, 'Please sit down.' She said, 'This may sounds like something from the movies but sometimes movies do come true. I need to tell you that Landina is alive.'"