Index  ›  health  ›  NY Post
health · NY Post ↗

14-year-old becomes triple amputee following illness that over 32M Americans had last year

NY Post Published Jun 29, 2026 Reviewed Jul 1, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Kaydin Baldwin was 13 when she contracted the flu.
13 years · age
Kaydin Baldwin, patient
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Kaydin Baldwin had 117 days in the hospital and a triple amputation.
117 days · hospital stay3 limbs · amputations
Kaydin Baldwin, patient
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Kaydin Baldwin celebrated her 14th birthday in the hospital.
14 years · age
Kaydin Baldwin, patient
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Between 32 and 57 million people had the flu between October and the end of May.
about 32 million · peopleabout 57 million · people
CDC, data source
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
More than 32 million Americans dealt with influenza last year, between 390,000 and 800,000 were hospitalized, and between 24,000 and 81,000 deaths were reported.
about 32 million · peopleabout 390000 people · hospitalizedabout 800000 people · hospitalizedabout 24000 people · deathsabout 81000 people · deaths
CDC, data source
View source ↗

See more of our coverage in your search results.

A common illness has turned one teen’s whole world upside down.

Kaydin Baldwin from Kerrville Texas, was 13 when she contracted the flu — a disease that somewhere between 32 and 57 million people had between October and the end of May, according to the CDC.

But her condition turned dire, leading to 117 days in the hospital — and a harrowing triple amputation.

Baldwin’s flu progressed, and she developed both strep pneumonia and sepsis, a life-threatening response to the infection. Doctors made the crucial decision to amputate her right arm and both her legs in order to save her life.

While rare, several complications can arise from influenza, including severe, life-threatening bacterial infections.

Kaydin’s developed necrotizing pneumonia, a rare form of bacterial pneumonia that affects those with weakened immune systems.

This infection, typically caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae or Staphylococcus aureus bacteria, can start off with flu-like symptoms, but quickly become catastrophic.

“Multi-organ failure, 117 days in the hospital, she coded for two minutes,” Kaydin’s mother, Amanda Baldwin, told KENS5.

The teen, who recently celebrated her 14th birthday in the hospital, has been fitted for prosthetic limbs and will need to complete inpatient rehabilitation before heading home.

“In a matter of moments, everything she knew — running around with friends, doing everyday tasks, dreaming about her future — was turned upside down,” her sister, Arieanna Valdez, said on a GoFundMe that was set up to help with Kaydin’s medical bills, prosthetic limbs, home modifications and other expenses.

“She is still the same bright, funny, and strong girl we’ve always known, but now she faces challenges no child should have to face. She is learning how to navigate the world all over again, with courage that inspires everyone around her.”

While more than 32 million Americans dealing with influenza last year, between 390,000 and 800,000 were hospitalized, according to CDC data. There were also between 24,000 and 81,000 reported deaths.

Though most people recover within a matter of days or weeks, some may develop moderate complications like sinus or ear infections.

Other more severe complications can include inflammation of the heart (myocarditis), brain (encephalitis) or muscle tissues, as well as multi-organ failure of the kidneys or respiratory system.

The flu can also worsen chronic health conditions, like asthma or chronic heart disease.

Warning signs of a more serious complication can include difficulty breathing, persistent pain in the chest or abdomen, dizziness, confusion, seizures, severe weakness or muscle pain and a fever or cough that improves at first, then returns or worsens.

Bacterial infections that develop from the flu are often treated with prescription antibiotics, although these don’t work on influenza as it’s a viral infection.

Public health concerns rose last winter around the increase of “super flu” diagnoses — the subclade K variant of the H3N2 influenza A virus — with hospitalizations seeing a spike in admissions around the country.

While similar to flus of previous years, doctors were particularly worried about how fast and strong symptoms came on and how contagious the illness was.

This article was originally published by NY Post ↗. citations.press indexes the source-backed facts above and links to the original. Something wrong? Corrections policy · Report an error