MORA, Minn. – Born four months premature, Michaela Johnson was so tiny she fit into the palm of her mother's hand.
She was blind, suffered from chronic lung disease and had epilepsy. Doctors warned that she might need a ventilator for the rest of her life.
Frightened and overwhelmed, Michaela's parents sought help from a government program that covers in-home nursing for medically fragile Minnesota children and people with disabilities.
To the couple's dismay, Pine County officials said no. Michaela's mother, Michelle, remembers county officials telling them to call 911 if their daughter's oxygen machine stopped working or if she suffered a prolonged seizure.
A year later, the Johnsons applied again, and again Pine County said no.
Finally, worn down by constant anxiety and repeated trips to the emergency room, the Johnsons turned to their last resort: They sold their house and moved 40 miles west to Kanabec County.
Two months later, Michaela was approved for more than $60,000 a year in home care and medical equipment.
"You get to the point where you're told 'no' so many times that you have no choice: You have to pack up and leave," Michelle Johnson said from the family's new home in Mora.