Blogger lets me look at what people
type in when they travel to my site and along with the “floortime” “floortime mama” but then some make me very sad “Husband wont accept autistic child” “ “Child wont talk” and I feel such kinship for the lonely fingers typing those words on
another end of the internet
These days some people who arrive on my blog
arrive after having typed in “hospital
visit for child ” or Crohn’s
When we were first getting admitted to the hospital
in February – I hunted for a something on the internet on how to prepare for a
hospital stay. I really found nothing suitable
So here I
write this post specifically for you -unknown mum or dad -about how to make a
hospital visit more bearable
Since R goes for infusions on a pretty regular
basis, DH and I have the dubious distinction of some expertise in this area
1. Explain
why and keep it simple When possible explain simply why you are at the hospital. We told R simply
that we were there to make his belly hurt go away . That the doctor needed to
look inside his tummy to see what was wrong
2. Be aware that your child is
hearing what you are saying. We found R looking up “Crohns
disease in children” and “Remicade” on Wikipedia – not necessarily what you
want a child to be reading
3. Make a schedule and tick things
off on the schedule. Most of the time children do not
get why they are in the hospital or why things are being done to them. When
things are being ticked off a list , it gives them a sense that they are making progress and that there is an end in sight.
4. Bring some home to the hospital.
Take their and your ordinary clothes with you – I know R found my tatty
nightgown and snuggling up with his bedtime story book – a signal that things
were okay and ordinary – even though life was far from ordinary.
5. Go to pediatric units
– Pediatric nurses are the finest creatures in the world and they think of things
like kiddie videos that regular nurses won’t think about
6. Treats for Hospital Day
If you need to go on a regular basis to the hospital do some special things
that are reserved just for hospital day . In our case, we eat pizza at the restaurant
, do elevators, watch some special DVD’s, unlimited video games
7. Don’t cry in front of your
child. Seriously, no matter how hard it is
8. Prioritize physical comfort.
Example, if your child needs an IV,Nitrous is very relaxing, . Numbing cream can
make all the sting go away. Make sure your child is warm.
9. Distract your child –
The hospital where we go to have a Wii Console – Every other visit, R has
whined about getting the IV out and being “all done”. This time since the Wii
had many new games, there was not a peep out of him
10. Treat your child the way you
want others to treat him. Most of us are really good
advocates for our kiddos. But I think we need to go one step more than that.
We need to treat our child with a special tenderness, treating their fears with respect.
This means for example that when a nurse jokes “oh he is going to fight that IV”, we don’t smile along with them.
If you think about it – these sorts of statements are deeply disrespectful to our kiddos.
Now I say something like “I would too if I did not understand why”.
Even though they did not mean any harm in the first place – there is a subtle shift in the energy of the room. R does not feel like mum and dad and nurse are on one side and he is on another. And the nurses treat him differently
We need to treat our child with a special tenderness, treating their fears with respect.
This means for example that when a nurse jokes “oh he is going to fight that IV”, we don’t smile along with them.
If you think about it – these sorts of statements are deeply disrespectful to our kiddos.
Now I say something like “I would too if I did not understand why”.
Even though they did not mean any harm in the first place – there is a subtle shift in the energy of the room. R does not feel like mum and dad and nurse are on one side and he is on another. And the nurses treat him differently
Hospital stays are never fun. But I hope these
tips make them a little more bearable
This article has been written for Hopeful Parents and is published there today
6 comments:
great post K
This is a wonderful post. You are so thoughtful- both with how you treat R, but also how you help out and gently "educate" the rest of us! I love your outlook! <3
Lovely, helpful comments, off to share xx
Such a lovely informative post. I am sure that many parents will find this helpful if they need to take their child to hospital. You certainly gave me some good tips! Thanks xx
Very helpful advice! Love and hugs to you : )
some extremely useful tips, especially the one about 'treating your child the way you want others to treat him'.
Its amazing how you enter completely into R's world and try to make the difficult times a little bit easy.
God bless you!
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