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The Boy in the Bubble
I'm half-heartedly watching an episode of "American Experience" on PBS about The Boy in the Bubble. It's a fascinating subject, I just can't bear to watch that much television. So I'm half listening and half doing other things, like updating my resume.
I have such mixed feelings about some of the "heroic" measures that some doctors take with special needs kids. I'm sure I could feel differently if I were in that situation, but for now, it just makes me nervous. I mean, this kid was trapped in this plastic playroom because doctors promised his parents a cure for his immunodeficiency and then couldn't do it.
I see the same thing with some of the micro-preemies that are in my program. One of my clients is a former 21-weeker and it is just amazing and staggering to think about all of the interventions that were performed to keep her alive. And then who knows what the long-term effects are going to be? She's 6 months old now and looks/acts like a 3 month old, so it's hard to tell. There are soooo many things that can go wrong with micro-preemies.
Some countries won't even attempt to intervene on babies born before a certain time, like 24 or 26 or 28 weeks. As a clinician I can see the reasoning, but as a parent? What if we get pregnant and have a micro-preemie? Will I be singing the same tune?
Sometimes I think too much.
I have such mixed feelings about some of the "heroic" measures that some doctors take with special needs kids. I'm sure I could feel differently if I were in that situation, but for now, it just makes me nervous. I mean, this kid was trapped in this plastic playroom because doctors promised his parents a cure for his immunodeficiency and then couldn't do it.
I see the same thing with some of the micro-preemies that are in my program. One of my clients is a former 21-weeker and it is just amazing and staggering to think about all of the interventions that were performed to keep her alive. And then who knows what the long-term effects are going to be? She's 6 months old now and looks/acts like a 3 month old, so it's hard to tell. There are soooo many things that can go wrong with micro-preemies.
Some countries won't even attempt to intervene on babies born before a certain time, like 24 or 26 or 28 weeks. As a clinician I can see the reasoning, but as a parent? What if we get pregnant and have a micro-preemie? Will I be singing the same tune?
Sometimes I think too much.
no subject
And I've probably done the math of her current age wrong, because she's definitely older than a gestational age of 1.5. When we did her assessment, which was probably 2 months ago, she was testing at 2-3 months and that was right around her GA. So she's older now. But yes, right now she's on target with her adjusted age... but it's still early to tell about long-term effects. She was very lucky in terms of not having brain bleeds or any major early signs of cerebral palsy. I'm pretty sure the retinopathy she has is resolving as well and she isn't showing hearing concerns yet. She's INCREDIBLY lucky.
But she's in the serious minority. And I'm VERY curious to see how she progresses... but I'd really like to see who she is at 7 or so.
My step-niece was born early, I want to say 25 weeks or so, and as a baby she was fairly lucky... but she's got a lot of sensory concerns, CP, learning disabilities, etc. now. I'm not saying I wish she wasn't alive (even though I don't talk to them anymore), I'm just saying that both of those kids are pretty lucky and some of the babies the doctors end up "saving" live pretty tormented lives.