Tuesday 26 June 2007

Puppet on a string

Not a conversation anyone should have about their child. How long do you want CPR to be performed? Do you want them to be put on a ventilator? Do you want them to die at home, at the hospice or in hospital?

We had the meeting to plan for dealing with illness when he's well, when he's in decline and at the end.

There were so many people there they had to use a seminar room:

- Oncology consultant
- Palliative care consultant
- Paediatric consultant
- Social services
- Community nurse
- Clinical Nurse Specialist (oncology)
- Clinical Nurse Specialist (family support)
- Hospice outreach
- Home nursing agency
- The parents

Good of them all to give up so much time for a little boy. But so hard to endure. Having to go through his history yet again. Having to discuss symptoms that will show the tumour is progressing. Having to discuss what treatment it is and is not worth having at the end. Emotionally draining. And then back to work.

Someone said how brave we were for having the meeting. I get unreasonably annoyed at that type of statement. I don't feel brave nor do I think we are being brave. I feel we have no option and sometimes just a bit patronised.

Got home to an excited boy. The hospice had got him a signed photograph from Mr Tumble (children's TV character). He was thrilled, wanting to show the photo round the house. Made the emotion from the meeting that bit harder to handle.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

You know what, though, it is brave. It seems unavoidable, but I've seen parents who refuse to have the conversation, and wait for health care providers to make the decisions, piecemeal.