Small Goals, Big Celebrations

Well we left Great Ormond Street on Monday 17th October, very late at night (anyone who has been long term in hospital knows how long it takes to actually get out, especially with the wait for the dreaded TTO's - prescription meds to take home).  The plan had actually been to transfer to our local hospital but Andy and I decided unanimously that as there was nothing that the hospital was doing that we couldn't do at home so we did just that - and no-one objected!

Since getting home the work has started - each time we bring Daisy home after a long stay it's just like those early days bringing home a newborn baby.  The family has to adjust to a new person, new routine, this is what it is like for us.  Similarly, when you bring your child home from hospital after a long stay you expect things to be better, not worse.  Both are true for us, now we have adjusted to having a child with complex bladder issues, with even more pain medication, with even more sources of infection.  But the more things change, the more we rise to the challenge and the more determined we are to keep Daisy out of hospital and home with the family.

Which is why for the first time in years we actually managed a complete half term break together as a family, we even managed some days out and family time together.  This was all worth the huge military effort that had to go into place to make it happen, but it did happen, and for a fleeting few days we had what thousands of other families in the UK had for a week, a normal(ish) half term holiday.

So now we are midway through the second half of the term and it's taken this long for me to dust down the old blog and write.  Not through lack of content, but sometimes it's just hard to keep writing about the slow decline we are going through.  Even compared to earlier this year things have deteriorated.  Daisy has five different stomas/catheters that need to be dealt with, managed, dressed, washed out, cleaned, changed.... all can be potential infection sources. And infection is what we are battling with - the old nemesis Candida is back with a vengeance - colonising her bladder and two of her stoma sites, it is clearly making her unwell and causing her pain.  Having so many bugs in her bladder (she also is colonised with ecoli) means that the mitrofanoff catheter has to be on free drainage permanently to try and stop the continuous overgrowth.  She is also on permanent antifungals and antibiotics which are making her feel rough.  If the battles with the bugs were not enough we are having continuing problems with Daisy vomiting bile, mainly at night time and particularly after she has her meds.  The whole point of her gastrostomy is just to vent out bile, that also has a bag attached to it 24 hours a day, but something is stopping it working properly and Daisy will still vomit, despite our best efforts.

So we now have a child who has at least two drainage bags attached to her day and night and overnight (and often for a good portion of the day) an extension bag attached to her ileostomy bag to drain the watery, high volume output.  I find myself up to my neck in various body fluids at all shades of green a yellow and to add insult to injury the tiny (5cm) bit of rectum that was left following the colectomy surgery is still inflammed and bleeds most days.  Daisy's pain management regimen has gone through roof - she has a minimum of 24 drugs a day and often more.  She goes to school with a bottle of oxycodone now as the pain is starting to break through to the school day.  We still do not know what each day will hold.

But we can't give up on Daisy as her will to get on with life and overcome the obstacle after obstacle that is thrown in her way is huge.  Sometimes we stand back and ask are we doing the right thing for Daisy but just to look at her face when she is wheeled onto the school bus or has a visit to our hospice says it all.  All she wants is to be at home, school or hospice - these are the three places where she can be a little girl, she can feel safe and she can be happy.  We are doing everything in our power to keep her out of hospital at the moment, despite positive cultures, resistance to drugs, anaemia, increased pain, line infection risks, the pyschological impact of being a patient versus being a little girl cannot be underestimated.  For Daisy to keep fighting and to keep strong she needs to be happy, and if it means that we have to work even harder to keep her at home, so be it.

We continue to be so grateful for support of our palliative care team and our hospice, it is reassuring to know that their aim is that same as ours - to give Daisy a childhood as possible and to keep her as comfortable as possible.  We were over the moon to hear that we are going to be able to stay at our hospice for Christmas!  This will give us all a chance to enjoy Christmas and to be together without being sleep deprived or worrying about when the next med is due.  My mum is going to join us too which means Andy and I will be able to nip out to the pub for some grown up time too.

And of course, just before Christmas, on the 22nd December it's Daisy's 7th Birthday.  Seven years old - that is such a big age, I can hardly believe it, after all she has been through she will be celebrating her 7th birthday.  Every child's birthday is special but Daisy's is so special - she was born prematurely and spent her first 8 weeks in the neonatal unit, our Christmas that year was spent apart - I had a caesarean section, my first after three normal births, so had to stay in hospital, Daisy was in the intensive care unit and poor Andy had to soldier on at home with Theo, Xanthe and Jules aged 7, 5 & 2 respectively. They all came up to the hospital later on Christmas day with my dinner on a plate under some tin foil.  After that Christmas and Daisy's traumatic birth a couple of days before it doesn't matter where we are as long as we are all together, however being at Chase hospice will definitely be the icing on the cake.  Daisy's birthday is also a big excuse to party and we will be visiting the Oxford Street Disney store on the morning of her birthday for a bit of a shopping spree before meeting up with her Godparents and some close friends for a party in central London.

To get through this time of continuing uncertainties we set ourselves small goals - Celebrate Daisy's birthday, get to Chase for Christmas, then keep resetting new ones when we reach them, nothing too ambitious, things other people take for granted, but small term goals that can be changed if Daisy's health changes but things we can look forward too.  For the next few weeks I will look forward to Christmas, hopefully we will visit Santa at one of his stop off points in London, we will celebrate Daisy's 7th Birthday, we will go to Chase for Christmas, beyond that who knows, we remain in Daisy's hands but brave and indestructable Daisy continues to defy odds, scales huge mountains, challenges perecpetions day in day out so the least we can do is be there to help her do what she wants to do.


Waiting for the school bus wearing a new coat from Grandma and a Disney Santa Hat with her name on in from one of our friends at PostPals!


Watching Toy Story with Big Brother Theo - she adores Theo as he sorts out anything technical,  she calls him YoYo!

2 comments:

  1. Tough subject, beautifully expressed. SO glad you're home x

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  2. Anonymous7:44 pm

    Great post. What a lovely family you have. Glad you are able to go to the hospice. Your other children must be such troupers :)

    ReplyDelete

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