How do you instruct someone in subtleties you are only just starting to understand yourself?
As we prepared to allow Susan to spend an afternoon, night and most of the following day (so there was no getting around the fact that she would have to take a peanut dose while away from us), I struggled with this question.
I wondered if I was crazy to entrust my child to another?
(Even a parent of a child with food allergies...who also happened to be a doctor.)
I reminded myself that Susan has always refused to be defined by her food allergies.
(I reminded myself that we DO NOT want her to be defined by her food allergies.)
I stared at my computer screen, trying to find the words that would ensure my daughter's safety. All the while, a part of me wondered why I would take such a risk...while another part of me asserted that the risk was not so great, and that the only way we could see ourselves through the clinical trial was to try to find some sort of balance.
As I am sure any parent of any child (and most especially those with a child with special needs) can attest, there are certain things a parent knows that they...well, just know about their child. A parent sees things in their own child that others -- even those looking carefully and listening attentively -- will miss. That's just the nature of the relationship between a parent and a child. And so I wrote, and I edited, and reviewed with my husband and finally...I decided I just had to...trust the universe.
Susan's "operating instructions" were entitled "Susan's Peanuts."
Peanut Dosing Instructions
As we prepared to allow Susan to spend an afternoon, night and most of the following day (so there was no getting around the fact that she would have to take a peanut dose while away from us), I struggled with this question.
I wondered if I was crazy to entrust my child to another?
(Even a parent of a child with food allergies...who also happened to be a doctor.)
I reminded myself that Susan has always refused to be defined by her food allergies.
(I reminded myself that we DO NOT want her to be defined by her food allergies.)
I stared at my computer screen, trying to find the words that would ensure my daughter's safety. All the while, a part of me wondered why I would take such a risk...while another part of me asserted that the risk was not so great, and that the only way we could see ourselves through the clinical trial was to try to find some sort of balance.
As I am sure any parent of any child (and most especially those with a child with special needs) can attest, there are certain things a parent knows that they...well, just know about their child. A parent sees things in their own child that others -- even those looking carefully and listening attentively -- will miss. That's just the nature of the relationship between a parent and a child. And so I wrote, and I edited, and reviewed with my husband and finally...I decided I just had to...trust the universe.
Susan's "operating instructions" were entitled "Susan's Peanuts."
Peanut Dosing Instructions
1) In the morning, with breakfast, Susan should take:
10 mg Zyrtec
20 mg Famotidine
2) One hour before dose, Susan should take:
20 mg Omeprazole
3) Preparing Susan's peanut dose:
-- Place the taller Bullet
Blender Cup on the counter in advance
(this will
allow pre-measured peanut protein and chocolate whey to settle)
-- Fill the cup with
milk (leave about 1/4 inch at the top)
-- Blend using the
Bullet Blender base
(Do not run
for more than 60 seconds continuously -- mix well, please)
-- The short Bullet
Blender Cup is a back-up, just in case something goes wrong
4) The peanut dose:
-- Susan should have a
small snack just before she takes her peanut dose
-- Please check Susan's
skin (cheeks, chest, back) just before she takes her dose
-- I packed ones that
she likes in the bag with her peanut dose
-- Susan drinks her
peanut dose with a straw (in the bag)
-- She will need to
lick the blender blades in addition to drinking the dose
-- Once she has
finished the dose, please pour milk down the sides of the cup to ensure she gets as much
of the dose as possible. She will drink
that, too.
-- No need to wash it
-- just screw the top on and send it home with Susan!
5) The 2-hour observation period
-- Calm, quiet activity
(movie, reading, board game, craft)
-- Check Susan's skin
(cheeks, chest, back) every ten minutes (I use the snooze function on my phone)
-- At each 10 minute
mark, ask Susan how she feels -- be sure she really thinks about that question
-- Please complete the
dosing journal (in the bag)
6) In case of reaction
-- Skin changes --
observe.
We have not
treated skin changes. It is best to
watch to see what is happening. Susan can
tolerate some itchiness and they have historically resolved without intervention
(eventually, even if not right away)
-- Nausea -- provide
support, coach relaxation, remind Susan that she has tolerated this dose
-- Vomiting
Provide
support.
Call
on-call doctor for clinical trial.
It is
likely that you will not do anything else.
-- For any other
symptoms, it is preferred that you contact the on-call doctor for the clinical
trial first, as their goal is not to provide medical intervention (such as Benadryl) that might mask other symptoms.
-- In the case of rapidly
progressing symptoms such as difficulty breathing or sensation that her throat
is swelling, administer Susan's Epi-Pen and page the doctor on call for the
clinical trial. In the case of an
emergency, get her the help she needs and then contact us.
We have found that Susan does best if she has a mid-morning and
mid-afternoon snack. She has a variety
of options -- it doesn't have to be much, just something so that her stomach is
not empty.
That was it.
1 1/2 pages.
So much information, and yet...so little.
At the bottom, I provided both my and my husband's cell phone numbers and witnessed permission for the Hertz family to seek medical care for Susan if need be. As I signed in front of a witness, I felt slightly ill. I so hoped there would be no need for anyone ever to look any more closely at that piece of paper than we had...
The Clinical Trial Coordinator and doctors knew about and supported the plan. Everyone knew how to reach everyone.
Wanting to believe, but worried about the unknown (both for Susan and for Lydia and her family), we dropped Susan off at Lydia's house on Friday afternoon...and headed toward Bemidji, Minnesota.
That was it.
1 1/2 pages.
So much information, and yet...so little.
At the bottom, I provided both my and my husband's cell phone numbers and witnessed permission for the Hertz family to seek medical care for Susan if need be. As I signed in front of a witness, I felt slightly ill. I so hoped there would be no need for anyone ever to look any more closely at that piece of paper than we had...
The Clinical Trial Coordinator and doctors knew about and supported the plan. Everyone knew how to reach everyone.
Wanting to believe, but worried about the unknown (both for Susan and for Lydia and her family), we dropped Susan off at Lydia's house on Friday afternoon...and headed toward Bemidji, Minnesota.
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