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25 Ağustos 2016 Perşembe

Should you take your children to visit sick relatives? | Ranjana Srivastava

During the final weeks of her life, all spent in an Indian hospital, my grandmother deteriorated peacefully, and gracefully, until she slipped into a coma and breathed her last. My 10-year-old self remembers a thing or two about this time.


The hospital’s egg curry, a much-loved north Indian dish, was amazing. The tiny cakes with real butter icing that defied all dietary guidelines weren’t bad either so my cousins and I, gathered in the small room, took turns selecting the menu and outwitting the nurses, who sweetly played along, praising the voracious appetite of our fading grandma. Enveloped in grief at their mother’s impending death, the adults couldn’t bear to look at the food – if our mirth seemed out of place, they never said so.


As we wolfed down the food and settled down to another game of Scrabble, my diminutive grandma would open her eyes to peer at us. We often sat within her line of sight and sometimes when she wasn’t tired, she would lift her hand in blessing. She didn’t have any last-minute advice for us neither did she say goodbye. She never cried and she never complained. In fact, she barely spoke but she smiled when possible. The kind of quiet, contented smile that said she was at peace with life even though she was dying far too young. I remember thinking how much she loved her grandchildren – the feeling was so powerful and visceral that it never struck me there could be suffering behind it.


But my grandmother’s skin had turned bright yellow and explanations were called for.


“Why is she yellow?”


“They say it’s jaundice,” the adults replied.


“Why does she have a drip?”


“The doctor ordered it.”


“Why is she sleepy?”


“She is tired.”


“Is she hungry?”


“No.”


“Then, can we have the egg curry?”




It was through incidental observations that as children we became witness to life drawing to a close.




There were no doctors in our family and there was no sophisticated understanding of the process of illness and dying. Since the adults didn’t know much, there were no customised, careful explanations for the children. In fact, as loss stared us in the face, there was very little to say. But what we lacked in words we made up for in another way – we stuck together to observe the ritual of dying.


Alongside our parents, we watched our beloved grandmother sleep, awake, groan and smile. We watched her totter to the bathroom and then confined to her bed. We watched her eat half her food and then none at all. We learnt to scrutinise the doctors’ expressions and understand that our sorrow wasn’t their fault. We saw how hard the nurses worked and came to fill in their gaps without rancour.


Thus it was through incidental observations that as children we became witness to life drawing to a close. It was a gradual and real schooling so that when our grandmother finally died, we were sad but neither inconsolable nor traumatised. Years later, as grown-ups, we find ourselves helping our own children navigate illness and loss – as the cycle continues, we summon our own memories about the importance of just having been at the bedside.


I found myself thinking of all this when I looked after an elderly patient who came for an elective procedure which went horribly wrong. As organ after organ failed, my patient retained an uncommon spirit of optimism, expressing hope that he would get home to see his grandchildren whom he greatly missed.


In the week he became irretrievably ill, his daughter came up to me, wringing her hands.


“What should I do about the kids?”


I waited, sensing there was more. As it turned out, her children, 8 and 13, had not been in at all. She had protected them from his temporary problems and when his condition took another downturn, she was grateful that they were occupied at school. She maintained an anxious vigil over him but kept hoping for a day to come when her father was well enough to greet his grandchildren like his old self.


“What are you afraid of?” I gently asked.


“That they’ll have lifelong nightmares. Isn’t it better if they remember him being well?”


I felt a stab of regret. It’s true that her father looked pale and gaunt but the warmth in his eyes was unmistakeable. And he could still speak, telling me he didn’t have long and thanking me for my care. He didn’t want to burden his daughter but I longed to fulfil his final desire without compounding her dilemma.


“What would you do if you were me?” she tearfully asked.




GPs report meeting adults … who fall apart when a parent falls ill because they have never encountered illness




There, she had asked the question I had dreaded. I believed that although there had been better opportunities, a visit to their grandfather’s bedside would still be meaningful and provide an opening to a later unavoidable conversation with the children about illness and mortality. I thought the children were old enough to be left confused by the turn of events and wondered what views they might form of what happened in a hospital. I feared that their mother, coping with bereavement, might struggle to find reasonable explanations later. And I fretted that the emerging disagreement in the family over the children would test adult relationships. So I told her sincerely, “I would find it heartbreaking but I’d try to bring them in.”


When it comes to children visiting sick or dying relatives in hospital, every family decides differently. Granted, hospitals aren’t designed for the ease of young (or old) visitors. There is a maddening lack of space, chair and amenities and visitors can feel conscious of getting in the way. It’s unlikely that these deficiencies will disappear anytime soon though people do find their way around them.


Studies show that childhood bereavement alone is unlikely to be related to adult outcomes. Rather, factors such as parental support, open communication, age-appropriate explanation and the presence of other adverse social and psychological events may have more impact than the fact of the death.


In hospitals and nursing homes, there is a stark lack of young visitors to the bedsides of their elderly relatives. When children do visit, they are nearly always parked on a device, making real engagement impossible. We seem happy to let our children Google illness, just not let them near it. But making illness and mortality invisible to our children has unexpected consequences. GPs report meeting adults in their 40s who fall apart when a parent falls ill because they have never encountered illness up close and don’t know how to deal with their own emotions, let alone their children’s.


There is an epidemic of loneliness among our elderly population as they trudge from residential care to hospital and back again. For staff, the loneliness is in plain sight – every doctor has met a patient who begs to stay an extra day because “it’s nice here, people talk to me.”


Addressing loneliness is hard when there are a dozen other priorities even though a visit from a loved one is worth a dozen pills. And the comfort of strangers is no match for the consolation of family, so every day we convince and cajole relatives to visit, until it becomes a job as routine as checking bloods.


Patients cheer up when anyone visits but when children come they have an unfailing effect on lifting the mood and alleviating the loneliness of patients. Occasionally, I’ve needed to take one of my children on a weekend ward-round and felt bad about it. But my misgivings have melted at the sheer delight of patients. Nothing banishes the dreariness of being in hospital than an innocent banter with a child. The food tastes nicer, the pain seems bearable and life itself seems more hopeful. Indeed, children inject a kind of optimism and happiness in patients that it’s hard to replicate. Countless patients have thanked my children, saying, “You remind me of my grandchildren,” prompting one green medical student to ask me, “Then where are their grandchildren?”


Unfortunately, for my patient, time ran out and his grandchildren didn’t come in. But the encounter was another reminder of the therapeutic benefit of young visitors to the bedside.


We cannot forever shield our children from the realities of life. It’s normal to feel apprehensive but there are steps parents can take to prepare everyone for a visit. We need to protect our children but we also need to spare a thought for our elderly who have often given years to building a bond with our young only to be deprived of it when they most need it. Being sick is hard enough, they don’t need to be lonely too.



Should you take your children to visit sick relatives? | Ranjana Srivastava

17 Haziran 2014 Salı

Two Mers cases in US did not spread to relatives or healthcare workers

Neither of the two US situations of Mers has spread the typically fatal infection to family members or to healthcare employees who taken care of them in Indiana and Florida, the Centers for Condition Handle and Prevention said on Tuesday.


Both of the US circumstances concerned healthcare employees who traveled to the United States in May from Saudi Arabia, which remains at the center of the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (Mers) outbreak.


The CDC said test results of specimens from each of the home members and the healthcare staff in hospitals the place the contaminated men have been treated tested unfavorable for each energetic infection and any signs of earlier infection with the virus.


Efforts to get in touch with folks who may possibly have come into get in touch with with the infected guys throughout their travels to the United States are virtually finished, and so far none of these travel contacts has shown signs of MERS infection, the company mentioned.


Mers, which brings about coughing, fever and at times fatal pneumonia, has been reported in much more than 800 patients, largely in Saudi Arabia. It has spread to neighboring nations and, in a few situations, to Europe, Asia and the United States. At least 315 men and women around the world have died from the condition.



Two Mers cases in US did not spread to relatives or healthcare workers

28 Mayıs 2014 Çarşamba

Relatives take away Sierra Leone Ebola sufferers from clinic

ebola

Wellness staff don protective fits in the course of an operation at an Ebola isolation centre in the village of Kampungu, in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Photograph: Ho New / Reuters/REUTERS




Family members of Ebola sufferers in Sierra Leone have been removing their loved ones from local community overall health centres in spite of protests from health care employees, amid warnings from the Globe Overall health Organisation that the deadly and hugely infectious illness is nonetheless spreading across West Africa nearly two months after an outbreak was initial reported.


Guinea’s capital Conakry has recorded its 1st new Ebola cases in a lot more than a month, although 5 individuals have died in Sierra Leone’s very first confirmed outbreak of Ebola virus, according to the WHO.


The spread of the outbreak, which Guinean authorities had said had been contained, risks additional complicating the fight against the virus in a region previously struggling with weak healthcare methods and porous borders.


“The predicament is serious, you cannot say it is underneath handle as circumstances are continuing and it is spreading geographically,” Dr Pierre Formenty, a WHO professional who just lately returned from Guinea, informed a news briefing in Geneva on Wednesday.


“There was no decline. In truth it is due to the fact we are not ready to capture all the outbreak that we have been beneath the impression there was a decline,” he stated.


In Sierra Leone, the family of one particular female stated they eliminated her from the clinic in Koindu town, in the country’s east, simply because they did not believe in the healthcare method and feared she would die if a planned transfer to the common hospital in the town of Kenema went ahead, Amara Jambai, the wellness ministry’s director of illness prevention and management, advised Reuters.


On Wednesday, Jambai informed the BBC that a total of 6 sufferers had been “aggressively” removed from care in Koindu, in defiance of health care workers.


Ebola, a haemorrhagic fever with a fatality rate of up to 90%, is believed to have killed nearly 200 folks in neighbouring Guinea and Liberia since March in the initial deadly look of the illness in West Africa.


The West African outbreak spread from a sparsely inhabited corner of Guinea to the capital, Conakry, and into Liberia, creating panic across a area struggling with weak healthcare methods and porous borders.


When asked about the risk posed by the woman’s removal from hospital in Kenema, Jambai said: “She can infect others, her household members and also these in the neighborhood. There is no news of her problem simply because she has been taken away so we need to have to search and uncover her and make certain that it (Ebola) does not spread.”


Jambai said lawmakers and local community leaders would try out to speak to family members members and persuade them to return her to hospital. There has been no news of the woman, whose identity has been stored secret, because she was taken from Koindu to her village nearby, Jambai said.


In Guinea, Telimele and Boffa – two districts north of Conakry that had been previously untouched by the condition – the two confirmed outbreaks by way of laboratory testing, the WHO mentioned. Twelve situations, including four deaths, have been reported there amongst 23 and 26 May, although suspected Ebola infections had been documented in the adjacent districts of Boke and Dubreka.


Aboubacar Sidiki Diakité, who heads the Guinean government’s efforts to halt the virus’s spread, mentioned the origins of all the new outbreaks had been traced back to cases in Conakry.


“The problem is that there are households that refuse to give details to wellness staff. They hid their sick to try to deal with them by way of classic techniques,” he told Reuters.


The WHO has documented a complete of 281 clinical circumstances of Ebola, such as 185 deaths in Guinea given that the virus was very first identified as Ebola in March. The condition is believed to have killed eleven men and women in Liberia, believed there have been no new cases there because 9 April.


Ebola is endemic to Democratic Republic of Congo, Gabon, Uganda and South Sudan. Researchers feel the West African outbreak was induced by a new strain of the virus.




Relatives take away Sierra Leone Ebola sufferers from clinic

16 Mart 2014 Pazar

Bereaved relatives criticise police watchdog more than deaths in custody

Sean Rigg

Sean Rigg, who died in police custody in 2008. Photograph: PA




Bereaved families have criticised the police watchdog – the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) – saying its members lack “empathy, sensitivity and compassion” when investigating deaths in police custody.


In an IPCC report into the way the commission handles inquiries, relatives stated they “felt they and individuals who had died were wrongly characterised or unfairly judged”. And the report noted the impression that police receive a lot more favourable treatment than members of the public.


The report, published on Monday, called for much better training for IPCC staff on problems associated to race and ethnicity, mental well being and learning disabilities.


It was welcomed by Marcia Rigg, the sister of Sean Rigg, a forty-year-outdated musician with psychological health difficulties who died in police custody in 2008. But she said the watchdog has “not won the families more than nevertheless”.


The overview recognized psychological wellness as a key concern in numerous of the deaths in police custody the IPCC investigates.


About half of the people who died in those circumstances in 2012-13, and practically two-thirds of those who apparently took their very own lives afterwards, are known to have had psychological well being issues.


The 111-webpage report also comprehensive issues raised over “inadequate consideration to detail and a failure to collect and collate all proof or to pursue all realistic lines of inquiry”.


The IPCC’s overview additional: “Families, their representatives and police officers criticised us for taking too long to comprehensive investigations, leading to additional pressure for all involved.”


It also set out a series of proposals created to increase IPCC investigations, like making police officers attend witness interviews as soon as attainable following an incident.


The charity Inquest contributed to the investigation. Its co-director, Deborah Coles, mentioned: “The absence of a robust police watchdog has allowed corruption and hazardous practices to go unchecked.


“Family members and public confidence will only be achieved if the IPCC delivers an investigation procedure that assures wrongdoing, misconduct and bad practice is uncovered and police are appropriately held to account.


Marcia Rigg mentioned: “We hope all the recommendations are implemented with no delay, and that as nicely as assisting us the evaluation will support other families and lead to efficient change in the way deaths in police custody are investigated.”


She criticised the unique inquiry into her brother’s death as a “Mickey Mouse investigation”.


She said: “In the first stages, a whole lot of our questions were not answered.


“We have been really concerned as to why the officers have been not being interviewed quickly and we had been extremely concerned that the officers have been allowed to collude in excess of their statements of fact whereas an ordinary member of the public would definitely not be permitted to do that. We found that extremely insensitive.”


The IPCC review explained there had been some reported examples of good practice in the commission’s engagement with bereaved households.


With reference to problems of discrimination, the watchdog explained it would, in all situations, take into account whether this required investigation.


It also stated it was supplying ongoing refresher instruction for both investigators and casework managers above how to deal with allegations of discrimination.




Bereaved relatives criticise police watchdog more than deaths in custody