Birth Defect: Cerebral Palsy - Cerebral palsy can occur at birth when there is brain damage or it can occur anytime in the first few years of life. Cerebral palsy affects the child's...
When Your Child’s Birth Defects Turn You into a Home Healthcare Provider
There is the misconception that birth defects are somehow only something that might make a child stick out in a crowd, such as a shortened leg, a club foot, or a missing limb. In other cases the opinion might be that a birth defect is something that affects the inner organs of a child and upon surgery is not noticeable. Even as these scenarios are true upon occasion, when your child’s birth defects turn you into a home healthcare provider, you will most certainly battle with feelings of guilt, inadequacy, fear, and a severe lack of sleep.
Birth Defect: Cleft Lip/Palate - Common birth defects include cleft lip and cleft palate. More than 5,000 infants every year in the United States are born with either cleft lip or cleft...
You nursery will rival a hospital ward with its blinking machines, beeping gadgets, and monitors that alert you to your child’s heartbeat, breathing, and also nutrient intake. When at first confronted with durable medical equipment, many a parent is shocked and feels woefully inadequate. Fortunately, home healthcare agencies are at your beck and call and able to train you in the use of the machines until you feel comfortable with them. It is a wise idea to involve each and every family member in the training, including an outside caregiver such as a babysitter who has declared herself willing to be called upon to provide you with babysitting services for your child.
Birth Defect: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome - Fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) is a birth defect that is the result of maternal drinking of alcoholic beverages during the pregnancy. It is a preventable...
Your best course of action involves the services of a devoted social worker who will be there to oversee the collaboration of different service agencies and who will gently but firmly help you to step into the position of your child’s home healthcare provider. Here are some things to remember as you are ready to embrace this development in your child’s health needs:
Birth Defect: Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome - Hypoplastic left heart syndrome is a congenital heart defect present at birth. It is a rare heart condition that affects the lower left chamber of the...
Birth Defect: Phenylketonuria (PKU) - This is a rare birth defect that can be detected by a heel prick blood test at birth. Left undetected PKU can cause mental retardation.
Birth Defects Affecting Fetal Limbs - While any kind of birth defect is most heartbreaking to the parents of an infant, the ones which affect the limbs are especially problematic, since generally...
Birth Defects and the Health Care System - When you first learn that your child will suffer from a birth defect, the odds are very good that you will be handed a list of resources. Many of these...
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All articles on this site are for information only and should not be treated as medical advice.
If you experience any symptoms, consult a medical professional.