[vc_section full_width=”stretch_row” css=”.vc_custom_1585128400841{background-color: #576283 !important;}”][vc_row][vc_column][vc_empty_space][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column width=”1/3″][/vc_column][vc_column width=”2/3″][vc_empty_space][mk_fancy_title strip_tags=”true” tag_name=”h1″ color=”#ffffff” size=”60″ line_height=”90″ font_weight=”bolder” margin_bottom=”0″ font_family=”none”]Guide for parents after diagnosis[/mk_fancy_title][mk_divider style=”thick_solid” divider_width=”custom_width” custom_width=”70″ align=”left” border_color=”#a1aabe” visibility=”hidden-sm”][mk_fancy_title strip_tags=”true” tag_name=”h5″ color=”#ffffff” size=”16″ font_weight=”400″ margin_bottom=”0″ font_family=”none”]Help by others[/mk_fancy_title][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][vc_empty_space height=”64px”][/vc_column][/vc_row][/vc_section][vc_section full_width=”stretch_row” css=”.vc_custom_1585137324203{background-color: #ffffff !important;}”][vc_row][vc_column][vc_empty_space][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column width=”1/3″][vc_wp_custommenu title=”After diagnosis” nav_menu=”263″ el_class=”leftsubmenu”][/vc_column][vc_column width=”2/3″][mk_image src=”https://www.cmtc.nl/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/help.jpg” image_size=”full”][vc_column_text disable_pattern=”false” margin_bottom=”10″ css=”.vc_custom_1599144450611{margin-bottom: 0px !important;}”]This section is for friends and family. Many close friends feel uncomfortable asking questions about the development or course of your childâs illness. They also often feel powerless because they do not know how to help you. Do you notice that someone who is close to you and cares about you finds it difficult to talk to you or offer help? Then have them read this special article.
The most important advice for the environment of a family with a child who requires more care is: do not be afraid to ask questions about the childâs disability or illness. Openly tell them that you want to know more. Follow the development of the child together with the parents. Remember that they have less time to do fun things than before. Do not compare your own children with the child who has a disability / illness. Provide emotional and practical support where possible and make it a habit to regularly call just to say âhelloâ.[/vc_column_text][mk_fancy_title strip_tags=”true” color=”#576283″ size=”24″ font_weight=”bold” margin_top=”20″ margin_bottom=”0″ font_family=”none”]How can you respond better?[/mk_fancy_title][vc_column_text disable_pattern=”false” margin_bottom=”10″ css=”.vc_custom_1599144491368{margin-bottom: 0px !important;}”]Parents of children who have disabilities or chronic illness expect that they will be supported by people who are close to them, both emotionally and practically. How can you help?[/vc_column_text][mk_fancy_title strip_tags=”true” tag_name=”h3″ color=”#576283″ size=”22″ font_weight=”bold” margin_top=”20″ margin_bottom=”0″ font_family=”none”]Emotional support[/mk_fancy_title][vc_column_text disable_pattern=”false” margin_bottom=”10″ css=”.vc_custom_1599144549831{margin-bottom: 0px !important;}”]Listening is important. Be available, take the time and listen actively (so ask open questions, reflect and summarise) and be attentive. Make more time than usual to do something with the child. The limitation / illness can mean that tasks take more time and / or can go slower. For example, it may take longer to get in and out of the car or the house. Offer to go to a doctor, therapist or care provider once to get a better understanding of the child and the condition / illness.[/vc_column_text][mk_fancy_title strip_tags=”true” tag_name=”h3″ color=”#576283″ size=”22″ font_weight=”bold” margin_top=”20″ margin_bottom=”0″ font_family=”none”]Practical support[/mk_fancy_title][vc_column_text disable_pattern=”false” margin_bottom=”10″ css=”.vc_custom_1599144647897{margin-bottom: 0px !important;}”]You can provide reliable help to parents on a regular basis, such as:
- Shopping.
- Taking care of the other children or do household chores.
- âBeing thereâ to take care of the children during an emergency situation.
- A weekly visit at a certain time and doing the laundry, tidying up or helping out in the garden to reduce stress.
Every family needs a different kind of help depending on the situation. If you donât know what the parents need from you, just ask them.[/vc_column_text][mk_fancy_title strip_tags=”true” tag_name=”h3″ color=”#576283″ size=”22″ font_weight=”bold” margin_top=”20″ margin_bottom=”0″ font_family=”none”]Empathy[/mk_fancy_title][vc_column_text disable_pattern=”false” margin_bottom=”10″ css=”.vc_custom_1599145315604{margin-bottom: 0px !important;}”]Parents donât want sympathy! What they want is empathy and it takes quite some effort from you to understand how they feel and what they go through. Therefore try to âwalk in the parentsâ or the childâs shoesâ for a while. Perhaps the list below can help you to understand the stress, on top of the daily hassle, as described by parents of a child that requires extra care:
- Frustration due to uncertainty about what will happen to the child in the longer term and difficulties in finding clear answers.
- Feelings of guilt because you have to divide attention between the child who has extra needs and the rest of the family.
- The continuous question why the child has the disability / illness and whether it could have been prevented.
- Dealing with the chronic sadness and loss of the ânormalâ child that the parent does not have.
- Worries about whether the child will be accepted by the environment.
- Worries about future plans for adulthood (education, work, family life).
- Worries about the severity of the condition.
- The fatigue associated with the continuous giving and arranging of daily care, which goes beyond the normal expectation pattern for the child for the coming years. Families may have difficulty feeding, dressing, toileting, bathing, heavy lifting, playing, therapy, putting on splints, eating, playing, etc. In addition, arrangements and âbattlesâ with municipalities over facilities, transportation, etc.
- The pressure of attending many therapy sessions per week, plus the appointments with specialists, hospital, results and tests.
- The infinity of it all âŠ
- Less freedom of choice and freedom of movement because you always have to think about the special needs of the child.
- Sadness and frustration because the child is not going to roll, crawl, sit or walk, or because it is not talking, cannot do everything it wants.
- Possible marital problems because your partner does not accept the child, does not understand you or does not help you plus extra stress such as lack of sleep.
- Dealing with the effects on brothers and sisters. How do they feel and how do they deal with the difficulties?
- Other children cannot understand why mom and dad spend more time on the child with ⊠Feelings of guilt, rebellion or rivalry.
- Uncertainty about a new pregnancy. Can it happen again with the next child?
- The feeling of being âtrappedâ due to physical exertion and the extra organisation needed for outings (from simple picnics to longer planned vacations). There are concerns about sufficient space in the car, finding a place with good facilities, accessibility, toilets; accommodation; problems with eating out and specially prepared food. All of these factors make it difficult to plan in the long term and make it less likely for the family to make a spontaneous decision to go out.
- Always putting oneâs own needs aside to meet the extra needs of the child.
- Financial problems (home modifications, special cars, medicines, facilities, special toys).
- The doubt or inability to return to work due to the treatment and special needs of the child.
[/vc_column_text][mk_fancy_title strip_tags=”true” color=”#576283″ size=”24″ font_weight=”bold” margin_top=”20″ margin_bottom=”0″ font_family=”none”]What can I do for you?[/mk_fancy_title][vc_column_text disable_pattern=”false” margin_bottom=”10″ css=”.vc_custom_1599145729000{margin-bottom: 0px !important;}”]âWhat can I do for you?â
In her book âWhat can I do for you. Support during mourningâ, writer Karin Kuiper has collected some wonderful ideas that are very easy to realise and that we would like to share with you:
- You can help by âbeing thereâ. Call, stop by, go out or a coffee, send a card.
- Take parents with you for walking, cycling, dancing.
- Help out during birthday parties. This way the real hostess / host can catch up with the guests.
- Ask about the interview with the director / doctor.
- Stop by on special days or send a card / call to let them know you are thinking about them.
- Secretly plant flower bulbs in the parentsâ garden.
- Take the children to buy a surprise for their father or mother or make a beautiful âwork of artâ with them.
- Offer to go to the recital at music school, the competition at the gym club, the cup competition at the football club or the school musical.
- Offer practical assistance in the form of cheques that can be exchanged at the issuer.
- Send a card with ten self-written compliments.
- It is easy to maintain intensive contact with one person. But for someone with a child with a disability / chronic illness, it is not easy to keep a whole circle of friends / environment happy. Be generous in maintaining the friendship.
- Reach out on wedding days and the childrenâs birthdays.
- Make sure that you are just pleasant company.
- Take a freshly pressed smoothie with you when you come over. Tasty and healthy!
- Talk about the fun and less fun sides of your own life. The world keeps turning and in the end everyone wants to move on with their life. Itâs nice to stay involved in the lives of others. That way you prevent loneliness.
- Call in the first few weeks after hearing the diagnosis.
- If a parent cries, donât pacify them, but touch them gently to show your support.
- Do not break the friendship without explanation. The children will not understand where everyone went. This will cause confusion.
- Take the dog out for a walk (or take the parent out for a walk).
- Give / borrow the book that you recently enjoyed so much yourself.
- âBeing thereâ means listening without judgment. Listening is paying attention with your mouth shut. Let them cry or get angry. It can be nice to let the emotions go. Listen and offer a shoulder and some recognition.
- Eat together regularly.
- Send a regular message to let them know whatâs happening in your life. Send photos of holidays, children and grandchildren or places of interest, nice videos or websites.
- Give a medium with your favorite music. Go to a concert together. Give a medium with your Top Ten of tear-jerkers. Forward links to YouTube videos, videos and internet sites to share the music of your favorite artist.
- Ask again how the reports were, whether the exam was passed and whether everyone was âoverâ.
- Spontaneously ask parents for a picnic in the woods or on the beach. Go fly a kite with them.
- Offer long-term disaster relief assistance with leaking gutters, flooding washing machines and defective dishwashers and such. Give a voucher that can also be redeemed in five yearsâ time â then parents will know that they may also ask for help in a while.
- Offer to go to the swimming pool or amusement park â the expedition will really be a trip!
- Arrange an evening of film â and also arrange the babysitter!
- Call on the parentsâ help every now and then.
- Take over the daily life of the parents for three days and send them out to recover.
- Give something beautiful. A bouquet of flowers, a special photo in a frame, a beautiful plant, a separate postcard, a tea cup with hearts.
- Help with the preparations for birthdays and holidays.
- When visiting a hospital, send a âgoodnightâ text message, or âa success today in the morning!â â message.
- Mourning and processing are not a bleeding finger that needs a patch, not a wound that is quickly closed or leftover. Take the sadness and the process seriously. Accept that it will take a while before it gets âbetterâ and the other person becomes cosy and cheerful again.
- When parents come to visit, pour the juice into a wine glass and set the table festive for a simple lunch.
- Tell an inspiring story about your âheroâ or your hobby.
- Wash their car (unsolicited) for them.
- Offer specific assistance. âNext week / time / holiday Iâll be carefulâ âShall I cook for you tomorrow?â âCan I help you with the garden?â
- Provide a warm house and a bunch of flowers, or a Welcome Home card, when you return from the hospital.
- Find a ridiculous photo of the parents or yourself, and show that it can always be worse!
- Give parents the chance to sit on a couch all day long with a book, film, magazine or laptop and a pot of tea. No shopping, cleaning up or care obligation for them.
- Organize an egg hunt at Easter.
[/vc_column_text][mk_fancy_title strip_tags=”true” color=”#576283″ size=”24″ font_weight=”bold” margin_top=”20″ margin_bottom=”0″ font_family=”none”]How should you not respond?[/mk_fancy_title][vc_column_text disable_pattern=”false” margin_bottom=”10″ css=”.vc_custom_1599145874933{margin-bottom: 0px !important;}”]Of course every comment from a good heart is welcome. Certainly, if you know each other well and know what it means to you. Yet it is better not to respond in the following ways:
- Deny the disability or illness.
- Show anger.
- Express fears aloud.
- Criticize the chosen therapy / treatment.
[/vc_column_text][mk_fancy_title strip_tags=”true” tag_name=”h3″ color=”#576283″ size=”22″ font_weight=”bold” margin_top=”20″ margin_bottom=”0″ font_family=”none”]Deny the disability or illness[/mk_fancy_title][vc_column_text disable_pattern=”false” margin_bottom=”10″ css=”.vc_custom_1599145990415{margin-bottom: 0px !important;}”]A reaction such as âDonât worry, thereâs nothing wrongâ or âHeâll grow over itâ can hurt parents. No matter how well-intended, you are thereby denying the severity of the diagnosis they have just received. Even âNowadays there is as much as possibleâ is a form of denial. Not everything can be solved with medical treatment. It is possible that you deny the seriousness yourself, which is a sign of compassion. First, try to deal with your own sorrow. Or look for âfellow sufferersâ in the form of other family members or friends of a family with a disabled child /child with a chronic illness.[/vc_column_text][mk_fancy_title strip_tags=”true” tag_name=”h3″ color=”#576283″ size=”22″ font_weight=”bold” margin_top=”20″ margin_bottom=”0″ font_family=”none”]Show anger[/mk_fancy_title][vc_column_text disable_pattern=”false” margin_bottom=”10″ css=”.vc_custom_1599146036494{margin-bottom: 0px !important;}”]It is sweet and understandable to get angry about the diagnosis that your friends or family have received. But venting your anger towards the childâs parents, even if it is aimed at a doctor or hospital, for example, has a negative effect. Anger is not an emotion that parents can use, so try to keep this to yourself.[/vc_column_text][mk_fancy_title strip_tags=”true” tag_name=”h3″ color=”#576283″ size=”22″ font_weight=”bold” margin_top=”20″ margin_bottom=”0″ font_family=”none”]Express fears aloud[/mk_fancy_title][vc_column_text disable_pattern=”false” margin_bottom=”10″ css=”.vc_custom_1599146125672{margin-bottom: 0px !important;}”]After the diagnosis, there is often one fear that dominates: how should it go later? âWhat will happen to this child when he is five years old, or twelve, or 21? And what if I am no longer there myself? âThen other questions arise:â Will he ever learn? Will he be able to go to school? Will he be able to love, live and laugh and do all the things we had planned? âOther unknown things also cause fear. The parents fear that the diagnosis of their child might be the worst. Fear can paralyze them. Therefore, make sure that you do not feed the parents in their fear. Listen to it, say you understand, but do not participate in predicting or discussing doom scenarios.[/vc_column_text][mk_fancy_title strip_tags=”true” tag_name=”h3″ color=”#576283″ size=”22″ font_weight=”bold” margin_top=”20″ margin_bottom=”0″ font_family=”none”]Criticize the chosen therapy / treatment[/mk_fancy_title][vc_column_text disable_pattern=”false” margin_bottom=”10″ css=”.vc_custom_1599146172135{margin-bottom: 0px !important;}”]Because parents often come across âunknownâ due to their childâs disability / illness, the advice of professionals is very important to them. They can also opt for a not yet known or alternative therapy, or treatment. As a family member or friend, it is important that you support the advice and efforts of professionals â trusted and respected by parents â even if you disagree with what they do. Your acceptance and support is necessary and valuable for families with special needs.[/vc_column_text][mk_fancy_title strip_tags=”true” color=”#576283″ size=”24″ font_weight=”bold” margin_top=”20″ margin_bottom=”0″ font_family=”none”]Finally[/mk_fancy_title][vc_column_text disable_pattern=”false” margin_bottom=”10″ css=”.vc_custom_1599146213358{margin-bottom: 0px !important;}”]It may be clear: a child with a chronic illness or disability brings stress, sadness and fatigue with it. Fortunately, parents do not always feel this stress continuously or equally. As in any other family, feelings of happiness, achievement, pleasure and satisfaction are certainly also experienced. The most important message for friends and relatives is to consciously see how life can be for the family. And how you can help by continuing to talk, by offering practical help and by showing the same love or friendship as before.[/vc_column_text][mk_fancy_title strip_tags=”true” color=”#576283″ size=”24″ font_weight=”bold” margin_top=”20″ margin_bottom=”0″ font_family=”none”]Doâs and donâts for friends and family[/mk_fancy_title][vc_column_text disable_pattern=”false” margin_bottom=”10″ css=”.vc_custom_1599146418155{margin-bottom: 0px !important;}”]What you have to do.
- Be yourself
You do not suddenly have to behave differently because the child of your friends / family has a disorder or a chronic illness. Are you the friend that makes harsh jokes? Then you do not suddenly have to be more responsible. Are you the sweet overprotective mother? Then do not suddenly become tough or strong. Try to find your own way in helping the parents. Donât think: âHow should I respond, how should I handle this?â But rather: âHow do I want to respond?â - Show how you feel
Real love and friendship mean: being happy when the other is happy and being in pain when the other is suffering. By showing your own emotions about the diagnosis or the problems with their child, the parents can feel moved and strengthened. It is not the intention to âsaddle themâ with your sorrow, (and that they should comfort you instead of the other way around), but you certainly do not have to hold back your tears. This way you show that you understand somewhat what they are experiencing and that you have a lot of sympathy. - Sound the alarm on time
Parents with a child with a chronic illness or disability can feel so much stress that they go beyond their limits without realising it. As a good friend or family member, you can see how things are going from a distance. Keep in mind that the situation can be ten times more difficult than the parents would have you believe. Do you see that they keep too many balls in the air, are exhausted or almost never smile again? Take them apart to talk about extra help. Whether that is more babysitting or a conversation with a psychologist or family therapist.
What you shouldnât do
- Avoid the subject
The child in question can become an âelephant in the roomâ. They can be that subject that is not being discussed, in order not to ruin the atmosphere or because you think it will make the parents unhappy. Sometimes parents actually find it nice not to talk about it for a while, but often talking can be a relief. Just ask: âDo you want to talk about it?â - Think that everything stays the same
Busy parties, joint meals or vacations ⊠For parents of a child with a disability or chronic illness, those are the moments they often donât like. They are usually more concerned with their child than enjoying the company and socialising, or there are too many incentives for the child. Donât blame them if more and more often one of them doesnât come along or if they just stay at home. Try to find other moments to have a good time together. - Thinking for the parents
âI wonât invite them to my childâs third birthday, because thatâs too confronting for them.â âParents of a child with a chronic illness or disability can end up in social isolation. Therefore, always keep communicating openly and do not be afraid to get ânoâ for an answer. At least you have invited them in any case. - Not give a baby shower gift if there is a danger that a baby might not live
No matter how serious the situation is, it hurts when people assume the worst, while parents themselves hope for the best. So, nevertheless give a gift, go on a maternity visit and stay in touch!
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