Sunday, January 24, 2010
Fun Stuff On The Way!
I'm still trying to work out the details but in the very near future I will be filling everyone in about my mailbox surprise and holding a raffle of sorts so you can have one of your own.
Saturday, January 16, 2010
Pregnant Woman Fights Court Ordered Bed Rest
***Helen added a link in the comments which I am posting here. It is a later article written about the case and goes into much more detail.***
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/florida-court-orders-pregnant-woman-bed-rest-medical/story?id=9561460&page=1
I first saw this story on a support group but have since seen it popping up all over the internet. I found it to be quite appropriate for discussion here since there have been many times when comments have been posted about how we should treat women/pregnancies where prematurity (or the threat of prematurity) is involved...
Personally I do NOT agree with what was done to this woman and reading the article brought back horrible memories of when I was admitted to the hospital 11 years ago. My husband and I were sat down and told that once I entered into the hospital at 23.2 weeks (it was the 2nd hospital that I was taken to. The first hospital didn't have a level 3 NICU) that the health of our baby took precedence over everything else and I would not be allowed to leave until I delivered our child. I wasn't even allowed to leave my room unless accompanied by a nurse. I had to beg the doctor to allow my husband to push me outside to get some fresh air and that was only allowed once (after 2 weeks of being in one room). Even though I felt trapped (overwhelmed, scared, angry, sad, depressed, etc) I was willing to stay. But I can't even imagine what it would be like had I really wanted to leave and was legally stopped from doing so.
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/florida-court-orders-pregnant-woman-bed-rest-medical/story?id=9561460&page=1
I first saw this story on a support group but have since seen it popping up all over the internet. I found it to be quite appropriate for discussion here since there have been many times when comments have been posted about how we should treat women/pregnancies where prematurity (or the threat of prematurity) is involved...
Personally I do NOT agree with what was done to this woman and reading the article brought back horrible memories of when I was admitted to the hospital 11 years ago. My husband and I were sat down and told that once I entered into the hospital at 23.2 weeks (it was the 2nd hospital that I was taken to. The first hospital didn't have a level 3 NICU) that the health of our baby took precedence over everything else and I would not be allowed to leave until I delivered our child. I wasn't even allowed to leave my room unless accompanied by a nurse. I had to beg the doctor to allow my husband to push me outside to get some fresh air and that was only allowed once (after 2 weeks of being in one room). Even though I felt trapped (overwhelmed, scared, angry, sad, depressed, etc) I was willing to stay. But I can't even imagine what it would be like had I really wanted to leave and was legally stopped from doing so.
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
It Came! It Came!!
I received the most exciting thing in the mail today and it's not even my birthday.
Stay tuned...
Stay tuned...
Sunday, January 3, 2010
Should the Cost of Saving a Preemie...
Should the cost of saving a preemie dictate the minimum gestation that a preemie can be resuscitated?
This is such an emotionally charged topic but one that I find very interesting when you take your own personal situation out of your emotions and try to look at it from every angle.
An article in Politics Daily, written by Joann M. Weiner, brings up this subject (in relation to health care reform).
In her article she writes (of an article in the New York Times)...
That last sentence... that's where I'm stuck. Really stuck.
First off... the cost of raising a preemie can be far more costly than the NICU bill. I know of families who have hit their life time insurance cap before their child was 5. That would have been us had my husband not changed jobs (a job change made necessary because of our insurance issues). Preemies, post NICU, have years worth of specialist visits, therapies, tests, labs, equipment, hospital stays, shots (shall we discuss how expensive RSV injections are), mental health specialists (which is not well covered by insurance and largely paid for by parents) and medications.
Paige is now 11 (born at 25.5 weeks weighing 1 lb 12 oz). I cannot even begin to estimate that cost for our situation but I can tell you that it has exceeded the cost of her NICU bill. For many years she never went a week without seeing a specialist or therapist. After age 5 the weeks turned into months but she still never went more than a few months without having something jabbed into her to run some test. This went on for many years. So, when looking at the cost of prematurity on society, let's not stop adding it all up when they leave the NICU.
(On a side note... On New Years Eve I was sitting at my computer trying to think of something witty to write as my status update on Facebook when it hit me... Paige had not seen any medical specialists in 2009. None. I couldn't believe it. I got up from my computer and combed through the calendar... She saw her pediatrician once (regular kid stuff), had her teeth cleaned twice (regular kid stuff) and had both flu vaccinations (regular kid stuff). That's it. Oh boy did I ever cry. My poor child had endured 11 years worth of appointments (labs, visits, tests, etc) and finally had a break. Although she still has regular appointments with various mental health specialists... there were no medical doctors in her life for an entire year. I know it won't last (as puberty can bring back some of the issues that have subsided) but it was worth celebrating.)
Secondly, what about all of the preemies who will never work? Since the above quoted neonatologist can justify the dollars spent as an investment... where is the return on the investment then?
And to answer my own question... the cost of saving a preemie has never been a deciding factor to me when discussing resuscitation limits based on gestation. But I've been left with a few questions rattling around in my brain now that deserve further consideration.
(I'm going to open up the comments to allow anonymous comments)
This is such an emotionally charged topic but one that I find very interesting when you take your own personal situation out of your emotions and try to look at it from every angle.
An article in Politics Daily, written by Joann M. Weiner, brings up this subject (in relation to health care reform).
In her article she writes (of an article in the New York Times)...
Writing in The New York Times, Jane Brody told a very compassionate story of an 11-year-old girl who was born after just 25 weeks gestation, weighing only 13.5 ounces, but who is now, amazingly, an accomplished writer and illustrator. Brody did not cite the costs of the child's neonatal intensive care, other than to say that the infant spent the first five months of her life in a Falls Church, Va., hospital. (It is difficult to find data on such costs; one hospital in Rhode Island estimated the daily expense at around $2,000, which means that a five-month stay would cost upwards of $300,000.) The Times article concludes with a comment by Dr. Michele Walsh, a neonatologist in Cleveland, who says that although it is expensive to maintain "million-dollar babies," it becomes very cost-effective over time: "There is a return on investment when they get out into the work force and pay taxes."
That last sentence... that's where I'm stuck. Really stuck.
First off... the cost of raising a preemie can be far more costly than the NICU bill. I know of families who have hit their life time insurance cap before their child was 5. That would have been us had my husband not changed jobs (a job change made necessary because of our insurance issues). Preemies, post NICU, have years worth of specialist visits, therapies, tests, labs, equipment, hospital stays, shots (shall we discuss how expensive RSV injections are), mental health specialists (which is not well covered by insurance and largely paid for by parents) and medications.
Paige is now 11 (born at 25.5 weeks weighing 1 lb 12 oz). I cannot even begin to estimate that cost for our situation but I can tell you that it has exceeded the cost of her NICU bill. For many years she never went a week without seeing a specialist or therapist. After age 5 the weeks turned into months but she still never went more than a few months without having something jabbed into her to run some test. This went on for many years. So, when looking at the cost of prematurity on society, let's not stop adding it all up when they leave the NICU.
(On a side note... On New Years Eve I was sitting at my computer trying to think of something witty to write as my status update on Facebook when it hit me... Paige had not seen any medical specialists in 2009. None. I couldn't believe it. I got up from my computer and combed through the calendar... She saw her pediatrician once (regular kid stuff), had her teeth cleaned twice (regular kid stuff) and had both flu vaccinations (regular kid stuff). That's it. Oh boy did I ever cry. My poor child had endured 11 years worth of appointments (labs, visits, tests, etc) and finally had a break. Although she still has regular appointments with various mental health specialists... there were no medical doctors in her life for an entire year. I know it won't last (as puberty can bring back some of the issues that have subsided) but it was worth celebrating.)
Secondly, what about all of the preemies who will never work? Since the above quoted neonatologist can justify the dollars spent as an investment... where is the return on the investment then?
And to answer my own question... the cost of saving a preemie has never been a deciding factor to me when discussing resuscitation limits based on gestation. But I've been left with a few questions rattling around in my brain now that deserve further consideration.
(I'm going to open up the comments to allow anonymous comments)
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