When everything is going so well, I have a lot less to say.
Do I hear hurrahs all round?
The boy is well, the girls are fab, and we're going on a dream holiday, quite literally a wish come true (courtesy of the Starlight charity - which I will post about another time). Even at good times we feel like we're living against the clock.... One emergency admission and the trip is off (they can't insure us).... Finger crossed for us please. Have a great day.
A blog about Cystic Fibrosis, promoting organ donation, family, love, art, drinking too much tea (and quite possibly gin).
Wednesday, 30 April 2014
Friday, 11 April 2014
CF myths
There are many reasons why I started this blog. Most importantly I guess, I find writing things down clears them from my head. Or at least tidies them up. I also want to share how we are all doing with family and friends. It's really hard keeping up with who I have told what to, and when we are in hospital, or awaiting test results, this could be a central place to update all, which would be kinda handy. Most of the time talking helps. Sometimes it doesn't. After a day in hospital it's the last thing I want to do (a few days later I am back to yakking away to anyone who will listen!). Then there is CF awareness and fundraising, which mean a huge amount to us. We are super optimistic about the future, and really think research happening now is going to make a huge difference to our future. We are already proud recipients of so many advances in CF care, just in the last few years. And awareness is hugely important too. If there was more understanding about CF, and how it affects him, then his life would be so much easier in future. So in future blogs I will be dispelling a few CF myths, and confirming some CF truths.
Tuesday, 1 April 2014
Waiting
We spend a lot of our time waiting for test results. It used to be much harder. Now it's not quite so hard. I guess the more you pack into your life (we are now a family of five, and we really pack it in!) the less time you have to worry. Usually it's results from the lab - if his cough seems worse, he coughs up into a pot, or on a swab, and we send that into the lab. It's as easy as dropping it off at our GP round the corner, which is great. 4 or 5 days later, we get the results from the lab. They are not slow, they need to grow the bugs in the sample to identify them, and that takes up to a week. Then, if we need to, we swap his antibiotic to one that is sensitive to that particular bug. We do this maybe once a month, more often when unwell. When really bad, we send in samples every other day - one sample might be negative, the next positive. Whilst you might hope for a negative result, if he's coughing, that tells us nothing. It doesn't mean he's not actually growing anything, just that the sputum in that pot didn't contain the infected sputum. A positive result means we can treat the infection with the correct medication, which is what we want. Stop it in it's tracks. A big F you to the bugs. So we spend a lot of time waiting for results.
This week has been about waiting for the CT results. Today I had an email from our (amazing) CF specialist nurse 'CT looks good, we'll chat it over at our X-ray meeting and I'll get one of the doctors to call you back'. Big relief. Big glass of vodka for Mum. Maybe I had been worrying about that one a little more than I thought.
This week has been about waiting for the CT results. Today I had an email from our (amazing) CF specialist nurse 'CT looks good, we'll chat it over at our X-ray meeting and I'll get one of the doctors to call you back'. Big relief. Big glass of vodka for Mum. Maybe I had been worrying about that one a little more than I thought.
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