Z
zeeannie
Guest
Tonya, your track sounds just like ours. My daughter is 13 now and has been proactive on beginning treatments herself for a few years. Since she became aware of the concept of 'schedules' we had afterschool mapped out to a T. When to have her snack, when to do homework, dinner treatments, etc. Once this became habit, she began doing these things on her own without being reminded. I have now added pills to her set of responsibility. She divvies up all her breakfast/dinner meds in the weekly med dispenser thingie every weekend. We bought tiny baggies (worried that I would trigger some drug bust sting after ordering thousands online!) that she puts her enzymes in for school. She makes a bunch of these up as needed and keeps them in a hidden compartment in her pencil case. Each baggie has enough for lunch so she just has to bring one baggie with her to lunch.
She doesn't always do her huffs at 100% all the time, but she's doing most of them reasonably well, so I don't make it an issue. When she seems overly distracted during vest/huff time I ask her something like "How many sets have you done?" on the pretense that I need to know when she's done so dinner will be ready, but it's just to get her to think about what she's doing without nagging her to pay attention. I am usually cooking dinner nearby, and I can see her, but as far as she's concerned she's on her own.
So far we haven't had to deal with any rebellion. Luckily she's waaaaay healthy, so if that comes up we have some leeway and it won't be a desperate issue to deal with. On the downside of that, she won't realize any immediate consequences for not doing her treatments. She is aware tho of how skipping certain meds affects her, like Zantac, and lactase.
At clinic, we started pulling away from the discussions about two years ago and made sure Sophie did all the talking, listing all current meds, etc. I'm there to clarify or bring anything up that's missed, but otherwise she deals with the docs and nurses. At our Quality Improvement Committee meetings at her clinic, our current project is transitioning to adult care. We're coming up with steps that begin early on to facilitate that transition. A lot depends on the maturity of the child and what they can take on personally, as opposed to age alone. In a couple years, Sophie may start seeing the docs by herself, and I will come in at the end for a recap.
She doesn't always do her huffs at 100% all the time, but she's doing most of them reasonably well, so I don't make it an issue. When she seems overly distracted during vest/huff time I ask her something like "How many sets have you done?" on the pretense that I need to know when she's done so dinner will be ready, but it's just to get her to think about what she's doing without nagging her to pay attention. I am usually cooking dinner nearby, and I can see her, but as far as she's concerned she's on her own.
So far we haven't had to deal with any rebellion. Luckily she's waaaaay healthy, so if that comes up we have some leeway and it won't be a desperate issue to deal with. On the downside of that, she won't realize any immediate consequences for not doing her treatments. She is aware tho of how skipping certain meds affects her, like Zantac, and lactase.
At clinic, we started pulling away from the discussions about two years ago and made sure Sophie did all the talking, listing all current meds, etc. I'm there to clarify or bring anything up that's missed, but otherwise she deals with the docs and nurses. At our Quality Improvement Committee meetings at her clinic, our current project is transitioning to adult care. We're coming up with steps that begin early on to facilitate that transition. A lot depends on the maturity of the child and what they can take on personally, as opposed to age alone. In a couple years, Sophie may start seeing the docs by herself, and I will come in at the end for a recap.