M
Mommy2Zeke
Guest
Ok... here's my issue. My son has CF and short bowel syndrome. He had necrotizing enterocolitis when he was just 2 months old and lost 90% of his small intestine. He's had loads of surgeries and it got to the point that no one in our home state would touch him because he is such a complex case. We ended up at UNMC Omaha for intestinal rehabilitation treatment and overall it's been very successful. They oversee all of his nutrition. Our local CF team oversees his respiratory issues. We've gone through three CF docs locally. One overtreated with crazy long IV drugs for everything under the sun and had turf issues with docs at UNMC so we dropped him. Second Dr. was great but was only coming to our city while they searched for a CF doc to cover our local CF clinic. Third doctor is who they brought in and trained- (he had never been a CF doctor before).
At first I thought he was ok, but then it became increasingly obvious that the guy wasn't doing his job, nor was he respecting how I wanted my son treated. We would come in and I'd ask about his latest culture, and instead of looking at the last culture we'd had done, he'd pull up the one from 3 months prior and not even bother to look at the date. Then, when I asked to be sure of what my son was growing out (all of which are things he has grown out before with absolutely no symptoms) the doctor insisted on restating protocol and talking over me. I knew protocol and I was NOT questioning it. The latest incident was when I told him some of the medications and methods that doctors at UNMC were using to treat my son's small bowel. Their methods are unorthodox but they are being studied for effect. The doctor visibly rolled his eyes and made some discouraging remarks. In my view, I didn't hire him to oversee any of my son's GI care. Now he is 'wanting to talk to the GI doctor' at UNMC. In addition to that, the nutritionist that came in started make really obvious statements. "Are you aware that his W to H percentages are really low?" No kidding, lady. Where have you been the last 10 months while UNMC doctors and me and my husband have gone to battle to try and get his weight up? We have tried EVERYTHING just short of putting him back on TPN through central line. This nutritionist has seen us ONCE before (she doesn't even come in every visit) and she walks in and seems to start making some sweeping judgements as I explain everything I know to her. I just really rubbed me wrong. I felt like my abilities as a parent were being attacked. It's as though they really think I'm just going along letting my son starve to death or something.
Anyway, the reason we are considering going to UNMC for CF is because my son was treated by Dr. Columbo and his team for several months while we were there for care in the hospital. He and his staff were nothing but wonderful to us. In fact, the whole hospital has been wonderful to us. We already go up every other month to see the Intestial Rehab team. Coordinating a CF visit wouldn't be hard.
Respiratory-wise, my son has been lucky. We eradicated pseudomonas over a year and a half ago. Everything else he has cultured has been minor. He has never been in the hospital for respiratory issues. He's never had pneumonia from anything he has cultured. He's only had three 'flare-ups' that acted like anything from a runny nose to a bit of a head cold and only took him about 2 weeks to get over. We've been very blessed that way. Would you all suggest that I have someone in the state just in case or just go ahead and go with UNMC? BTW... we are looking at moving to Omaha eventually. Currently even though we live 2 states away, our insurance covers them in-network too.
At first I thought he was ok, but then it became increasingly obvious that the guy wasn't doing his job, nor was he respecting how I wanted my son treated. We would come in and I'd ask about his latest culture, and instead of looking at the last culture we'd had done, he'd pull up the one from 3 months prior and not even bother to look at the date. Then, when I asked to be sure of what my son was growing out (all of which are things he has grown out before with absolutely no symptoms) the doctor insisted on restating protocol and talking over me. I knew protocol and I was NOT questioning it. The latest incident was when I told him some of the medications and methods that doctors at UNMC were using to treat my son's small bowel. Their methods are unorthodox but they are being studied for effect. The doctor visibly rolled his eyes and made some discouraging remarks. In my view, I didn't hire him to oversee any of my son's GI care. Now he is 'wanting to talk to the GI doctor' at UNMC. In addition to that, the nutritionist that came in started make really obvious statements. "Are you aware that his W to H percentages are really low?" No kidding, lady. Where have you been the last 10 months while UNMC doctors and me and my husband have gone to battle to try and get his weight up? We have tried EVERYTHING just short of putting him back on TPN through central line. This nutritionist has seen us ONCE before (she doesn't even come in every visit) and she walks in and seems to start making some sweeping judgements as I explain everything I know to her. I just really rubbed me wrong. I felt like my abilities as a parent were being attacked. It's as though they really think I'm just going along letting my son starve to death or something.
Anyway, the reason we are considering going to UNMC for CF is because my son was treated by Dr. Columbo and his team for several months while we were there for care in the hospital. He and his staff were nothing but wonderful to us. In fact, the whole hospital has been wonderful to us. We already go up every other month to see the Intestial Rehab team. Coordinating a CF visit wouldn't be hard.
Respiratory-wise, my son has been lucky. We eradicated pseudomonas over a year and a half ago. Everything else he has cultured has been minor. He has never been in the hospital for respiratory issues. He's never had pneumonia from anything he has cultured. He's only had three 'flare-ups' that acted like anything from a runny nose to a bit of a head cold and only took him about 2 weeks to get over. We've been very blessed that way. Would you all suggest that I have someone in the state just in case or just go ahead and go with UNMC? BTW... we are looking at moving to Omaha eventually. Currently even though we live 2 states away, our insurance covers them in-network too.