T
tarheel
Guest
<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote><i>Originally posted by: <b>SarahProcter</b></i>
<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote><i>Originally posted by: <b>saveferris2009</b></i>
I've seen the word "atypical" used by those who:
-Are scared of what CF can bring and it assuages their fears to use the word "atypical" in front of CF
-Don't want to put the preventative work into treating a CF child (aka I don't need to do CPT daily because the kid has atypical CF)
-Refuse to get a genetic diagnosis / don't really have CF</end quote></div>
I've heard it used by another category though - the director of the pediatric CF clinic that my daughter goes to. He tells me that my daughter has atypical CF, and may well never have symptoms, and if she has any he'd expect them to be mild, and that we don't need to do daily CPT, and that they're trying to come up with a new category, currently being called CFTR Metabolic Disorder, for people with two mutations who don't actually "have CF". He says that the addition of genetic screening to newborn tests has caught a ton of kids that have "atypical CF".
So I hear you, I do, about people wanting to wishful-think themselves out of cystic fibrosis by calling it atypical - but what do you do when that's what the doctors are calling it?</end quote></div>
Find a different doctor who understands what the hell CF actually is. Just because its a cf center doesn't mean all the docs have a thorough grasp on the concept of the disease. My mom always told me when I was younger that even though I was "healthy" (not really, but for the sake of the example) then, we did treatments so that I would go to college and lead a normal life.
Side note- If you don't do something now (I say this in a non condemning way, from personal experiance) you'll always wonder what you shoulda/coulda/oughta have done.
<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote><i>Originally posted by: <b>saveferris2009</b></i>
I've seen the word "atypical" used by those who:
-Are scared of what CF can bring and it assuages their fears to use the word "atypical" in front of CF
-Don't want to put the preventative work into treating a CF child (aka I don't need to do CPT daily because the kid has atypical CF)
-Refuse to get a genetic diagnosis / don't really have CF</end quote></div>
I've heard it used by another category though - the director of the pediatric CF clinic that my daughter goes to. He tells me that my daughter has atypical CF, and may well never have symptoms, and if she has any he'd expect them to be mild, and that we don't need to do daily CPT, and that they're trying to come up with a new category, currently being called CFTR Metabolic Disorder, for people with two mutations who don't actually "have CF". He says that the addition of genetic screening to newborn tests has caught a ton of kids that have "atypical CF".
So I hear you, I do, about people wanting to wishful-think themselves out of cystic fibrosis by calling it atypical - but what do you do when that's what the doctors are calling it?</end quote></div>
Find a different doctor who understands what the hell CF actually is. Just because its a cf center doesn't mean all the docs have a thorough grasp on the concept of the disease. My mom always told me when I was younger that even though I was "healthy" (not really, but for the sake of the example) then, we did treatments so that I would go to college and lead a normal life.
Side note- If you don't do something now (I say this in a non condemning way, from personal experiance) you'll always wonder what you shoulda/coulda/oughta have done.