Monday, April 11, 2011
Future player?
On one side of a page was a heart with [my kid] + [cute girl in his class]--see? Maybe I'm not completely heartless if I don't divulge names--written on it. On the other was a detailed, 4-step plan of action:
Plan A: Get close to [cute girl] and kiss her. FAIL
Plan B: Tell her to close her eyes and kiss her. FAIL
Plan C: Tell her to come really close to you, then kiss her. FAIL
Plan D: Pretend to tell her a secret, then kiss her. IN PROGRESS
Friday, April 8, 2011
News from the NICU
My baby's nurse that day was such a grouch! She saw me crying in my chair and told me all kinds of super-unhelpful, non-uplifting things--"Look how his saturation levels are dropping (even though I'd been told by several nurse practitioners that the pulse oximeter is notoriously unreliable when the baby's moving, or the plug isn't on a flat surface).... You need the blow-by (oxygen mask). You know, most babies here have the nasal cannula for oxygen. None of this business with the head box or blow-by. No need to mess with those things." When I told her the head box was mostly for humidity because his nose gets really stuffy, and that they took him off the nasal cannula days ago because his oxygen saturations were consistently too high with it on, she said, "Oh, really?" sarcastically, and shook her head... And here's more from our own Nurse Ratched: "He only nursed for a few minutes, huh? So we probably don't even need to weigh him again" (again, voice dripping with contempt, or sarcasm, or something negative). Then she asked if we could finish his feed with the tube, which is when I basically begged to have the tube taken out. She went and asked the nurse practitioner for permission, and then came back and said, "You want the tube out? Here you go," and roughly wiped his little face with adhesive remover while tugging on the tape. She had been told by the nurse practitioner to wait till he'd digested his last feeding so he wouldn't spit up, but she did it immediately. I SWEAR the feeling I got from her was total spite. Then, as I was sitting in my chair crying after a disappointing discussion with the nurse practitioner, she said, "You know, you COULD sign him out of here AMA if you're so anxious to get him home. But then the hospital would sue you and come after you for all the money you owe them for his stay here. I can guarantee your insurance wouldn't cover anything if you did that. But, it's an option you might not have thought of." I heard her complain about one of the babies in her charge to one of the other nurses. That just cemented in my mind that she was either having a REALLY bad day, or she should maybe look into another profession. She is NOT my favorite nurse, and I'm praying she's not on today....
So, anyway, during and after his last feeding of the day before I came home, his oxygen saturations dropped to the high 50s a number of times, he stopped breathing at least 5 times (apnea), and he had 2 "A & Bs"--oxygen sats dropped AND heart rate dropped to the low 70s. SCARY! I had requested that he be allowed to sleep as long as he wanted between feedings during the night instead of being woken up every 3 hours (who wants to start THAT schedule before he comes home, right? And also, then he could be well-rested for daytime feedings), and the (nice, sweet, compassionate) night nurse said the longest they'd let him go would be 5 hours between feedings, but she'd let him go that long. She told me he hadn't had many wet diapers, that he'd lost weight since yesterday, that he'd needed oxygen through the night before as he slept, and that those things combined with last night's "episodes" were his signals that he was still too weak for oral feedings (all of this was said with empathy and kindness, I should add. She apologized for bringing up that possibility, and said she was just trying to prepare me in case they needed to place the NG tube again.). She said she'd try her best with the bottle-feeding on demand through the night.
I left the hospital scared and sobered and so, so upset. Another month of leaving the big kids to go practice feeding the littlest one loomed ahead, and I felt completely deflated.
Fast-forward to this morning, when the phone rang. The caller ID showed it was the hospital, and my stomach lurched. What bad news were they calling with? It was today's nurse practitioner. "Mrs. McKrola, let's get this boy out of here." WHAT?!?! Not even CLOSE to what I was expecting to hear! I was too shocked to ask what brought about this drastic change of heart. She told me to bring his car seat today to see if he'd pass the car seat test, and then we could consider discharging him sometime tomorrow (IF he does well today)! She said they'd teach me how to place the NG tube and check for placement, and he could come home with oxygen, too (for sleeping and eating). I told her I wasn't expecting any of this, considering what a tough time we'd had yesterday. She said those were all feeding-related episodes, and since I'll be with him as he eats, it would be fine.
Isn't it incredible how quickly things can change (it's quite possible that my constant praying all day yesterday had something to do with it, don't you think?)? I'm off to the hospital to hang out with the little dude. I have so many questions. The answers don't really matter too much, as long as I can bring my boy home, but I'm still curious.... Does this mean he did great during the nighttime and morning feedings? Did they finally get to chat with their lawyers to see what their liability would be, and what waivers they needed me to sign?
PS: I just want to add that I'm not a total crazy person and won't insist on bringing him home if he doesn't seem ready.
Thursday, April 7, 2011
NICU black hole
The reason he was admitted to the NICU in the first place was for his suspected heart defect. They've ruled that out (yippee!!!), so what's the deal? Why is he still in there??? Devin and I asked the charge nurse practitioner a couple nights ago why he was still there, since he seems like he may just be the healthiest baby in there, even with his extra chromosome ("genetic enhancement"). She agreed with that, but said he needs to be able to take 100% of his feedings orally before they'll remove the NG tube (the feeding tube in his nose) and send him home. I've tried nursing him about 4-5 times a day for the past few days (he's on an every-3-hours schedule), and he IS really sleepy and hard to wake up before and during, but he's so good at it once he gets going.
Apparently the only reason he's got the NG tube is that babies with Down syndrome have low tone and can't handle nursing or bottle-feeding very well--it tires the poor little things out and they'll develop an oral aversion if they're "forced" to keep trying. Huh! Well, this baby with Down syndrome has a very powerful suck (yowch!), and he's got the suck/breathe/swallow pattern down pretty dang well. It's SO INCREDIBLY FRUSTRATING being told that he can't do something when he's proven time and time again that he can! They automatically give him a tube feeding unless I'm there and ask them to please let me try nursing him first, or Devin's with me and tells them to step away from the feed tube and give him a chance to nurse or take a bottle. If he wakes up on his own, they feed him a bottle (which is actually fine with me--even though I'm stubbornly dead-set on nursing him--because he's awesome at downing a bottle, and if that gets him out of there faster, I'm all for it, even if we have to learn how to nurse once he's home). It IS true, from what I've heard and read from other moms of babies with DS, that they do tend to be sleepier, in general, than other babies. So, it might take a little more effort to get him to wake up for a feeding, but it's worth the effort to try. Sticking a syringe of milk in a feeding pump and pushing a button to get it going is a heckuva lot easier than working with him for almost an hour to get and keep him awake and help him take a whole bottle. It's all about convenience, in my opinion.
So, here's the analysis of the black hole that is our NICU stay:
--goal is that baby takes 100% of feeds orally --baby is automatically given tube feed unless he a) wakes up on his own at the exact time of his feeding, b) Devin or I aren't there, or c) takes too long with nursing or taking a bottle when we are there.
Do you see how mind-blowingly ridiculous this is??? They want him to eat, but they hardly give him a chance to try! If we were to wait for him to take all of his feedings orally using their method, he could be in there for over a month! One of the nurse practitioners told us that they could send him home with the NG tube--that they'd show us how to insert one and check for correct placement--so he could go home sooner. And the very next day, a different nurse practitioner told us she was sorry, that that was something they couldn't do. ARRGH! I just know that if I could bring this boy home, we could work all the livelong day on nursing, since I wouldn't be wasting hours driving to and from the hospital twice a day and trying to split my time between home and the &$*#@ hospital, and he'd rock it! The NG tube is completely unnecessary!
My friend Lexi suggested that I get a pediatrician to evaluate him. I wasn't sure how to go about finding one that would do that, so last night I called my regular pediatrician and explained what was going on and asked him for any advice or names of docs who could go check our baby out. When I was done telling him the whole tale, he was almost as irritated as I've been, and said he'd call the NICU's attending physician and see if we can't get our baby busted out of his jail. So, this morning I called the NICU first and asked if my doc had talked to the attending yet, and he had, but they wouldn't tell me what had been decided. Then I called my doc, who told me he'd reassured the attending that he'd be willing to monitor our baby for weight gain weekly if needed, and even assist in managing the NG tube, if necessary.
So, now we wait. The attending physician still needed to do rounds with the NICU staff, where they discuss all the babies' issues, so I won't know till later what's been decided. Meanwhile, I'm going to assume he's coming home TODAY, and bringing a car seat to the hospital with me. He still needs to pass the "car seat test" (he has to show he can hold his head up while seated in it, without his head falling forward, potentially blocking his airway). Now that I think of it, this may actually be a challenge.... Because of his low muscle tone (courtesy of the Down syndrome), he's really, really "floppy" like a rag doll. So, this is what I'll fervently be praying for today--that the attending physician signs his discharge papers, and our boy passes the car seat test. Wish us luck!