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To you and all hopeless-feeling posters I suggest reading about the Vasa Program at www.brainstrokes.com, and if you like what you read and if a home program is something you could handle then I suggest that before you give up you email Dr. Vasa and tell her your dad's situation and ask whether her program is suitable for him. My husband is doing the program now, and although his progress is slow (I doubt he will ever be Dr. Vasa's poster childChild neglect and psychological abuse Child safety seats Child tylenol cold multi-symptom plus cough School age child development) he is doing better than he was in rehab and shows every sign of continuing to progress.
Mood: caregiver222 Journal Entry: "Today is Saturday August 23, 2008. Inez i..." [Read]
, Aug 30, 2006 12:00AM
It is impossible to tell if any person will recover. Only the life-force can make that decision. I can state that I have had a great deal of success in rehabing using lots of patience, and that one should never give up. My sweet little 101 year old girlfriend has improved from being comatose and incontinent and completely non-responsive, to learning how to read again, and during the last few weeks she is actually having little conversations! She is no longer incontinent and has learned to walk again. The did not speak for a number of years and had been given up by one of the top rehab facilities in the nation. She was deliciously eatingAnorexia nervosa Binge eating Bulimia Eating disorders - resources Necrotizing soft tissue infection Sweating Sweating - absent a full portion of meat lasagna, pea soup, mashed potato with butter, four juices, jello and yogurt for lunch today, all by her little self! What a sweety-pie! The "professionals" were within 24 hours of putting in a feeding tube last year when I stopped them. Twelve months ago she was unable to move her handsHand or foot spasms Hand tremor, sit up or respond in any way to someone. She would just stare vacantly. Getting her to regain her speechHearing or speech impairment - resources Speech disorders has been difficult, but it has come about. For a long time she would try so hard to make a word but not a sound wouldsome out. Then there was a single garbled sound a day. Final a single word. Then, with encouragement, a try at a sentnence. And finally, more sentences! Yup. And she is a happy-pie, laughing all day long like a sixteen year old.
The program is not expensive, but hiring a helper is expensive. I pay a wonderful, strong helper $10/hr. for 8-10 hrs per day. I figure if my husband regains some independence this will be cheaper in the long run than maintaining him as an invalid for years on end.
How much progress has your husband made? Can you transfer him now?
Yes, I can transfer him (scooting transfer, not standing transfer), but Dr. Vasa doesn't recommend a lot of transfers. She recommends he be on the mat, doing the exercises 10-15 min. out of every half hour all day long, so that's what we're doing, except to take him outside into the sunshine once a day. Sometimes we eat lunch outside once we're out there, go to the mailbox, or chat with a neighbor. But he's usually not off the exercise mat for longer than 30 min. a day, bcs the exercises make him very tired, so he wants to sleep after lunch rather than spend more time outside. And his cardiologist (who approved of everything I told him about Vasa prog) says the less time he spends cooped up in wheelchair and the more time he spends moving on the floor mat, the better his edema will get.
When I say I can transfer him, I mean only from bed to wheelchair and vice versa. I wouldn't dream of transferring him into bathtub without the strong helper I've hired. He takes a tub bath only every three days, (Don't be shocked. In his rehab he only got a tub/shower once a week.) bcs a tub bath takes so much time away from doing the exercises and resting from them. (Difficult transfers into and out of tub, the bath itself, then resting from the exertion of the two difficult transfers.
I know there are special bath benches for handicapped people, but Dr. Vasa advises against buying adaptive equipment. She says use that money to pay helper so he can become able to function without the adaptive equipment. He couldn't do many of the exercises without our helper, since I'm not strong enough, so we really must have a helper.