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For a child to keep confident in the medical staff, it is essential to suppress pain during the various treatments performed on him. Today, it is possible.

A child may not suffer, but say the opposite because he is afraid. Fear is a form of trauma and must be taken into account in the management of pain. There are ways to make it disappear.

Pain free procedures are now widely spread in all hospitals. Professionals and parents should ensure their application.

Children with ataxia telangiectasia are brought to be often confronted with the medical community, synonymous for great anxitety. In order that visits to doctors or in hospitals become a routine, preferably nice, it is essential that all the care they receive is surrounded by maximum precautions. To do this, one must:

 

Confidence


In fact, these last two points are closely related. You can not tell a child: "Trust me" if afterwards, he is suffering. This is obviously relevant to the medical staff, but it is equally important for parents who bring, in spite of themselves, their child to the hospital. If the place is synonymous with pain, then the child may not trust them anymore.

Generally speaking, it is a truism to say that confidence is established if the words are followed by actions. In other words, each medical act has to be explained to a child: how it will be done and what means will be used so that he won't feel anything ... and do what was said.

Injections


When we think "hospital," we usually think "injection".

With the prospect of the injection comes into play a series of worrying criteria such as the size of the syringe or the virtuosity of the nurse. In fact, we can reduce the number of objective criteria for pain to four:

Surgeries


The recommended precautions below are valid mainly for surgery requiring only local anesthesia, a skin biopsy in dermatology for example. It is a deep skin sample, which can be impressive and painful if not properly prepared, if all precautions are not taken to minimize the inconvenience. But they also apply to preparations to more invasive acts or general anesthesia.

Thus, it is desirable that the following conditions are met, in addition to environmental criteria and confidence as previously treated:

If these three conditions are met, then your child will not feel anything. He probably will not remember anything. This will allow to tackle the following acts with great serenity.

This protocol is the only one to respect the anti-pain charters that are now well established in modern medicine.

You have the inalienable right to refuse or to halt an operation that does not comply with these conditions.

 

IMPLANTED INJECTION CHAMBERS OR PAC (Port-A-Cath)


Patients who require regular infusions as the injection of immunoglobulins may see their venous capital deteriorate over time (veins difficult to penetrate, damaged by the products of injections ...), making the infusion difficult, so painful, to set.

Thumbnail imageOne solution is to put, under general or local anesthesia, a small injection chamber under the skin, usually over the pectoral muscle next to the clavicle. Also known as Porth-a-Cath (PAC), it is equipped with a catheter which is connected to a large vein near the heart. The chamber is closed by a silicone membrane to receive a needle for injection or allow blood sampling. The needles used are specific (Huber tip or Gripper System) and must be positioned with all the precautions of sterility.

This system may present some risks, however rare if used properly and with precaution:

A final drawback of the system is purely aesthetic: the PAC may appear under the skin and form a small ball.

However, it has significant advantages: :

Anyway, the decision to implement a PAC has to be discussed with the doctor.