|
Because strong school-family communication and cooperation
are essential resources for kids coping with muscle diseases,
it’s useful to understand some of the day-to-day challenges
of neuromuscular disease.
Family Life
Many adults with disabilities credit their success in life to
their family’s insistence on treating them like other kids,
with responsibilities and dreams just like everybody else’s.
Neuromuscular disease lays a heavy load on a family medically,
emotionally, socially and financially. Parents often feel worried,
overwhelmed and isolated, and siblings may feel overlooked and
ignored. As the disease progresses, so does parent-child dependency.
Family life can revolve around caring for all the child’s
physical needs, right down to waking every few hours to turn him
or her in bed.
Faced with a life-shortening disease, families may focus strongly
on the “here and now.” They may have little patience
with school systems that seem to emphasize discipline and long-term
planning. Due to the unusual demands of living with neuromuscular
disease, a parent may appear to teachers to be coddling the child,
or to be overinvolved in his or her care.
Elementary Years
Children may be blithely unaware of their neuromuscular disease,
or they may express curiosity, anger, guilt, hurt, sadness or
fear about the differences they see between themselves and other
kids. They may get angry at “my stupid legs” when
they fall. Research has shown that many children with serious
chronic illnesses experience strong feelings of isolation, inadequacy
and worthlessness.
At the same time, children’s natural resiliency allows
them to bounce back from these negative emotions, especially if
they feel accepted, supported and secure. Helping children verbalize
their feelings, focus on their strengths and make friends with
peers can enable them to incorporate a realistic awareness of
their disabilities into their self-concepts.
Ironically, children who are less disabled by neuromuscular disease
can have a tougher time with peers. Children who seem “OK”
and don’t use wheelchairs, but whose conditions cause them
to be clumsy and weak, often suffer taunts, jibes and accusations
of being lazy or not trying hard.
Fatigue is a very real symptom of muscle disease, especially
in the afternoons. Teachers should realize that fatigue can masquerade
as disinterest or noncompliance. Rest periods and small snacks
are ways to address this problem.
Teen Years
Just as their friends start gaining independence, adolescents
with some muscle diseases start losing it. At this most self-conscious
age, these teens now may require help with eating and toileting,
or need to wear leg braces, or have to ride special buses. As
muscle wasting progresses, simple activities become increasingly
difficult.
Many teens have a “take me as I am” attitude about
their disabilities and participate as fully as possible in school
life, finding creative ways to thrive and grow.
But some children withdraw emotionally as they enter their teens,
preferring the world of video games, TV and online games to outside
society. Others may deny the disease process and struggle on,
resisting a wheelchair and pretending nothing is wrong.
If a child show signs of depression, parents should be notified
so that appropriate treatment can be sought.
Again, kids with less obvious impairments can take a big hit
in middle and high school, enduring brutal bullying and teasing
because they look, walk or talk “funny.” One young
woman with Friedreich’s ataxia (FA) (a condition that makes
muscles progressively more uncoordinated and slurs speech) described
herself as an “outcast” in high school, especially
when her condition worsened during her junior and senior years,
and she fought against using a wheelchair.
“I sometimes wonder if the kids in high school who called
me names think of me now. I wonder if they remember how they tripped
me, knocked my books out of my hands, slammed my locker shut while
I was trying to open it, threw spit wads at me, and hit and bruised
my legs,” she wrote at age 26. (“From a Cocoon to
a Butterfly in Six Years,” MDA’s Quest magazine July-August
2004)
Using a Wheelchair
Unless a bone has been broken, the transition from walking to
wheelchair use takes place gradually, both physically and psychologically.
Each child — and each neuromuscular disease — is unique.
Some children never attain the ability to walk, and they use a
wheelchair from early childhood. In other cases, the transition
to a wheelchair may occur at any age.
When students get to the point of falling frequently, schools
sometimes require them to use their wheelchairs at school in the
name of safety, even though the student vigorously insists he
or she wants to walk. There are advantages to walking for as long
possible, provided it’s safe to do so. Walking promotes
bone strength, circulation and more similarity to peers. Using
a wheelchair full-time at school may make it harder for students
to maintain walking ability at home.
Many families let the child set the timetable for using a wheelchair,
while making accommodations to minimize falling. At school, these
can include providing help carrying books and lunch trays, allowing
extra time to navigate the halls, appointing a designated runner
during sports, and planning for classroom and playground safety.
Ironically, once children start to use a wheelchair full-time,
they often find they regain mobility, energy, freedom and confidence.
To facilitate this transition, it’s vital that the school
environment be wheelchair friendly and that teachers and school
personnel accept the change positively.
|