Open Heart Surgery
Recovery Is a Full-Time Job
March 16th, 2006
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Maggie
Lichtenberg |
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You are now
home from the hospital, and while the healing process is well underway,
or you would not have been discharged, there are miles to go. There seem
to be so many instructions to remember. You simply will not be up to
much in the first few weeks, and in some cases, for several more. I
won’t understate this.
Yes, an upbeat approach by the
hospital medical staff may have sent you waltzing home and it’s
thrilling to be leaving the hospital, where you haven’t been permitted
to sleep through the night. Yet you are returning home greatly fatigued,
with a medications schedule to manage, possibly a tank of oxygen, and
perhaps recurrent irregular heartbeats or other complications that
remain unresolved. Now is the time to dedicate yourself to the hard work
of recovery. Alternating rest and exercise, and above all patience with
the physical and emotional trials ahead, is your assignment for the next
several weeks.
You and your
caregiver will mostly be on your own unless your particular situation
requires a treatment plan that includes post-op visits from a home
health care nurse. Even if that’s the case, now is the time to review
any guidelines your hospital medical team has given you about what to be
aware of.
If you have purchased the paperback
or downloaded the e-book version of The Open Heart Companion:
Preparation and Guidance for Open-Heart Surgery Recovery, from my
website
http://www.openheartcoach.com, it’s time to reread Chapter 5, “The
Challenges You May Face.” This chapter provides detailed information not
only on challenges that may arise in your recovery, but it also supplies
solutions as well. For example, on the subject of feeling isolated:
“This is the time to find other open-heart surgery survivors and their
caregivers to talk to. Swap stories, share information, hear what other
families have gone through.
Just knowing that you are not alone
as you go through your rehabilitation can lift the veil of isolation.
There can be a tendency to hold one’s surgery and recovery experiences
too privately, but not reaching out to others will only deprive you of
receiving compassionate support. If you are feeling isolated, do
yourself a favor: reach out to friends and family, and look for a heart
surgery support group locally or online.” However, whenever in doubt
about what you may be experiencing specifically, contact your designated
medical liaison for professional diagnosis or medical attention. No
question or concern is too trivial.
For most of us, there is a difficult
recovery challenge from the time we leave the hospital until we are
healed and strong enough to enroll in a local rehab program. That’s one
of the reasons for my book, to bridge this gap as so little medical
attention is focused on the recuperation period that lasts anywhere from
four to eight weeks. We thought getting through surgery was the biggest
hurdle. However, the hurdle is greater when we are home on our own with
not much progress to report fast enough -- and without all those experts
in the hospital to lean on.
Every recovery is different. If
you’ve been told to expect improvement “two days forward, one day back,”
you might be disappointed to experience instead only one good day (a
period of energetic spunk) followed by two, three, or even four days of
just plain feeling lousy. Even to meet the assignment of increasing your
walking time from five minutes to ten minutes a day may feel like an
insurmountable task at first.
You may also be swinging in and out
of temporary depression. (In my case, I wished the discharge nursing
staff had emphasized the psychological challenges of recovery, not just
the physical stresses.) Or, you may feel “off,” and think you might be
coming down with a virus. That might be the case, but feeling off can
be due to other things as well: you may have become anemic (as I did);
you may be having an allergic reaction; sleep deprivation may have
caught up with you—there are many possibilities. Know that everyone goes
through discouragement, yet those who are informed to expect ups and
downs will fare far better.
Recovery after surgery takes time.
There’s often a feeling of “being all alone.” Because I, and dozens of
patients and caregivers who were interviewed for The Open Heart
Companion, have gone through open-heart surgery recovery ourselves, I
offer the help you need via a free monthly phone support group, a
newsletter specifically on recovery, a highly informational paperback
(also available as an e-book), and general practical tips. Stop by my
site at
http://www.openheartcoach.com to see how we can help you recover
faster.
Maggie Lichtenberg, PCC, a recent
open-heart surgery thriver, is an open heart coach to heart patients and
their loved ones, a professional speaker, and frequently published
author. To subscribe to her free online newsletter, Heart To Heart, send
a blank email message to HeartToHeart-On@zines.webvalence.com. To learn
more about Maggie's free phone support group and other programs go to
http://www.openheartcoach.com.
Books on Heart Disease
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