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Therapy and sanity for ordinary parents of special kids.

You’re Not Her Guardian Anymore, Dorothy: Realizing when Special Kids Become Special Adults

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“I don’t think it’s bacterial meningitis. With that, people get progressively sicker and die,” said the handsome young doctor.

“Wwwwwhat did you say?” I stuttered, looking frantically at my tiny, soon-to-be 21-year-old daughter, Katie, groaning beside me in her hospital bed with an IV hooked up to her pale, and scarily thin arms.

We had arrived in the Emergency Room just an hour earlier. Katie, home for Spring Break (You know that time when carefree college students jet off to tropical locales like Punta Cana and Cancun?) had arrived home extremely sick with nausea, fever, headache, and severe neck pain. Concerned, I did what I have always done when my kids are ill – called the pediatrician.

“Is Katherine there with you? May I please talk to her?” the pediatrician asked.

“She’s really sick and doesn’t want to talk.”

“Mrs. Gallagher, your daughter is an adult and I need her permission to speak to you.”

Hmmm, this never happened before. Flustered, I helped Katie sit up and handed her my phone.

“Hello, doctor. Yes, this is Katie Gallagher. I’m really sick. You can talk to my mother, OK?” she weakly replied, handing me back my now germ-infested iPhone and burrowing herself under a blanket.

After relaying Katie’s symptoms and sharing my own diagnosis (I’m no doctor, but I play one on the Internet), the doctor instructed me to take Katie straight to the Emergency Room.

When we arrived, I was quite familiar with where to go, since this wasn’t my first ER Rodeo. Over the years, I had visited many times with my daughters and nieces who had their share of ear infections, flus, and fingers caught in toy video cameras. In fact, as I looked at the renovated waiting room, I couldn’t help but feel pride thinking, “Yup, we built that.”

I had instructed Katie to lie down in the waiting room while I registered her. There, I got another surprise. “Mrs. Gallagher, your daughter needs to come in; She’s an adult.”

“Oh right,” I said, silently checking the math in my head. (Well 2016 minus 1995, the year of her birth… I guess she is an adult.)

Katie slumped down in the chair and proceeded to answer all the questions she was asked in her Katie-like, no-nonsense manner.

“Yeah, yeah. That’s our address.”

“Yeah, we have United Healthcare. It stinks,” she said.

The clerk then asked for a signature. Just as I reached into my purse for my ballpoint pen, the clerk slid forms in front of Katie. Wait! What?

Five minutes later, when we were promoted to triage, Katie again took center stage answering the questions.

“Is there any chance you could be pregnant?” the nurse asked.

“Bwwhahahaha! Ahhhh no,” Katie laughed slapping her knee.

Hmmm, there’s a question we’ve never been asked.

When Katie was finally taken back to the Emergency Room (several minutes and 35 magazines later), I was further excluded when the doctor addressed Katie and not me. I wanted to stand up and say, “Ah Hello? Yoohoo. Over here, the lady with the gray hair and wrinkles. I’m her mother, the woman who makes all her decisions.”

What was even more troubling was that the doctor wasn’t using friendly, soothing terms. Instead of words like “boo-boo” and “tummy ache,” he talked about catheters, CT scans, dehydration, IVs, spinal taps, Lyme disease, and bacterial meningitis. I wanted to lunge over to Katie and block her ears, but then I remembered that this was her right; she was an adult and her own guardian and any medical decisions were hers to make. Not a good feeling for a control freak, special needs mother used to protecting, advocating, and hovering over her kid for her whole life.

When the doctor talked about the seriousness of her condition and the prospect of deadly meningitis, I half-expected Katie to break down, but instead she asked a very good question: “How will you know if I do have it?”

“Well, we’ll run some preliminary tests and depending on those, we might have to do a spinal tap or lumbar puncture.”

Katie pulled the hospital covers up to her neck and very politely said, “OK thank you very much, doctor.” Then, after a few seconds, when the gravity of the situation hit her, the little girl returned. “Mommy, that’s gonna hurt. I don’t like needles.”

Brushing back her hair from her warm forehead, I turned to her and said, “It’s OK Sweetie. You probably won’t have to have it. And if you do, I’ll be right here with you to hold your hand.”

And that’s all I could do two hours later when I watched the doctor pull out what appeared to be the Space Needle to put in my little girl’s small back. A worried Katie, peppered him with questions.

“Is it gonna hurt?”

“How long will it take?”

“Can you please tell me when it’s going in?”

“Will I be sore afterwards?”

Then she turned on her side, reached for my hand, and looked up at me with her sad, big blue eyes, just as she had done when she was a child bracing for a shot. I was ready to pull out my tissues and blot the tears and quiet the shrills that would invariably come. But instead, she closed her eyes, squeezed my hand, and quietly winced, “Aggghhh! Agggghh! Oh my God this kills!”

No crying. No screaming. No thrashing. (Well, not on her part. I was a different story, as my eyes flooded with tears, watching my sweet baby in pain).

That’s when it truly sunk in; my little girl really was an adult. And a pretty brave, bright, and meningitis-free one (phew!) who is capable of managing her life decisions, despite my best attempts to baby her. 

“God Ma, this Spring Break sucks!”

“Katherine Lynn! I don’t like you swearing. Do I have to wash that potty mouth out with soap?”

 

4 Responses to You’re Not Her Guardian Anymore, Dorothy: Realizing when Special Kids Become Special Adults

  1. Katherine M. Martin, March 14, 2016 at 4:26 pm #

    At 18 the age of majority all rights transfer special needs or not. Many people don’t realize this.

    For those young adults with disabilities for whom guardianship is not appropriate a health care proxy may be a good alternative. It can be done without an attorney.

    I have it for my 21 year old who has ASD and major medical issues. We do it as shared decision making – he can sign but I have communication with all providers.

  2. Nora J. Baladerian, Ph.D. March 17, 2016 at 2:36 pm #

    While I appreciate your story, just having proxy is not enough. Please read our materials at the Disability and Guardianship where in-depth articles explore the positives and negatives of avoiding a court order. An aspect that greatly concerns me is that by using a proxy, or the unexamined SDM proposals, is that the huge problem of exploitation and abuse is unexplored. While likely the vast majority of those seeking legal authority over their adult children, or those participating in an SDM agreement may be trustworthy, there are many who are not. There should be SOME ATTENTION to this fact. People with I/DD are abused at rates higher than children or elders COMBINED. Let’s take care of the issue of legal authority with our eyes wide open to this oft ignored and very real aspect of life among those with developmental disabilities.

  3. Jessie C. March 24, 2016 at 3:11 pm #

    I’m studying to be a special education major at ISU, and we’re currently studying about transition planning in class. I know that this was outside of an educational setting, but I think it would still be nice if educators could help families prepare for more real life transitions like this as well. Thank you for sharing Katie’s story, and I can’t wait to read other blog posts of yours in the future!

  4. Stan Butterfield April 12, 2016 at 2:23 pm #

    I practice law in Oregon and focus on guardianships and conservatorships. The scenario described above I am sure happens frequently as young adults and their parents transition to independence. The article does bring up a very serious concern however, and that is when a developmentally disabled child becomes an adult. They have the same rights as Katie in this blog post unless a court has said differently. If you are the parent of such a child it is important to get a guardianship in place before you need to visit an emergency room.

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