Having a Bone Marrow or Stem Cell Transplant - Top tips. Bone Marrow Transplant Unit Information for patients

Similar documents
DEALING WITH ISOLATION. Information to help you during your time in hospital isolation

DEALING WITH ISOLATION. Information to help you during your time in hospital isolation

My Person Centred Statement.

Dignity in Care A F F I X L A B E L. Dear patient, relative or carer,

VIBE AND TONE PROGRAM MODULE 1 INTRODUCTION

Welcome to the Crohn s & Colitis Foundation s Online Support Group for Caregivers

UW MEDICINE PATIENT EDUCATION. My Daily Life. What can I do to be as healthy as I can?

Radiotherapy to the Brain

Stand in Your Creative Power

Young people s access to GP online services Patient Guide

Get Well Soon Helping you make a speedy recovery after your Laparoscopic Nephrectomy

Transition Planning: A Guidebook for Young Adults and Family

My work experience. Booklet 2. My diary

DD PRINTED IN USA Lilly USA, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. A Step-by-Step Approach to Building a Personal Network of Support

Your guide to children s residential care

How Teachers Can Help Me. Authored by

Life ahead plan. An aid to planning your long term recovery from cancer

CHOOSE YOUR OWN ADVENTURE

Quick Tip #3 Ideal Body Image Page 1 of 6

My Person Centred Statement.

Top 10 Things You Should Know Before Choosing An Orthodontist SPECIAL REPORT. The Top 10 Things. You Should Know When Choosing An.

Raising Difficult Issues with Your Service Provider

If you like the idea of keeping customers happy and helping them with their enquiries, then you should consider a career in customer service.

Helping you to make a speedy recovery after laparoscopic nephrectomy

Advance Care Planning Conversations:

Diabetic Foot Ulcer Scale-Short Form

Jarjums CONGRATULATIONS!

Coming into Hospital PATIENT INFORMATION. (Easy Read) Royal Devon and Exeter NHS Foundation Trust

The Importance of Taking Your Pills on Schedule

DOES ANY OF THIS RESONATE WITH YOU?

Looking after yourself during your GCSEs. A guide for pupils

Being in Care Being in Care

Getting It Done

Preparing for Interview. Widening Participation

Knowing when: It s Time for Table Talk

Wellness Recovery Action Plan

This book has been designed to help and support you throughout your enterprise experience.

Me and my body. Section 1

Time Management. Tips for Better

Depression and other emotional changes

Child Friendly Safeguarding Policy

Top 7 Things To Know Before Choosing Your Podiatrist

Created by Support Plus, 2017 Self harm

TOP TIPS TO A SUCCESSFUL TRADE EXHIBITION

Two week Positivity Plan

Wired Up. A pacemaker guide for teenagers

Where Does My Job End and My Purpose of session: To start you on a journey to help you take better care of your life and to find a balance between you

This factsheet covers:

Why do people set goals?

How to get your dream life in 3 easy steps.

THE BASICS USED WITH PERMISSION COPYRIGHT ADAPTED FROM OVERCOMING HOARDING BY SATWANT SINGH, MARGARET HOOPER AND COLIN JONES 2015

Living with an illness that you will probably die from

Future Matters. My Advance Care Plan

HOW TO DESIGN THE. dream engagement ring

Behavioural and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia in Residential Care SITE/PROGRAM: Contact/Phone:

THOSE POSITIVE THOUGHTS THOSEPOSITIVETHOUGHTS.COM

This is how I manage! My assessment of my need for help and support

A Starter Workbook. by Katie Scoggins

Finding out. This guide will help you to: A Changing Faces Guide for Young People. Find out more about what has happened to you

CYSTIC FIBROSIS & YOU

Preferences for Everyday Living Inventory- Nursing Home Version (PELI-NH-Mid)

Rigid gas permeable contact lens

AR: That s great. It took a while for you to get diagnosed? It took 9 years?

The Role of Patients in Transitions of Care

guide to Have plenty of downtime beforehand Have business cards close to hand Have a list of questions prepared Have a list of answers prepared

Choices. Personal Independence Payment. Read me

How to Quit NAIL-BITING Once and for All

What is emotional health?

JROTCDL.com CADET 105 Time Management 1

Healthcare in prison

EVERYONE IS SOMEONE LYRICS

Advance Care Planning Workbook. My Health, My Wishes.

Meet the Firms Tips for Students

People growing older with learning disabilities. Our advice about good support

SPECIAL REPORT. Top 10 Things to Know When Choosing Your Orthodontist. Top 10 Things. To Know. When Choosing Your Orthodontist. by Dr.

DEMENTIA PROJECT COMMUNICATION IDEALS THE LANGUAGE OF DIGNITY. Trudy Bower ISBN

Make a semester calendar.

You can put a mark on the line anywhere you want, wherever fits best with how you feel about school.

Understanding what influences your mental health and wellbeing

Case Study: First Solution-Focused Session

How would you describe your current levels of self-care?

Extra support when you need to go to hospital

Now you can Completely Clear up your Eczema with a Simple and Natural Solution that is Guaranteed to Work---For Life!!!

Understanding what influences your mental health and wellbeing

Welcome to Leadership

Going home after donating a kidney. Information for patients Sheffield Kidney Institute (Renal Unit)

Achieving Work-Life Balance Teleseminar. By: Brian Tracy. June 24 th, 2008

D.R. I have a good sense of humour and like to have a joke with people. I enjoy my food! And I can eat for England!

Soft contact lens: Oxysept 1

WORK EXPERIENCE LOG Name:...

How to Cope Emotionally with Relapsed Refractory Hodgkin Lymphoma Recorded on: March 26, 2013

Someone I Love Has PH

Christmas and the Holidays. By Sheila Munafo Kanoza

Sharing and Involving

Goal Writing Worksheet and Tips for Success

Challenging procrastination: A guide for students

Finding, Selecting & Working with a Behavioral Health Provider: How do you choose the right provider

To Get You From Crayons to College.

Created by Support Plus, 2017 Anxiety

My Advance Care Plan & Guide Plan the healthcare you want in the future and for the end of your life

Transcription:

Having a Bone Marrow or Stem Cell Transplant - Top tips Bone Marrow Transplant Unit Information for patients i

The top tips in this leaflet were suggested by a patient. If you or your friends and family have any of your own tips, please let us know so that we can include them in future editions of the leaflet. 1) Do your homework Before you come into hospital for your transplant, read all the literature that your doctors and nurses have given you. Some of the information may not seem relevant straight away, but it will help to prepare you for what is to come. Encourage those family and friends who will be supporting you and visiting you to read it too. If you experience any side effects, having read about them in the literature will remove some of the fear factor for them. 2) Be a patient patient! Do everything that the doctors and nurses ask you to do. They will know your limits - they have looked after many people having transplants and will be able to assess your progress, and know what you should be able to do. In hospital, planned daily schedules can go out of the window, as health care staff attend to the needs of other patients. This is particularly the case on a highly intensive unit, such as the Bone Marrow Transplant Unit (BMTU). Do not use the panic button too soon or too much. When your infusion stops, and the alarms sound, try to wait until a nurse comes - they will! 2

3) Getting through the day Give yourself little goals, and reward yourself when you achieve them. Don t overdo it - you will get very tired and it is frustrating not being able to achieve something because you set too high a target for yourself. Keep a small notebook or journal and write down your progress or events that happen - particularly things that make you smile. Look for the silver lining in any situations-reading it over later will not only bring back that smile if you are feeling a bit down, but you will also get a sense of the progress you are making. This is particularly important when you come to doing your physio. Although your room becomes your domain and you will personalise it, try to de-clutter as much as possible. It can be frustrating when you can t find something and I know it was there five minutes ago. Give yourself little goals, and reward yourself when you achieve them. 3

4) Coping with change Try, within the bounds of your strength, to retain some control over personal hygiene. Even if you feel really tired, it is nice to be able to take the cloth from the nurse and wash your own face. Having said that, in hospital, the first things that disappear are dignity, pride and embarrassment. The staff will make it easy for you to handle this. Remember that if it all gets bit much-particularly in the middle of the night-the nursing staff will spend time listening to you, your fears and concerns. Remember that you are not alone on this journey Remember that you are not alone on this journey. Throughout the UK, and indeed the world, others share your path 24/7. Try to get a good friend or partner to handle stuff outside hospital, such as banking and home maintenance. Getting bogged down in such things can induce a sense of frustration, particularly if you can t get something resolved. Before the transplant, the chemo will mess up your sense of taste and/or smell. Hospital food, which tends to be well balanced but bland, will probably taste horrible. It does improve as you get your taste back. 4

5) Fighting boredom Make a list or schedule of visitors you are expecting - try to organise it so that you can look forward to visitors without wearing yourself out. Time can hang heavily and visitors mostly bring joy. In the early days of treatment, whilst you are coming to terms with where you are, try to make your room your domain, accept the reality of where you are. Missing home comforts, home cooking, your partner, can be really upsetting if you allow it to be. Try to give yourself a small project while you are in hospital, something to give you a focus and use up some of those waiting hours. Make a list or schedule of visitors you are expecting 5

6) Moving on Don t expect to suddenly get better - everything takes time. Do the daily physio, trying to go one step further each day, but don t get frustrated if you have a day off. There seems to be an unwritten rule of two steps forward, one step back, and on that third day you may find yourself lying in bed unable to do very much. Heal at your own rate! You will feel some trepidation when the staff finally give you a discharge date. You ve had all these weeks of being looked after, now it feels like you are on your own. You are not. Follow up reunites you with your team, and is very regular. Never be afraid to ask. Good luck! 6

Questions If you have any questions, write them down here to remind you what to ask when you speak to your consultant. 7

If you would like this information in another language or format, please contact the service equality manager on 0116 250 2959 BMTU Patient Information Group Having a Bone Marrow or Stem Cell Transplant - Top tips Edition 1: September 2013 Reviewed September 2017 For review September 2020 CAN222-0917