Interview 04  

Interview 04

Age at Interview: 58
Sex: Female
Background: Nurse, married with three adult children. Ethnic background/nationality: White British.

Brief outline:In October 2004, her son had a motorbike accident and was admitted to ICU. He had a serious head injury and broken jaw.

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Female
Even though medical staff were treating their critically ill son, he looked comfortable when they saw first saw him and they sensed that he would recover.
 
In the early stages no one could give her information or hope on whether her son would be brain damaged after his accident.
 
As a nurse and mother she refused to believe doctors who were telling her that her son would be permanently brain damaged.
 
Other people's everyday concerns felt minor and trivial compared to her own anxieties about her son's accident.
 
She found it extremely traumatic when someone died and difficult to be supportive to others when her own son was also fighting for his life.
 
She was extremely disappointed in two doctors who wouldn't believe her when she said her son had shown signs of awareness, and felt it was too soon to predict how he'd recover.
 
She felt it was too soon to tell whether her son would be brain damaged after an accident and she didn't want doctors to try and predict the outcome when it was too early to know.
 
Her son had to have his own room because he had MRSA but she felt he was in danger of injuring himself whenever he tried to walk and that he needed supervision.
 
Her son walked for the first time since his accident when he was in a rehabilitation unit and she praised the support he received from a physiotherapist.
 
Her son is now driving again and she is looking forward to the time he will be completely independent, which will be huge progress considering how severely injured he was.
 
After her son's accident, she found it difficult to read, watch certain television programmes and, at first, felt very emotional when she heard ambulance sirens.
 
She wanted to see how her son would progress without outside influences but also wondered if it was too soon for them to think about joining support groups.
Jonathan Miller - Intensive care
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