Showing posts with label AGE AND INFERTILITY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AGE AND INFERTILITY. Show all posts

Monday, January 28, 2013

I HAVE NOT FORGOTTEN ABOUT YOU!!!!!!!!



It has been over three months since I have posted anything new on my site.

This is due to the fact that my husband has been working out full time since then and my time is totally consumed with parenting for two, which leaves me no time really to write on my blog or my books for that matter.

Even as I am writing this note, my daughter who is now an active toddler, and naps just once a day for about a hour and a half, plugged out the computer twice before I could save anything and now has her sights set on the internet connection.

This note is therefore to promise you all that I am planning to return to active blogging soon, as I really miss it a lot, so bare with me.

My blog has a lot of earlier posts with helpful infertility resources though, for your continued indulgence, so please do not stop visiting.

I appreciate all of you who continue to visit my site and leave your kind comments. Those who write for answers to specific questions, please know that even if I do not respond right away, I am fully committed to always respond.

Happy reading, everyone!!!!!



Tuesday, April 20, 2010

ARE YOU AN EMPOWERED PATIENT???

Children are a gift from the Lord; they are a reward from him.
Children born to a young man are like sharp arrows in a warrior’s hand
Psalm 127: 3 & 4

"HOPE MAKES ALL THE DIFFERENCE"




The empowered patient, in my opinion, is one who does not depend on their doctor alone to make the decisions and give all the information regarding their treatment. They do their own research (even though many doctors do not like this) and they take part as much as possible in the direction that they want their treatment to go.

I have been meeting a lot of empowered patients online, since I have been blogging. On the subject matter that I blog about (infertility), there are a lot of people sharing information about their infertility challenge and I find that this helps many who are dealing with the same condition, as it broadens the light that they currently view their condition in, and allows them to make more informed and practical decisions, as it relates to their treatment. This does not only help others medically, but it offers a bond, because, even though people may be complete strangers, there is some amount of familarity, as people know right away that they are not alone in their struggles.

I was not an empowered patient when I was struggling with infertility, or it would not have taken me over a decade, to triumph over this condition. This I believe is largely due to the fact that I was not internet savvy at the time and did not know that a whole new world of information and support was waiting for me, by way of the internet. I was just content with following my doctors lead and relied only on information he gave me. Later in my struggles, however, when I saw that my age was also becoming an infertility factor, I made some adjustments to how I was dealing with my treatment process, and that was when everything changed for me, as I then was forced to take on the role of the empowered patient.

Please find below a link for a presentation from a survey done by Chris Schroeder, CEO Health Central and James Burroughs, Associate Professor of Commerce, University of Virginia, April 8, 2010, DTC Conference, Washington D.C., on their findings about the empowered patient.

This presentation is geared at persons dealing chronic conditions like diabetes and rheumatoid arthritis, but I do believe, by extension, it can be applied to every patient dealing with a condition over a prolonged period of time.

http://www.healthcentral.com/about/the-empowered-patient/

From the presentation:-

“Making treatment choices and selecting health care providers are high stakes decisions for people living with chronic conditions such as diabetes and rheumatoid arthritis. Finding the right doctor who can in turn find the right therapeutic regimen often makes the difference between a high quality of life and a low one for these patients.


Some of these people who are faced with ongoing treatment decisions take a more active role in their health care plan, while others are more comfortable following a doctor’s lead.”

Here’s to you, the empowered patient.