Home > Medical Research Archives > Issue 149 > Growing up with congenital heart disease: impact on the daily life quality from the perspective of a mother.
Published in the Medical Research Archives
May 2019 Issue
Growing up with congenital heart disease: impact on the daily life quality from the perspective of a mother.
Published on May 28, 2019
DOI
Abstract
Congenital heart diseases (CHDs) are the most common and severe anomalies at birth, with over 1 million newborns affected every year in the world. Thanks to the advances in surgical treatment and medical care over the past few decades, the majority of them now reach adulthood and have an acceptable life quality expectancy.
However, growing up with a congenital heart disease is far from being an easy task, although satisfactorily managed from the strictly medical point of view. Psychosocial, educational, financial issues, among the others, highly impact on the daily life of both the patients and their families, and a comprehensive and global knowledge of what living with CHDs condition does mean still has to be built in both the scientific and social community.
The present report is based on the direct experience of the mother of a 14 years old boy born with a severe heart defect. Key points on CHD-life management are proposed and discussed following a ‘from inside’ perspective, and suggestions aimed at soliciting the design and delivery of ad-hoc support programs are given. The importance of a multidisciplinary, global approach capable of joining all the scientific, professional and socio-political parts is highlighted.
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