Wednesday, August 10, 2016

Desirea's Story


We were scrambling last minute for a patient.  Project Armchair had been approached by KFYR news out of Bismarck to do a feature story on our volunteer services at Sanford hospital.  The interviews were finished and now the reporter, Max Grossfeld, wanted video of me reading to a patient and hoped to interview the young patient as well.

How could it be there were no patients available? I had been on the pediatric floor in my role as reading volunteer numerous times and (unfortunately), patients were usually in abundant supply.  Why today, of all days?  There was nothing to do but end the interview, pack up, and come back another day.

The following week I arrived on the sixth floor to read, as I had done every Monday during my summer break as a public school reading interventionist. I walked into a hospital room and recognized the name on the door.  Desirea Shelton was back in the hospital, and one of my favorite patients. Her smile lit up even the gloomiest hospital room and her laugh was infectious (pardon the hospital humor). Best of all… BEST OF ALL, Desi loves books as much as I do.  She wants to talk about them, read along with me, and predict what will happen on the next page. She is a teacher’s (and reading volunteer’s) dream.

I sighed as I pushed open the door, because seeing my favorite patient meant that she was in the hospital AGAIN. Poor lamb. Her wide grin chased away all despondent thoughts and pretty soon we were reading and discussing and predicting, just like always. When I was done with all patients that day, I contacted the appropriate parties and said, “If you can get here tomorrow, I’ve got the perfect patient.” And just like that, Desirea became a TV star.  Well, to those of us that adore her, anyway.

After the interview, I stood and chatted with her mother for awhile, which is rare for me while I am in my role as volunteer.  I make a point of NOT asking personal questions or being inordinately interested in their personal lives.  I don’t ask about diagnosis, prognosis, or treatments. There are privacy directives and laws, but beyond that, I have found that parents and patients alike are weary with discussing the illness. There are tired of thinking about. Tired of living it. Tired of being consumed with it. It’s a break from all of that that I hope to provide, for the brief moment I intersect in their lives. I am there to read and to brighten a day.  That is all.  

For reasons I cannot explain, God has granted me the ability to walk into the rooms of gravely ill children – children with tubes and drainages and chemo drips – things that should break my mother’s heart – and yet these realities do not prevent me from coming back.  They should.  It is awful and utterly heart rending.  And yet, I keep coming back.  I cannot explain it. 

But as Desi’s mother began to share her story, I stood transfixed, and the carefully compartmentalized sections of my heart began to wobble and melt, like sandcastles during high tide. Desi is chronically ill, that much I had surmised from her frequent hospital stays.  But the breadth and scope of her illness was more than I could take in.

As the details spilled from Kristina, my heart ached for this sweet child and her family.  They have been living a medical nightmare for seven years. It blindsided them from Desi’s first days of life.

I asked Desi’s mom if I could share a tiny portion of Desirea’s story on social media, as a backdrop to the news story. “Oh, please do!” she cried.  “I want to raise awareness in any way I can. This is such a rare disease that it needs more research and awareness.” Kristina paused for a moment and searched for words. “It needs a cure,” she ended with soft hope.

And so, Kristina began to write down details of their journey.  Once she started writing, her pen took on a life of its own and seemed unable to stop. Fourteen pages later, she laid down her pen, emotionally spent and out of things to say.  Kristina told me later that it was the first time she had taken the time to record the crooked path of their medical saga.  I got the feeling it was therapeutic, somehow.

The next few paragraphs are a summation of that exercise.  With Kristina’s full permission and hearty support, I share their story.

Desi’s mom first noticed something was wrong with her precious newborn, when Desi was just one week old.  She developed severe cradle cap, and her hands and feet were scaly.  At three months of age, her hands and feet were so dry that they would crack open and bleed. Thus began this single mom’s relentless search for answers. 

At two years of age, Desirea was hospitalized for the first time with breathing problems.  There would be six more hospital stays during that year, for either lung or skin infections.  Kristina was getting desperate.  What was wrong with her baby girl? Why could no one offer any answers?

By the time Desi was three, she had suffered fourteen individual cases of pneumonia and numerous skin infections.  In July of her fourth year, Desi was diagnosed with her first case of MRSA in her left leg and right wrist.  The usual rounds of antibiotics were not helping this time. The local hospital realized they could do nothing for her and transferred her to a larger hospital.  Kristina waited, alone and terrified, while Desi underwent surgery to drain the infection.  MRSA would become a constant in their lives.

It wasn’t until 2014 that a new doctor began to view Desirea’s repeated seeming disjointed symptoms as a larger, unsolved puzzle. As the ICU doctor dug into Desirea’s medical history, he found a shockingly lengthy list of recurring symptoms:
1.    Ichthyosis (genetic skin disorders)
2.    Scoliosis
3.    Sever Anxiety
4.    Atopic Dermatitis
5.    Left Valgus leg deformation with ¾ in. differential
6.    Knock knees
7.    Asthma
8.    Severe perleche (cracked corners of the mouth)
9.    High Ige levels
10.ODD
11.OCD
12.Functional disorder of the polymoronclear neutrophilis
13.Severe allergies

(If I misspelled any of these terms, please forgive me.  These words are like a foreign language to me).

Finally, someone in the medical world was determined to put the puzzle pieces together and search for answers. Many diseases were suggested, but blood work finally confirmed Low Ige Igg with Primary Immune Differcy. 

Job’s Syndrome.

I know who Job is.  At least, I know of his legend. Job was a biblical character who was put to the ultimate test of faith.  In a conversation between God and Satan, God held Job up as a man of true integrity and righteousness.  Satan scoffs at this.  Everyone has their breaking point, and Job, however righteous, has his, too. Satan kills Jobs children, takes away all of his vast wealth, covers Job in excruciating boils, and in a certain twist of irony, leaves intact Job’s nagging, unhappy wife (book of Job, Holy Bible).

Little five-year-old Desirea was similarly suffering on the scale of biblical proportions.  There is no “normal” for her. A trip to the mall might bring on an asthma attack severe enough to hospitalize her. She must nightly have her hands and feet slathered in cream and wrapped in gauze. She missed half of her entire year of Kindergarten.  The school environment can reek havoc on her fragile immune system.  She can’t have friends over to her house because of the risk of infection.  Can’t ride a bike without inducing an asthma attack.  Her scaling, raw skin invites stares and shunning by other children and nervous adults.  Her lungs are failing.  A lung transplant looms in her future. 

Kristina recently added me to a closed-group Facebook page with frequent updates on Desirea’s status. I watched all last weekend as the statuses came one on top of another. MRI’s and port troubles and more MRSA.  This time in her hip and coursing through her veins.  I prayed for her as I mowed my lawn, worked on fall school activities, and cleaned the garage.  By Sunday morning I couldn’t stay away any longer. I skipped Sunday School and headed to the hospital.  

That smile… oh, that smile.  It was there, just like always.  Desi’s skin is so sensitive, it’s easier for her to go without clothing. She was putting a puzzle together and fretting that six pieces were missing.  She was bored, hungry, and ready for company.  I sent her mom out to take a break and stretch her legs and then I read not one, but two books to this giggling charmer.  She is a prisoner in this room.  She cannot step outside her hospital door.  Can’t sit in the brightly colored play room.  Can’t venture outside to feel the warm sun on her face.  She is a prisoner in both room and weary body.

I read a pop-up book to her about a garden (thank you, nameless donor, that chose this beautiful book!).  Desirea sighs and says she wishes she could go outside and play.  “Close your eyes, Desi,” I say.  She obliges. “Can you feel it?” I say. “Feel what?” she asks with her eyes still closed.  “The sun, Desi.  Can you feel the sun on your face?  Can you hear the birds singing and feel the butterfly that just landed on your cheek?”  There’s that smile again.  She’s so gloriously irrepressible.  “When you get sick of this room, open your book and pretend you are outside with the sun and the birds and the butterflies.”

I am quiet on the ride home from Bismarck afterward.  I read Kristina’s handwritten journal and am awash in conflicting emotions.  This mother’s pain is splashed across page after page in raw honesty.  I am heartbroken that any child must suffer so. Filled with empathy and respect for all mothers that face each day with courage.  And am selfishly grateful that my children have been so remarkably healthy.

The biblical Job finds vindication at the end of the story.  God heals Job’s body, restores his wealth, and even blesses him with more children.  I wish these things for my little, sunny, friend as well.  A healthy, restored body, and a long life filled with every imaginable blessing. 

So there it is.  We know how Job’s story ended.  Desirea’s is yet unfolding.  When you read the last word of her story, please say a prayer that this child - this brave, smart, irrepressible, suffering child will enjoy her own “happily ever after.”

She deserves no less.

*The occurrence of Job’s syndrome is rare – literally one in a million.  
**In 2008, only 250 cases worldwide had been diagnosed.

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